The Problem Of Objective and Subjective in Nagel’s Philosophy

Document Type : علمی پژوهشی

Author

Ferdowsi University of Mashhad

Abstract

Thomas Nagel is an outstanding modern philosopher whose writings cut across almost all the important branches of philosophy ranging from the philosophy of mind to political philosophy but the underlying unity of his philosophy stems from the fact that he analyses almost all philosophical issues in the context of the clash between the subjective and the objective perspectives. In his view, this clash leads to a series of philosophical problems that cannot be solved or properly understood without considering the subjective and the objective perspective. In this paper, I have tried to elucidate the way Nagel tackles the problem of the subjective and objective and the meaning of Nagelian objectification on the basis of his The View from Nowhere and The Last Word. I will show how we can distinguish two sorts of objectification in his thought: an objectification based on an objective self that transcends the limited individual perspective and an objectification based on structural features of human thought which sets epistemic limits on how we can think about the world or cast doubt on the foundations of knowledge. I have finally addressed the issue of whether this dual aspect of objectification and Nagel’s claim that we have to shift from one sort of objectification to another as we enter different areas of cognition is logically and philosophically coherent.

Keywords


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