Soul, subject and person : a brief history of western humanism
Keywords: 
Soul
Person
Subject
Nature
Humanism
Freedom
Production
Issue Date: 
2019
Publisher: 
Catholic Institute, Faculty of Law and Business Studies
ISSN: 
2464-0344
Editorial note: 
The authors are permitted and encouraged to post published articles on their personal or institutional website, with a clear indication that the paper was published in this journal and with a link to the journal’s website.
Citation: 
Murillo, José Ignacio (2019). Soul, subject and person. Res novae, vol.4, issue 1, str. 7-29
Abstract
The history of Western humanism is marked by the emergence of philosophy as a theoretical way for investigating reality. Philosophy studies human beings in connection with the ultimate foundation of reality. Within Western thought, the tradition associated with this kind of research has forged three basic ways of conceiving of human beings’ most radical and distinctive features: man as rational soul, as a self-conscious subject, and as a person. All three are based on important theoretical discoveries, but their coexistence has not always been exactly peaceful. Given that human beings cannot live without self-knowledge, the way we see ourselves has important socio-cultural and ethical consequences, which broaden our view of human beings, bringing to light previously hidden features of humanity. Attempting to recover and make sense of the diverse notions of what it is to be a human being is especially important when the very notion of being human is blurred and its normative value is threatened.

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