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When word spread that Paul Ricoeur was coming out with a book titled Oneself as Another,[1]
those who work on intersubjectivity got understandably excited. Here a major twentieth century philosopher,
who had already started to articulate an account of an intersubjectivity constituted self—the narrative self—
was coming out with a work explicitly on intersubjectivity. It was not to be; however it is hard to feel
disappointed about a work which is rightly being considered his magnum opus. It brings together all the great
themes of Ricoeur’s past works—narrative, action, metaphor, time, even evil—uniting them with new and
important ethical and political theorizing. Here I will present not so much what I wish Ricoeur would have
written under the title Oneself as Another, but what Oneself as Another can contribute to our understanding
of that crucial form of alterity: alterity across (and within) subjects, intersubjectivity. As such I will be directly
responding to Frederick Olafson’s criticism that “These [studies] do not seem to me to contribute much, if
anything, to an understanding of the ethical import of Mitsein.”[2]
Oneself as Another reads like a work late in a career. Some discussions are extremely truncated,
with footnotes sending the reader off to other books written by Ricoeur; other discussions—new
engagements with new themes or new thinkers—are meticulously spelled out. It’s as if one were
accompanying an experienced botanist on a nature walk, some plants seen over and over are past by briefly,
while others bring the tour to an abrupt halt, sometimes even leaving the path to explore something not seen
before eventually returning to the main stream more enriched (though not always clear why that particular
detour was the detour you just took). So as we map out ourselves Ricoeur’s terrain of themes of
intersubjectivity, at times our discussions will be must briefer than his, and at other times it will involve our
own detours into other works for clarification. What we will find is someone committed to taking seriously the
various, and sometimes aporetic phenomena of the self and the other but also committed to find a way to
render the phenomena intelligible. Where other thinkers might make their task easier by dismissing various
experiences of alterity as simply misleading, Ricoeur wants to save as much of the phenomena as he can.
Ricoeur’s strength has always been the recognition of the legitimacy of seemingly conflicting views and the
elevation of that inconsistency as something which needs to be thought. Only by steadfastly refusing to be
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reductionist, refusing to dismiss one aspect of the inconsistency as utterly ill-founded, can Ricoeur’s approach
of following the aporias make sense. Not only does he acknowledge the various views, and thus the aporias,
he thinks them through, finds a way to organize them and introduces concepts not necessarily to dispel the
problem but to make its intractability more clear and intellectually fertile.
The aporia at the heart of our discussion is an application of the classic “one/many problem”—how
do we remain the same throughout all our physical and psychological changes. But unlike many or most other
attempts to explain this, Ricoeur embraces the paradox and argues that, in a sense, the self is split. Confusion
arises as we conflate two distant notions of identity when reflecting on self-identity. There is numerical identity
—being one and not many—, and qualitative identity—being substitutable; both are identity in the sense of
sameness. Using the Latin term, Ricoeur refers to this as idem-identity. Idem identity also includes the genetic
identity which drives change over time and across development making it possible, for example, to identify an
acorn at one time with an oak tree later. But as everyone immediately recognizes when personal identity gets
articulated solely in terms of physical or metaphysical continuity, idem-identity does not give us guidance for
answering one crucial question of identity, “Who am I?” The answer to that question is ipse-identity: selfhood.
In contrast to idem-identity, ipse-identity is not dependent on something permanent for its existence. That is,
having a self over time does not necessitate having something the same, something perhaps metaphysical
which grounds the identity of self.
Ricoeur claims that the difference is particularly apparent in cases of promise keeping. In making a
decision to keep a promise, we vow to remain to the same across change.[3] There is nothing which grounds
this identity besides (or perhaps behind) the fact of keeping the promise; and the promise can be kept even if
one changes dramatically. If the ability to keep a promise is that which reveals the difference between idem-
and ipse-identity, character reveals how interrelated they can appear. Character is “the set of distinctive
marks which permit the reidentification of a human being as the same. By the descriptive features that will be
given, the individual compounds numerical identity and qualitative identity, uninterrupted continuity and
permanence in time.”[4] Character belongs to idem identity. The awareness that we can take up a stand
towards our character, preserving it, strengthening it, and revising it reveals the connection to ipse identity. But
these attitudes towards our character are themselves implicated in our character so the dialectical relation
between idem-identity and ipse-identity is particularly apparent here. Character is ipse becoming idem, but
idem-identity is only recognized as possessing certain traits appearing in certain ways, reflecting certain values,
that is, as a product of our character.
