HUMAN NATURE IN CONFLICT. REFLECTIONS FROM A PHENOMENOLOGICAL AND PSYCHOANALYTICAL PERSPECTIVES
HUMAN NATURE IN CONFLICT. REFLECTIONS FROM A PHENOMENOLOGICAL AND PSYCHOANALYTICAL PERSPECTIVES
Author(s): Jagna BrudzińskaSubject(s): Philosophy, History of Philosophy
Published by: Instytut Filozofii i Socjologii Polskiej Akademii Nauk
Keywords: ambivalence; conflict; individuation; lifeworld; motivation; polarity; phenomenology; psychoanalysis
Summary/Abstract: This article tends to connect phenomenological research with the psychoanalytical approach by focusing on the issue of conflict as the crucial dimension of human nature and its dynamics. On this basis, it becomes clear that human nature cannot be explained through a strict causal schema; rather, it can be grasped by exploring the dynamic moti-vational structures of experience which are expressed in the ambivalent tensions and striving tendencies of persons as subjects of the lifeworld. I stress that conflict is not a mere additional and accidental characteristic of experience that can somehow be elim-inated, but it rather affects the fundamental structure of personal experience and should therefore be understood as a constitutive moment of human nature. Thereby, my claim is that both self-experience and the development of community can only be understood in the light of motivational conflicts.
Journal: Dialogue and Universalism
- Issue Year: 2016
- Issue No: 3
- Page Range: 41-57
- Page Count: 17
- Language: English
- Content File-PDF