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Who said i think therefore i am
Who said i think therefore i am








who said i think therefore i am

As the Kenyan-born philosopher John Mbiti put it in African Religions and Philosophy (1975): ‘I am because we are, and since we are, therefore I am.’ So the ‘self’/‘other’ distinction that’s axiomatic in Western philosophy is much blurrier in Ubuntu thought. People are born without ‘ ena’, or selfhood, and instead must acquire it through interactions and experiences over time. There is a Zulu phrase, ‘ Umuntu ngumuntu ngabantu ’, which means ‘A person is a person through other persons.’ This is a richer and better account, I think, than ‘I think, therefore I am.According to Ubuntu philosophy, which has its origins in ancient Africa, a newborn baby is not a person. But I think it’s a beautiful idea-and I want to end of the same note as Birhabe. But does that mean we don’t think of ourselves as anything more than our relationship with others? I’m not sure. It makes sense then that we answer questions about ourselves with information about how we relate to other people.

Who said i think therefore i am how to#

I worry we sometimes we get caught in a language game: when someone asks us about ourselves, they normally want to know how to relate to us. That all said, I’m not sure I’m sold on a vision of the self as fundamentally relational. In short, our descriptions of ourselves often invoke our relationships to other.

who said i think therefore i am

Rather, when asked “Who are you?” we answer “brother,” “daughter,” “friend,” “healer,” “teacher,” etc.

who said i think therefore i am

It seems like Birhane does indeed believe in the existence of the self however, she thinks this self does not exist independently, but rather arises from a matrix of relationships.ĭon't we see this when we answer the question “Who are you?” Must of us do not answer with Cogito ergo sum, or (for the naturalist or empirically-minded among us) hold up a scan of our brains. Some philosophers-particularly that peculiar “post-modern” breed (but also oldies like Hume)-have wondered whether the self even exists at all (a concept important to Buddhist thought). As the Kenyan-born philosopher John Mbiti put it in African Religions and Philosophy (1975): ‘I am because we are, and since we are, therefore I am.

who said i think therefore i am

She writes,Īccording to Ubuntu philosophy, which has its origins in ancient Africa, a newborn baby is not a person. But Birhane asks a question: what’s the role of other people in the self? Does the self really come from one person’s solitary mind-or do the people around us inform who we refer to when we use the word “I”?īirhane draws from Ubuntu and Zulu philosophy to describe how certain societies believe that the self comes (at least partially) from other people, not just the lonely individual. She writes about how this idea of a self-sufficient, solitary self informs so much of the modern world, including current-day psychology and neuroscience. In a recent article in Aeon, Abeba Birhane muses on how Descartes (and Western Philosophy more broadly) thinks of “I,” or the self, as something that appears in a internal mind of an individuals. At some point in the chain, the belief of an “I” pops up. For Sartre, there is first thought, and then consciousness of that thought, and then consciousness of that consciousness of that thought, etc. For there to be an “I,” doesn’t thought already have to have taken place? Maybe we should say “it thinks” in the same way we say “it rains,” and say that the idea of “I” only comes after this thinking.ĭiving down the rabbit hole, Sartre posited the existence of multiple different types of consciousness in Transcendence of the Ego. David Hume and Immanuel Kant questioned the “I” in I think, therefore I am. However, since Descartes, doubt has expanded. The Frenchman's theory-if I am thinking, I must also be existing-is foundational to modern philosophy. For Descartes, the Cogito formed the foundation of all other knowledge: in the depths of Meditations, as he doubts everything, the Cogito is the one truth of which Descartes is sure. The phrase "I think, therefore I am" or " Cogito ergo sum" might make Descartes the most-quoted philosopher of the last 400 years.










Who said i think therefore i am