Human Identity
Claude Romano(Author)
Northwestern University Press
Will be published approx. on 16. November 2026
Book
Paperback/Softback
440 pages
979-8-89948-077-5 (ISBN)
Description
Examining philosophical views of human identity and calling for a shift in how we discuss this essential concept
The problem of identity is one of the most debated contemporary issues in philosophy and the social sciences. Human Identity does not approach this question from a sociological or political position but rather seeks to take a step away from the dominant approach in metaphysics and analytical philosophy, putting forward a dialogical concept of identity inspired mainly by the phenomenological-hermeneutic tradition. Claude Romano argues that the question of identity can only be satisfactorily formulated from the point of view of an intrinsically social understanding of the human being: The identity that matters in our lives is the one we can assume before others in truthful conduct and thus the one for which we can bear responsibility in the first person.
Romano carefully examines the full historical sweep of the philosophy of identity, referencing not only classic thinkers, including Descartes, Locke, Kant, and Husserl, but also contemporary interlocutors, such as Richard Moran and Charles Larmore. He engages in a sustained dialogue with these fellow philosophers, historical and current, while arguing for a complete paradigm shift in our approach to identity. Romano contends that we need to move on from the question Who?, as used by a prosecutor or judge to identify a guilty party, and instead look to the question used by Montaigne to define himself: Who am I?
The problem of identity is one of the most debated contemporary issues in philosophy and the social sciences. Human Identity does not approach this question from a sociological or political position but rather seeks to take a step away from the dominant approach in metaphysics and analytical philosophy, putting forward a dialogical concept of identity inspired mainly by the phenomenological-hermeneutic tradition. Claude Romano argues that the question of identity can only be satisfactorily formulated from the point of view of an intrinsically social understanding of the human being: The identity that matters in our lives is the one we can assume before others in truthful conduct and thus the one for which we can bear responsibility in the first person.
Romano carefully examines the full historical sweep of the philosophy of identity, referencing not only classic thinkers, including Descartes, Locke, Kant, and Husserl, but also contemporary interlocutors, such as Richard Moran and Charles Larmore. He engages in a sustained dialogue with these fellow philosophers, historical and current, while arguing for a complete paradigm shift in our approach to identity. Romano contends that we need to move on from the question Who?, as used by a prosecutor or judge to identify a guilty party, and instead look to the question used by Montaigne to define himself: Who am I?
Reviews / Votes
"Romano's discussion of color adds an entirely new and exciting dimension to the examination in attempting to clarify our understanding of human nature. The heated debates in our attempts to bring fresh insight to bear here have been greatly enlarged and enriched by Romano's new departure. He casts new and potentially exciting light on these debates by his startling new approach: his originality consists in revealing what new approaches are opened if you start from our understanding of colour. This book will transform the debates about human identity by opening exciting and fruitful new possibilities." -Charles Taylor, McGill University"After his history of selfhood in Etre soi-meme (2019), Claude Romano, one of the most productive hermeneuts of today, lays in this new book the groundwork for a conception of human identity that underlines its dialogical and social constitution. In the continuity of Heidegger, Ricoeur, and Taylor, it promotes an ethical view of ipseity that does not rest on the numerical permanence of the self, but on its responsibility, its strong commitments, and its truthfulness." -Jean Grondin, Universite de Montreal
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Evanston
United States
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 229 mm
Width: 152 mm
ISBN-13
979-8-89948-077-5 (9798899480775)
Copyright in bibliographic data is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or its licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Claude Romano is an associate professor at Sorbonne Universite and a professorial fellow at the Australian Catholic University. His many books include At the Heart of Reason (Northwestern University Press).
Samuel R. Webb teaches in the Great Books program at St. John's College.
Samuel R. Webb teaches in the Great Books program at St. John's College.
Content
Note on the Translation
Introduction
Part I: The Impasses of the Self
Chapter 1: The Wonder at Being Oneself
Chapter 2: The Invention of the Self
Chapter 3: Thinking Without the Self
Chapter 4: Self-Identity
Chapter 5: The Self and the Human Being
Chapter 6: The Bodily Self
Part II: Ipseity
Chapter 7: A New Paradigm
Chapter 8: The Question "Who?"
Chapter 9: Responsibility for Self
Chapter 10: Ipseity and Sociality
Chapter 11: The Interior and the Exterior
Chapter 12: Saving the Self?
Chapter 13: Ipseity and Authenticity
Notes
Bibliography
Introduction
Part I: The Impasses of the Self
Chapter 1: The Wonder at Being Oneself
Chapter 2: The Invention of the Self
Chapter 3: Thinking Without the Self
Chapter 4: Self-Identity
Chapter 5: The Self and the Human Being
Chapter 6: The Bodily Self
Part II: Ipseity
Chapter 7: A New Paradigm
Chapter 8: The Question "Who?"
Chapter 9: Responsibility for Self
Chapter 10: Ipseity and Sociality
Chapter 11: The Interior and the Exterior
Chapter 12: Saving the Self?
Chapter 13: Ipseity and Authenticity
Notes
Bibliography