2013 Konspektas Philosophical Anthropology
2013 Konspektas Philosophical Anthropology
2013 Konspektas Philosophical Anthropology
FAC U LT Y OF H U M A N I T I E S
DE PA RT M E N T OF PH I L O S OPH Y
Donatas Večerskis
Philosophical Anthropology
SYLLABUS
Kaunas, 2013
Translated and edited by UAB “Lingvobalt”
Publication of the syllabus is supported by the European Social Fund (ESF) and
the Government of the Republic of Lithuania. Project title: “Renewal and Inter-
nationalization of Bachelor Degree Programmes in History, Ethnology, Philoso-
phy and Political Science” (project No.: VP1-2.2-ŠMM-07-K-02-048)
Literature. Since its origins literature has also been permeated with
admiration, fear, and the question of what a human is. Already in
Sophocles’ Antigone, written in 442 BC, the choir chants that many
amazing creatures exist in the world but none of them are more
marvellous than man. Similarly, in the eighth psalm a psalm reader
expresses his perplexity over human nature when reflecting on the
greatness of all creations.
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ours” gives priority to “just like mine” and at the same time “me”…
Hence the topic of the philosophical problem of a human is not that
of a being which belongs to a specific region of beings, and not of
the unity in type or essence, but that what always exists as “my self”.
That what is asked is not a general “Who”, essence, but the one who
asks in their own individual existence”1. (Jonkus, D.).
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was not the first one to direct philosophy on the path of the anthro-
pological study. Sophists could be said to be the first philosophers
who made a human and not the cosmos or elements of the world
the focus of their thought. Sophists discuss a human in the light of
cultural philosophy. Michael Landmann claimed that “the sophists
were the first true philosophical anthropologists because the soph-
ists were the first to analyze culture.”
For example, Protagoras claimed that “of all things the measure is
Man, of the things that are, that they are, and of the things that are
not, that they are not.” Man is put in an exceptional position as man
determines what is good and what is bad, and man decides what is
right and what is wrong, man himself defines the criterion. This
view of the sophists opened up new horizons for the criticism of
mythical imagery, values of traditional morality, and ultimately to
the criticism of human concepts themselves. In other words, even
though it had been long thought that cultural, social institutions
are a given or a gift of God, studies of different cultures, mores re-
vealed that their otherness stems from man because it is the fruit
and consequence of the human activity.
Socrates
The maturity of the total sophist thought reaches its peak in the fig-
ure of Socrates. Socratic philosophy first of all manifests itself as an
understanding, recognition of one’s own ignorance. This seemingly
banal phrase essentially reveals the view of a Socratic philosopher
both to oneself and to other people – I must constantly critically
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This attitude also means that there is trust in human reason, the
correctness of thinking, because knowledge, according to Socrates,
gives man a possibility to avoid that what is not virtuous and brings
harmony and bliss to a human soul.
Plato
Plato’s anthropology cannot be separated from the theory of ideas and
from the dualistic understanding of the world. Man is a dualistic be-
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ing made of a body and a soul. Even before Plato there had been talks
about the soul as an essence of a human most often associated with
reason, logos, and reasonable nature. Plato also assumes this idea of
an immortal soul – a soul exists before it merges with a body and it
remains in existence after the body dies. A human body, even though
bound to a human, is in principal just a grave, a grave stone for the soul.
Plato divides the human soul into three parts: the divine part, reason,
and parts that belong to the sensory world. In Platonic anthropology a
human body is depreciated, and priority is given to the rational world
of spirit (as in the case of reflections of ideas priority is given to ideas).
Aristotle
As in the case with Platonic philosophy, Aristotelian anthropology
inquires into a human in the context of metaphysical categories,
specifically, in the light of dichotomies of potentiality/actuality,
substance/accident, form/matter. Aristotle’s inquiry into a human
uses schemes of metaphysics which he calls the first philosophy.
Similar to Plato, Aristotle claims that a human is a construct of a
body and a soul and that thanks to the rational element of the soul
a human is what it is. Hence, the soul is the essence of a human.
But if for Plato the body was just an accident, for Aristotle a human
soul and body were bound in essence – just as a form and matter
were dependent one each other. Based on this metaphysical scheme,
rehabilitation of sensations and corporeity takes place because the
act of thinking occurs only when reason merges with sensations. A
soul cannot exist without a body just as a form cannot exist without
matter. A soul is the first element which makes us living beings, al-
lows us to move, feel, and think.
