The Pregnant Self

Pregnancy, a human phenomenon experienced throughout the world and throughout history, has been largely ignored by the philosophical community. A preference for the abnormal and the extraordinary has left this common yet challenging process on the sidelines of philosophical discussion. Pregnancy...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Sherwood, Rosilee
Language:en
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10012/4787
id ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-OWTU.10012-4787
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-OWTU.10012-47872013-10-04T04:09:40ZSherwood, Rosilee2009-10-02T16:03:45Z2009-10-02T16:03:45Z2009-10-02T16:03:45Z2009http://hdl.handle.net/10012/4787Pregnancy, a human phenomenon experienced throughout the world and throughout history, has been largely ignored by the philosophical community. A preference for the abnormal and the extraordinary has left this common yet challenging process on the sidelines of philosophical discussion. Pregnancy stands as a significant challenge to many of our intuitions about the self, particularly those concerning the boundaries, plurality and diachronic identity of the self. Because of this, pregnancy necessitates a theory of the self which does not merely uphold our usual assumptions about the self. Daniel Dennett presents a theory of the self which meets this criterion. He argues that the self is a centre of narrative gravity: an abstract, theoretical entity which is useful for the explanation and prediction of an individual’s behaviour. Dennett’s theory, though provocative, lacks a basis in typical human experience. He relies primarily on thought experiments and extraordinary conditions to support his theory. To demonstrate the applicability and generality of this theory, it must be tested against a common, natural human occurrence like pregnancy. In this paper we explore the application of Daniel Dennett’s theory of the narrative self to the experience of pregnancy. This application yields a double result. Dennett’s theory is bolstered by a demonstration of its generality and applicability, and the experience of pregnancy is placed into a context in which it can be validated and understood.enpregnancyselfDennettnarrative selfdiachronic identityplural selfboundaries of the selfThe Pregnant SelfThesis or DissertationPhilosophyMaster of ArtsPhilosophy
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic pregnancy
self
Dennett
narrative self
diachronic identity
plural self
boundaries of the self
Philosophy
spellingShingle pregnancy
self
Dennett
narrative self
diachronic identity
plural self
boundaries of the self
Philosophy
Sherwood, Rosilee
The Pregnant Self
description Pregnancy, a human phenomenon experienced throughout the world and throughout history, has been largely ignored by the philosophical community. A preference for the abnormal and the extraordinary has left this common yet challenging process on the sidelines of philosophical discussion. Pregnancy stands as a significant challenge to many of our intuitions about the self, particularly those concerning the boundaries, plurality and diachronic identity of the self. Because of this, pregnancy necessitates a theory of the self which does not merely uphold our usual assumptions about the self. Daniel Dennett presents a theory of the self which meets this criterion. He argues that the self is a centre of narrative gravity: an abstract, theoretical entity which is useful for the explanation and prediction of an individual’s behaviour. Dennett’s theory, though provocative, lacks a basis in typical human experience. He relies primarily on thought experiments and extraordinary conditions to support his theory. To demonstrate the applicability and generality of this theory, it must be tested against a common, natural human occurrence like pregnancy. In this paper we explore the application of Daniel Dennett’s theory of the narrative self to the experience of pregnancy. This application yields a double result. Dennett’s theory is bolstered by a demonstration of its generality and applicability, and the experience of pregnancy is placed into a context in which it can be validated and understood.
author Sherwood, Rosilee
author_facet Sherwood, Rosilee
author_sort Sherwood, Rosilee
title The Pregnant Self
title_short The Pregnant Self
title_full The Pregnant Self
title_fullStr The Pregnant Self
title_full_unstemmed The Pregnant Self
title_sort pregnant self
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/10012/4787
work_keys_str_mv AT sherwoodrosilee thepregnantself
AT sherwoodrosilee pregnantself
_version_ 1716600297253502976