A dialética Senhor-Escravo como chave hermenêutica em Bin Kimura
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.37067/rpfc.v10i1.1090Keywords:
Hegel, Schizophrenia, Bin Kimura, Self-ConsciousnessAbstract
The following study aims at seeking a Hegelian philosophical basis, explored in Phenomenology of the Spirit, towards self-consciousness and its genesis, in order to contextualize a structure that conceives consciousness not in a solipsistic base, but rather as a social construct, that apprehends the structure of otherness in its intimate nucleus, as in a struggle between antagonistic forces, each claiming recognition for itself, in the form of the allegory Master-Slave. From this basis, I exemplify empirically how this dynamic establishes itself, aiming at discussing schizophrenia, thru the perspective of Bin Kimura, whose schizophrenic clinical descriptions are, in many ways, close to this idea of a non-integrative clash of antagonistic forces. Finally, I try to conceive a parallel between Kimura's considerations on schizophrenia seen through a Hegelian perspective, gathering convergence and divergence between both authors.
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Copyright (c) 2021 Guilherme Ludovice Funaro

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