Thursday, September 19, 2019
What It Is To Be Human :: essays research papers
What It Is To Be Human    The body is socially constructed; and in this paper we explore the various and  ever-changing constructions of the body, and thus of the embodied self......The  one word, body, may therefore signify very different realities and perceptions  of reality.....(Synnot 1992, 43)    It has been said that in order to understand life and society, we as  people must first understand ourselves. Who are we as a people? Who are we as  individuals? Who are we as humans? These questions all present themselves when  discussing a topic such as this. I believe that it is indeed important to ask  questions such as these, and also as important to answer them. All of this  assuming of course, that there is one specific answer. My problem begins here,  in that I do not believe that there is one defined answer to these questions.  As you will see, many "great philosophic minds" have different views and beliefs  relating to these questions, and it is my job to sort through these different  beliefs and discover...... What it is to be human         It seems that for ages the human body has been studied and inspected.  However, literal "inspection" only takes us so far. As humans, we all know that  there are parts of our "being" that are intangible. Take thoughts, dreams, and  things of the like. We know they exist, yet they are unable to be inspected  scientifically (to any valuable degree at least). The distinction between  beliefs begins here. How one views this intangible side of life with respect to  the tangible, is the factor that defines one's beliefs.         There are several ways in which one may view the body. A dualist is one  who views the body and mind, or tangible and intangible, as two separate  intities existing together to form one being. The principle of "Cogito, ergo  sum," or in english, "I think, therefore I am." The "I" meaning the mind, and  "I am" meaning the body. (Synnott 1992, 92) The tangible side of the person  being bound of course, by the laws of biomechanics and gravity, and the  intangible being bound by nothing but the laws of reasoning.  ".....the body, from its nature, is always divisible and the mind is completely  indivisible." (Descartes 1995, 70)         Like anything, dualism comes with its pro's and con's. Many people  choose to believe in the idea of dualism because of its truths. Obviously, we  can all see that indeed, the body is real and tangible, and that the mind on the  other hand is the intangible, although it too is real. Likewise, as evidence of  dualism we have undoubtedly felt the physical as well as the non-physical.  					    
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