Individual Narrative and Political Character

Review of Metaphysics 55 (4):691 - 709 (2002)
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Abstract

CONSIDER THE PROBLEM OF INTEGRITY: we all aspire to be true to ourselves, to be today what we were yesterday, to fulfill our promises. One way of addressing the need for integrity, the need to be a whole person, is to think about what it would take to make an intelligible narrative out of one’s experiences. As Charles Taylor writes, “It has often been remarked that making sense of one’s life as a story is... not an optional extra; that our lives exist also in this space of questions, which only a coherent narrative can answer.” What is intelligible about a human life, on this view, is its life story.

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Michael Kochin
Tel Aviv University

Citations of this work

Friendship Beyond Reason.Michael S. Kochin - 2023 - The European Legacy 28 (8):807-821.
From Argument to Assertion.Michael S. Kochin - 2009 - Argumentation 23 (3):387-396.

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