Among other things, I am a mathematician and a Wacoan. It is moderately important to my self-image, my “identity”, that I practice mathematics and that I live in Waco. But there is an important difference between the two contributions. My identifying as a mathematician also includes a certain kind of “fellow feeling” towards other mathematicians qua mathematicians, a feeling of belonging in a group, a feeling as of being part of a “we”. But while I love living in Waco, I do not actually have a similar “fellow feeling” towards other Wacoans qua Wacoans , a feeling as of being part of a “we” (perhaps I should). It’s just that I do not exemplify the civic friendship that Aristotle talks about.
An initial way of putting the distinction is this:
- identifying with one’s possession of a quality versus identifying with being a member of the group of people who possess the quality.
This correctly highlights the fact that self-identification is hyperintensional, but it’s not quite right. Two finalists for some distinction can identify with being a member of the group of people who are finalists, and yet they need not—but can—have a “we”-type identification with this group.
It seems to me that the distinction I am after cannot be captured by egocentric facts about property possession. The “we”-type of identification is not a self-identification of oneself as having a certain quality. It seems to me that we have two different logical grammars of self-identification:
- (a) identifying with one’s possession of a quality versus (b) identifying with the group of people who possess the quality.
I think some people go more easily from (a) to (b), and some people—including me—go less easily.
I wonder if it is possible to have (b) without (a). I don’t know, but I suspect one can. It may be that some herd animals have something like (b) without having anything like (a). So why couldn’t humans?
I think the move from (a) to (b) tends to be a good thing, as it is expressive of the good of sociality.
There are also second- and third-person analogues to (2):
- (a) identifying a person with their possession of a quality versus (b) identify them with the group of people who possess the quality.
Regarding (b), I am reminded of Robert Nozick’s remark that people in romantic relationships want to be acknowledged as part of a “we”. In other words, people in romantic relationships want second- and third-person identification of them as part of the pair (a kind of group) of people in the particular relationship. I wonder if that’s possible without (a). Again, I am not sure.
I think 3(a) and 3(b) have a potential for being dangerous. One thinks of stereotyping here.
I think 2(a) and 2(b) also have a potential for danger, albeit a different one. The danger is that both kinds of self-identification lead to an inflexibility with respect to the quality or community. But sometimes we need to change qualities or communities, or they are changed on us. I suppose 2(a) and 2(b) are not so problematic with respect to qualities or groups that one ought to maintain oneself as having or belonging to (e.g., virtue or the Church).
Self-identification is a way in which one controls how one is perceived by an audience.
ReplyDeleteThe thoughts are scattered because the hinge that self-identification hangs upon is the belief in a private-language... and a private-language is an illusion; hence the scattered thoughts
If this were not the case it would not be possible for the Holy Spirit to interact.