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I introduced Ricoeur’s distinction between the two notions of identity for a couple of reasons—it
shows Ricoeur’s willingness to take seriously all the phenomena, even if they are aporetic and it starts to
reveal his notion of personal identity which is necessary to understand his account of the role the other plays in
identity—but in addition, through the concept of character, we can enter into a discussion of the first element
of Ricoeur’s account of intersubjectivity. Character, for Ricoeur, gets a significant portion of its meaning from
the theory of narrative. Character draws its potential for simultaneous unity and diversity, for simultaneous
“concordance” and “discordance”, from its essentially narratival nature. “The identity of character emploted,
so to speak, can only be understood in terms of this dialectic [of concordance and discordance]. ... The
narrative constructs the identity of the character, what can be called his or her identity, in constructing the
story told. It is the identity of the story which makes the identity of the character.”[5] Narrative identity is the
identity of character; it’s also the identity which bridges idem and ipse. The concept of narrative identity first
emerged at the end of Volume Three of Time and Narrative (Ricoeur has since called it the “principle
achievement” of the work[6]) where it served to mediate lived time and cosmological time.[7] Its development
was the motivation for Oneself as Another and takes up a significant (in space and importance) amount of
the book. For our purposes we need only focus on the intersubjective elements of the narrative identity,
numerous as they are.
We are subjects in others’ stories, others are subjects in our stories; others are authors of our
stories, we are authors of others’ stories. Our narratives are essentially interwoven with other narratives. We
are characters in other narratives—we are our parents’ child, our partner’s partner, our friends’ friend—and
they are characters in our narratives. Also, through our discussions and interactions with others we facilitate
the articulation and direction of their narratives, and they ours. All this is to say that our identity is never simply
our own. It is embedded with relations with others and we do not have ultimate control over the nature of
recognition. In a recent essay he presents three “models for the integration of identity and alterity according
to an increasing order of spiritual density.”[9] Although he only presents one model this way, they all can be
considered varieties of ways recognition can operate in the in the context of narrative identity. The first model
is translation. By translating another ideas into one’s own terms—an activity Ricoeur claims must always be
held to be in principle possible—we do not simply appropriate the other, we elevate ourselves through a
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respect for the worldview of the other. Translation is “a matter of living with the other in order to take the
other to one’s home as a guest . . . In this sense we can speak of a translation ethos whose goal would be to
repeat at the cultural and spiritual level the gesture of linguistic hospitality.”[10] Hospitality as a welcoming and
respecting is also a form of recognition and a means of integrating narratives. Through it we acknowledge and
welcome other stories in turn opening up possibilities for our story to be realized differently.
The second model Ricoeur calls “the exchange of memories.” One way others are co-authors of
our narrative is through sharing stories about ourselves about which we were unaware. The obvious examples
are stories which reveal what we were like as a young child and stories which reveal unrealized effects of our
actions. Invoking and sharing memories arises out of “narrative hospitality.” The activity brings to life anew the
past in a way that refashions one’s narrative identity. But to bring up the past for the sake of re-legitimating its
function in the present is to recognize the legitimacy of the narrative of the other. “A new ethos is born of the
understanding applied to the complex intertwining of new stories which structure and configure the crossroads
between memories. It is a matter there of a genuine task, a genuine labor, in which we could identify the
Anerkennung of German Idealism, that is, of ‘recognition’ considered in its narrative dimension.”[11]
Individual memories are shared, but there is also cultural memory which informs the individual character.
Bringing these shared memories to life for one another is not simply one way by which we are co-authors of
one another’s narrative identities, it is a way we facilitate the legitimation of the narratives.
The third model is “spiritually deeper” still: “the model of forgiveness.” One specific way of sharing
memories goes beyond simply recognition. Forgiveness enables one’s character for the present by freeing it of
its obligations from the past. Invoking memory could be a way of recalling debt; it could function to remind
someone of an unfulfilled promise and of the continual demands of justice. Forgiveness goes beyond justice to
charity, beyond recognition to the gift “whose logic of superabundance exceeds the logic of reciprocity.”[12]
It frees the other not from the effects of the past, but from the debts of the past. Forgiveness makes possible
a new future. In contrast translation makes possible a shared present, and exchanging memory makes
possible a more firmly established narrative. By being a gift of new possibilities, forgiveness remains the most
benevolent form of hospitality and shows the extent to which the intersubjective constitution of narrative
identity opens up the space for ethics.