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questions about the meaning of the world and human life we are
not resolving immediate problems of our routine life but these the-
ories are practical ones as they link our life with certain ideals. The
search for a universal meaning constitutes a selection of the con-
crete action. /…/ Different sciences focus not on the knowledge of
the world and life as a whole but on the study of their own specific
areas. This means that all sciences are forced to establish clearly
their limits of competence and define the object of their study. /…/
Philosophy seeks not so much as to uncover concrete truths but
to examine truth-in-itself, in other words, to uncover that realm
without which No concrete truth would have meaning. /…/ When
Merleau-Ponty discusses the relationship between philosophy and
sociology, he notes that “every time a sociologist goes back to the
source of his life knowledge, to that which helps him to understand
cultural, most distant from him, constructs, he without even know-
ing becomes a philosopher … Philosophy is not concrete knowing.
It is constant vigilance that does not let one to forget the source of
any knowledge”2. /…/Scientific definitions of a human are based on
human life itself, cognition of the world whose secondary expres-
sion is science.” (Jonkus, D.).
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The thesis of the fall of man or sin: the majority of religions in one
way or another talk about the beginning of human history being
marked by the fall of man. The assertion of sinfulness of man forms
peculiar anthropology of a human. Firstly, man and an under-
standing of man’s actions is burdened by guilt – human behaviour
inevitably becomes the object of moral valuation, hence human ac-
tions, intentions and goals are exclusively interpreted in categories
of good and evil. Secondly, human understanding is formed in the
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that No epoch knew as much about a human as the present one
and at the same time No epoch knew so little about a human as the
present one does. According to Heidegger, anthropology becomes
philosophical anthropology only if it is successful in uncovering
the essence of a human. Right from the beginning Heidegger ties
the examination of human being to the problem of human finitude:
“Finitude and the particularity of the question about it essentially
determine the internal form of transcendental analytics of the sub-
ject’s subjectivity.” (Jonkus, D.).
Thus Heidegger seeks to release philosophical anthropology from
a metaphysical veil and understand it as “fundamental ontology”, i. e.
reflect on a human “in the horizon of thinking about being.”
Language: what the ability to speak means to man and how this
ability relates to the realization of humanity. In his book The Hu-
man Situation Gerd Haeffner distinguishes three anthropological
functions of language.
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The representative function is, first of all, realized as the act of intro-
duction, presentation. Through language a person participating in
a conversation can be familiarized with that what cannot be known
without language. Another shocking understanding of language as
a representative function comes when the speaker himself tries to
understand how his own experiences become known to him, how
“thoughts get around in the mind”. Thanks to the representative
function of language things acquire form, sense and existence both
to the listener and the speaker.
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of his being in relation to the future and the past. Man does not
perceive his life ex nihilo; man originated from other men; man’s
creation is also a continuation and will also be carried on. There-
fore, man is a being in time, which exists and understands its ex-
istence as being in time, as being with the past and being towards
the future.
Topic: Body
Sub-topics:
Objectivist and Phenomenological Concept of a Human Body
Anthropological Role of a Body
Body and Intersubjectivity
Body – in all our everyday experiences our body most of the time
remains concealed, just like the dimension of the body itself. Even
though, as Merleau-Ponty notes, a body is an agent between us and
our world, the agent remains little talked about. “A body is a fun-
damental human attribute because a body, just as time or language,
constitutes all other phenomena. A body is not a separate realm of
human being but rather a way in which my self, the world and oth-
ers are given to me. Experiences of the self, the world, and the for-
eign are intertwined in the body” (Jonkus, D., Metodinė medžiaga
[Methodical Aid]).
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Both gender and ability of expression reveal that a body is not just
a simple thing in which I exist. A living body is not a formation of
molecules – it is a dimension of human life. Thanks to a body man
exists in the world, interacts with the world, and experiences the
world. Thanks to a body man is directed towards the Other. Thanks
to the ability of expression and ties with other bodies man is self-
expressive and understands these expressions. In summary, a body
is a dimension of human existence; saying that I have a body means
that the identity of “I” has a body.
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Fight: Heraclitus once said, “War is the father of all and king of all,
who manifested some as gods and some as men, who made some
slaves and some freemen.” War (power relations) is not a coinciden-
tal feature of human being; we are, as Fink said, fighters as much as
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