
Contents
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(1) A Suburban Existence (1) A Suburban Existence
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(2) Demarcating the Phenomenon and Defining its Characteristics (2) Demarcating the Phenomenon and Defining its Characteristics
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(3) Interpretations: A Dynamic of its Own and Rigidification (3) Interpretations: A Dynamic of its Own and Rigidification
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A Dynamic of its Own A Dynamic of its Own
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Heteronomy and Alienation Heteronomy and Alienation
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Rigidification Rigidification
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(4) Objections (4) Objections
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The Unforeseeable Nature of the Consequences of Actions The Unforeseeable Nature of the Consequences of Actions
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Constitutive Rigidification Constitutive Rigidification
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(5) Recapitulation (5) Recapitulation
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5 Seinesgleichen Geschieht or “The Like of It Now Happens”: The Feeling of Powerlessness and the Independent Existence of One’s Own Actions
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Published:August 2014
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Abstract
This chapter explores one aspect of self-alienation: the phenomenon of one's own actions taking on an independent existence and the resultant feeling of powerlessness. It argues that, when our life falls into a dynamic of its own, we are just as alienated from ourselves as when our own actions ossify into structures over which we no longer have command. In these cases we can no longer understand ourselves as authors of our own actions. The chapter begins by considering a situation that illustrates the feeling of powerlessness before expounding on the specific problem of this form of self-alienation by distinguishing it from other possible interpretations. It then interprets the phenomenon as a specific form of not being present in our own actions, with particular emphasis on the phenomenon of rigidification that ultimately leads to what might be called the masking of practical questions. It also discusses objections that can be brought against this interpretation and concludes by proposing a conception of self-alienation as a form of loss of control that does not, however, depend on an unrealistic ideal of self-mastery.
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