Ricoeur’s narrative identity, then, provides us a starting point for appreciating the intersubjective
elements of personal identity. But, one might claim, he has not given us anything more than Alasdair
MacIntyre or Charles Taylor have before him. Indeed if this were the extent of his contribution, we may be
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forced to agree with Olafson that not much new has been presented here, even including the three models of
recognition. But this is not all there is to say about the relation of identity and alterity as presented in Oneself
as Another. Really, the most obvious discussion in the book is still in front of us. In the tenth study, “What
Ontology in View?”, Ricoeur takes up the work of “otherness at the heart of selfhood.”[13] Here is where he
develops his thesis that alterity is “polysemic”—that alterity is irreducible to the alterity of other persons.
To get at ontology we need an appropriate approach. Ricoeur submits that the phenomenology of
passivity is the means to the consideration of the ontology of alterity: “passivity becomes the attestation of
otherness.”[14]
I suggest as a working hypothesis what could be called the triad of passivity and hence of
otherness. First there is the passivity represented by the experience of one’s own body—or
better, as we shall say later, of the flesh—as the mediator between the self and a world which
is itself taken in accordance with its variable degrees of practicability and foreignness. Next
we find the passivity implied by that relation of the self to the foreign, in the precise sense of
the other (than) self, and so the otherness inherent in the relation of intersubjectivity. Finally
we have the most deeply hidden passivity, that of the relation of the self to itself, which is
conscience in the sense of Gewissen rather than Bewusstsein.[15]
Following Ricoeur we should be careful not to reduce each dimension of passivity, and thus alterity, to one
another. To appreciate their nuances we need to treat them one at a time.
Ricoeur gives credit to Maine de Biran, Gabriel Marcel, Maurice Merleau-Ponty and Michel Henry
for recognizing the body as a locus of alterity, but he focuses his discussion on the insights of Maine de Biran
and Edmund Husserl. Maine de Biran initially noticed the passivity that comes first from the bodily resistance
to intentions, second from debilitating bodily illness, and third from the body as the location of external
resistance. In short, the body does not always collaborate with our plans. Beyond these passivities of the
body, however, is the general alterity realized in Husserl’s distinction between the body as Leib—the lived
body—and the body as Körper—the objectified body. The lived body is the occasion for all passive
constitution in response to which the ego constitutes. It is not simply that which occurs to us unwillingly, but
that which precedes the distinction between the voluntary and the involuntary. It therefore constitutes an
otherness at our most ownmost level independent of relations to others. Only once the body becomes
realized as a body among others, and the subject becomes recognized as a subject with and in a world, do
the intersubjective elements show themselves. But then they are not a condition for the alterity of the body,
but vice versa. It’s because of the alterity of the body that the alterity of the other self emerges.
But that is not to say that the alterity of other selves is reducible to the alterity of the body. The
second passivity, the passivity of the other self, receives typically Ricoeurean treatment. In order to
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incorporate the strengths of both sides of the debate, Ricoeur detours through extended analyses of Husserl’s
account of analogical apperception (as presented in the Cartesian Meditations), and Levinas’ account of the
“face of the other.” Husserl’s account is the paradigm of a intersubjective relation organized from self to other;
Levinas’ is a paradigm of an intersubjective relation organized from other to self. Ricoeur gives Husserl credit
for establishing passive synthesis as the site of our awareness of the other self (“The transfer by which my
flesh forms a pair with another flesh is a prereflexive, predicative synthesis—the most primitive perhaps, and
one that is found intertwined with all the other ‘passive syntheses’”[16]), but he argues that Husserl’s account
presupposes otherness rather than establishing it. Against Levinas, although he claims there is an important
role for methodological hyperbole —“the systematic practice of excess in philosophical argument”[17]—in this
case it has led to the occlusion of any account of the Self as opposed to the Same. (His conclusion is “that it is
impossible to construct this dialectic [of the Same and the Other] in a unilateral manner”[18] either solely from
self to other or from other to self. Ricoeur proposes that each direction performs a specific function. The
direction from self to other structures the epistemic awareness of the other as an embodied ego while the
direction from other to self structures the call to moral responsibility. “One unfolds in the gnoseological
dimension of sense, the other in the ethical dimension of injunction.”[19] The other calls us to respond to its
The third passivity is the call of conscience. Ricoeur recognizes that this is a suspect term, but still
intends to defend its claim as a legitimate site of alterity. To do so requires withstanding the Nietzschean
