Repository | Series | Buch | Kapitel
"We"
a linguistic and phenomenological analysis
pp. 215-245
Abstrakt
This essay has three major objectives. The first is to me the most urgent one. I believe that it is time to challenge the social arrogance expressed in the universal tendency to say "we," "us," and "our" when one has no business talking for anyone but oneself. This tendency is part of the "arrogance of power" behind the patronizing usurpation of the right to speak for the "free" people of the world, when they have never been asked, or the arrogant claim to speak for the "old" or the "new" generation, for "we philosophers," and even for "we phenomenologists." It is time to check on the credentials for such impostures.
Publication details
Published in:
Spiegelberg Herbert (1975) Doing Phenomenology: Essays on and in Phenomenology. Den Haag, Nijhoff.
Seiten: 215-245
DOI: 10.1007/978-94-010-1670-4_12
Referenz:
Spiegelberg Herbert (1975) "We": a linguistic and phenomenological analysis, In: Doing Phenomenology, Den Haag, Nijhoff, 215–245.