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  1. Sources of the Self: The Making of the Modern Identity is a work of philosophy by Charles Taylor, published in 1989 by Harvard University Press. It is an attempt to articulate and to write a history of the "modern identity".

    • R. A. Sharpe, Charles Taylor
    • 624
    • 1989
    • 1989
  2. 1. März 1992 · Harvard University Press. Philosophy. In this extensive inquiry into the sources of modern selfhood, Charles Taylor demonstrates just how rich and precious those resources are. The modern turn to subjectivity, with its attendant rejection of an objective order of reason, has led—it seems to m...

  3. Review of Charles Taylor's Sources of the Self Nate Teske Charles Taylor. Sources of the Seif: The Making of Modern Identity. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1989. This is a big book about big ideas that encompass broad sweeps of time. It is definitely part of recent ethical and social philosophy that has been

  4. Charles Taylor’s Sources of the Self has at least two objectives. On the one hand, it traces the historical sources of the modern understanding of selfhood. On the other hand, and perhaps more important, Sources of the Self aims to contribute to the reconstruction of that same under-standing of selfhood. Specifically, it promotes the view ...

  5. 22. Nov. 2020 · Die in Sources of the Self formulierte Kritik am neuzeitlichen Individualismus, Utilitarismus oder der prozeduralen Ethik führte innerhalb der Philosophie, Theologie, Sozial-, Politik- und Humanwissenschaften zu Diskussionen, die im weitesten Sinne im Kontext einer inhaltlichen oder substantiellen Theorie des Guten geführt werden.

  6. This chapter examines Taylor’s arguments as articulated in Sources of the Self, especially his view that human beings are self-interpreting and self-misinterpreting animals and that self-interpretation has ontological significance.

  7. 1. März 2012 · Taylor focuses on three areas of ethical commitment and self-definition that are central to the western European tradition: the development through history of a sense of “inwardness” and its connection with our emerging notions of individuality and selfhood; what Taylor calls “the affirmation of ordinary life,” or the development of the idea tha...