objection that conscience is corrupted by its connection to bad conscience, the objection that conscience
does not belong to the realm of the other but the realm of the same, and finally the objection that the origin of
conscience is nothing different from the face of the other (or perhaps the Freudian super-ego). Against the
first charge, Ricoeur locates a more fundamental feature of conscience—its connection to a form of self-
awareness which gives us to ourselves though not as an explicit presentation. “Conscience is, in truth, that
place par excellence in which illusions about oneself are intimately bound up with attestation.”[20] We will
give this phenomenon of “attestation” our full attention below, for now Ricoeur simply points out that
attestation always is accompanied by self-suspicion (rather than self-doubt or self-falsity) and therefore may
be the locus for the understanding of the possible alterity of a call of conscience which precedes the distinction
between good and bad conscience. The question, though, is whether this attestative conscience really serves
as a form of passivity and thus as a presence of otherness in the self. Appealing to Heidegger’s account of
conscience, Ricoeur claims that the call of conscience originates in something other than oneself. Quoting
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Heidegger he says conscience is a “calling forth and summoning us to being-guilty [being-in-debt].”[21] That is
to say, conscience contains an injunction to respond, to attest to ourselves in the presence of another. He
writes “conscience appears as the inner assurance that, in some particular circumstance, sweeps away doubt,
hesitation, the suspicion of inauthenticity, hypocrisy, self-compliance, and self-deception, and authorizes the
acting and suffering human being to say: here I am.”[22] “Here I am” is the call Levinas most cherishes; the
response Abraham gives to God. But one can sense in Ricoeur’s connection to attestation that he also has
something like Luther’s “here I stand” in mind as, contrary to Levinas’ emphasis, conscience facilitates a form
of self-assertion. The question then remains from whom or from where does this injunction arise. Is it the face
of the other that calls, or God—perhaps God as the absolute Other?—or the super-ego? Ricoeur concludes,
in what I believe is the most powerful sentence in the book,
Perhaps the philosopher as philosopher has to admit that one does not know and cannot say
whether this Other, the source of the injunction, is another person whom I can look in the face
or who can stare at me, or my ancestors for whom there is no representation, to so great an
extent does my debt to them constitute my very self, or God—living God, absent God—or an
empty place. With this aporia of the Other, philosophical discourse comes to an end.[23]
Ricoeur’s agnosticism is fully in line with his spirit of acknowledgment of the varieties of alterity. His
agnosticism here, however, shares an ethical spirit with Levinas. To ask the source of the injunction is to do
something other than what we are called to do, namely respond to the call and, in the process, attest.
The term attestation is a crucial one for Ricoeur. At one point in a footnote he says it is “the
password for this entire book.”[24] He closes the introduction with an extended discussion of the concept,
and then develops it throughout the book returning to it in the concluding Tenth Study. The Tenth Study itself
has three parts: the Ontological Commitment of Attestation, Selfhood and Ontology—which is connected to
attestation “inasmuch as attestation can be identified with the assurance each person has of existing as the
same in the sense of ipseity, of selfhood”[25]—, and Selfhood and Otherness—the content of which we’ve
repeated and which is inaugurated with the claim that “passivity becomes the attestation of otherness.”[26] So
“attestation” eventually becomes the central ontological category of Ricoeur’s theory of the self as (an) other.
Up to now Ricoeur’s contribution to theories of intersubjectivity is best captured in his own phrase,
“the polysemy of otherness.” Alterity is recognized and distinguished in all its forms taking care not to reduce
them to one another if inappropriate. Narrative identity is rich with intersubjective elements and provides for a
nuanced understanding of forms of recognition. The phenomenology of passivity reveals more alterity within
ipseity through flesh, the other self, and conscience. Each passivity has intersubjective elements, but no
passivity is reducible to intersubjectivity. What we get from Ricoeur, then, is a careful proliferation—a virtual
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taxonomy—of alterity. And this carefulness is rare in such discussions. He writes, “Why insist on the
polysemic character of otherness? Essentially in order to warn against an uncriticized reduction that would
conceal the difficulties attending the passage from metaphysics to ethics.”[27] But its certainly debatable
whether this constitutes an original contribution to “an understanding of the ethical import of Mitsein”, rather
than a simply a plea to take all views seriously. An analysis of the role of attestation in the intersubjective
constitution of subjectivity closes the debate. Here Ricoeur has focused in on something genuinely original
among the theories of intersubjectivity and something deeply compelling.
One might be suspicious, however, about treating Ricoeur’s account of attestation as fundamentally
including an account of intersubjectivity. It would appear to the contrary that it belongs to a theory of
subjectivity, and a classical one at that. Ricoeur introduces the concept by saying
attestation can be defined as the assurance of being oneself acting and suffering. This
assurance remains the ultimate recourse against all suspicion; even if it is always in some sense
received from another, it still remains self-attestation. It is self-attestation that at every level—
linguistic, praxis, narrative and prescriptive—will preserve the question “who?” from being
replace by questions of “what?” and “why?” Conversely, at the center of the aporia, only the
persistence of the question “who?”—in a way laid bare for lack of a response—will reveal
itself to be the impregnable refuge for attestation.[28]
As the assurance against all suspicion, which always answers the who-question and is reveled as such through
a determined asking of the who-question, Ricoeur’s concept of attestation sounds remarkably like a Cartesian
subject (which limits the possibility of complete doubt, always answers the who-question, and is revealed
through hyperbolically questioning one own existence). Rather than an aporia, Ricoeur would seem to haven
given us a transcendental subject posited to hold the ground against those post-modern theorists who think
that the proper question is not one of subjectivity, but of the conditions of subjectivity, the “what?” and the
“why?”
Ricoeur is of course conscious of this concern and develops attestation explicitly as an alternative to
the Cartesian ego and in such a way that he believes it will forestall the post-modern dissolution of the subject.
This of course is not a unique project,[29] but Ricoeur’s has more plausibility than the others as he builds the
impetus for the suspicion of the self into the very concept of attestation. In typically conciliatory fashion,
Ricoeur’s criticism of dismissals of the subject is not so much that they’ve wholly misunderstood the subject,
but that they’ve honed in too exclusively on one feature of the subject—the absence of self-certainty. The
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needs to be explicitly contrasted with episteme. Attestation reveals something—in that sense it belongs to
truth as aletheia—but it doesn’t posit a foundation a principle, a proposition which can be the basis for
justifying other beliefs. It is a belief, but a “belief in...” rather than a “belief that....” Rather than a conviction, it
is a trust: “a trust in the power to say, in the power to do, in the power to recognize oneself as a character in a
narrative, in the power, finally, to respond to an accusation.”[30] That is, attestation is the sense of the self
which testifies to the “I can” across linguistic, pragmatic and ethical contexts.
Consider a linguistic context. We become aware of the unique position of attestation when we
reflect on Wittgensteinian examples of feeling an ascribing pain. Could there be a criterion for feeling pain?
No, claims Ricoeur with Wittgenstein. Which is not to say you couldn’t be wrong about being in pain. The
important point is that there is a form of self-awareness which does not involve propositional self-ascription.
Attestation is not something one justifies or refutes. Doubt then, is not the proper response. We can’t doubt
the truth of the claim, as properly speaking no truth claim is made in attestation, but we can still be suspicious
of it veracity. “Veracity”, in this sense, “is not truth in the sense of adequation of knowledge to its object.”[31]
Rather it is something closer to self-commitment. Legitimating suspicion over against doubt definitively
differentiates Ricoeur’s account of attestation from Descartes’ cogito. We never doubt that we are capable of
acting, of using language or of responding to a moral injunction, but we may at times suspect our ability to do
so. And moreover we may at time suspect that we are the source of our meanings, our actions, or our
responsibility. The attested-to self is fragile. It is fragile not only because its conditions are themselves always
suspect, but because its unity across contexts is suspect. These suspicions are what motivates Nietzschean
dismissals of subjectivity, but suspicion shares a unique epistemic status with attestation. Suspicion “is not
simply the contrary of attestation...[but] also the path towards, the crossing within attestation. It haunts
attestation.”[32] As suspicion belongs to attestation, so is our relation to our attested-to self always
hermeneutic, always in need on interpretation. Ricoeur here shows that the hermeneutics of suspicion is itself a
hermeneutics of the self, precisely because the self—as ipse, and as attested to—remains always already
bound in the dialectic of same and other. Suspicion is the mark of the other in the self and the clue to the
to the affirmation of oneself as an acting (and suffering) being.”[33] But since it is the affirmation of oneself, and
it is not an empty affirmation but is of the self as acting and suffering, attestation has ontological implications
as well. That is, it tell us something fundamental about the nature of the self as an agent, as susceptible to
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effects, as fragile and also as open to suspicion. It is here that we can fully appreciate the intersubjective
dimensions of attestation—the presence of alterity in ipseity. After all, “what is ultimately attested to is
selfhood, at once in its difference with respect to sameness and in its dialectical relation to otherness.”[34] The
question really is why attestation gives the self in its otherness and not simply in its sameness. The latter would
be a reasonable view, a version of Cartesian certainly where we are given to ourselves as same, and our
alterity comes from our exposure to others. But Ricoeur claims that alterity stands in an internal relation to the
self, therefore attestation as attestation of self, must include attestation to the self’s otherness.
Notice that our discussion above about the “triad of passivity” effectively answers our question.
“Passivity”, as the phenomenological event of alterity, “becomes the attestation of otherness.”[35] Flesh is
both the locus for self-attestation, the source of the confidence in the self as able to act and to exist in the
world, and also always at the same time a locus of otherness in the self. That which attests to the self does
not itself fully belong to the realm of the same. Bodily attestation, then, as revealed in passivity, reveals the
self’s alterity as it reveals the “I can.” This instability of identification is the ontological basis for the fragility of
the self and the necessarily conjunction of attestation and suspicion. Or rather it is one basis, for the same
relation of attestation and passivity operates between subjects. The analogical apperception of the other must
originate somewhere in a sense of self, a sense of self which derives its confidence for being responsible from
the continual injunction addressed to it. To attest to oneself is to believe in one’s ability to respond to the face
of the other. Thus the passivity of the ethical injunction founds an attestation which, again, can never be
reduced to a movement within the same. Moreover, the injunction is always an awareness of another self and
the recognition of ourselves as selves, as beings capable of being called to act responsibly. This too occasions
attestation. However the call does not always come from another self; one’s conscience is perhaps the most
clear example of attestation occurring on the condition of the alterity within the subject. Ricoeur will even
write that “conscience is nothing other than the attestation by which a self-affects itself.”[36] Conscience, as
signifying “being enjoined by the Other”, reminds us of ourselves at the same time that it reveals the alterity at
our “heart of hearts”. And not just any alterity, recall, an alterity which according to Ricoeur is philosophically
ipseity in attestation Attestation as the confidence of the “I can” always reveals the other in the self. By
locating alterity both in passivity and in the self- assurance of the subject, Ricoeur convincingly establishes an
account of the self that is at its core intersubjective, but that doesn’t dissolve into the play of relations. That is
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a “significant contribution” to a proper understanding of Mitsein.
David
Vessey
Beloit
College
[1] Oneself as Another Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1992. Hereafter OA. The two most comprehensive reviews of
the book are Edi Pucci’s “Review of Paul Ricoeur’s Oneself as Another: Personal Identity, Narrative Identity, and ‘Selfhood’
in the Thought of Paul Ricoeur” (Philosophy and Social Criticism 18 (1992), pp. 185-209) and Charles E. Reagan’s “The
Self as Other” (Philosophy Today 37 (1993), pp. 3-22).
[2] International Studies in Philosophy Vol. 29, Issue 4, 1997, p. 138.
[3] The self-constancy at the heart of ipse-identity provides a means for Ricoeur to connect identity and ethics. As a
source for self-constancy we are always accountable to others for ourselves and responsible to their summons.
[4] OA, p. xx
[5] OA, pp. 147-8
[6] Critique and Conviction: Conversations with Francois Azouvi and Marc de Launay New York: Columbia University
Press, 1998. p. 89
[7] Here is the crucial quotation from Time and Narrative, Vol. III (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1988. p. 246). “To
state the identity of an individual of a community is to answer the question ‘Who did this?’ ‘Who is the agent, the author?’
We first answer this question by naming someone, that is, by designating them with a proper name. But what is the basis
for the permanence of this proper name? What justifies our taking the subject of an action, so designated by his, her or its
proper name, as the same throughout a life that stretches from birth to death? The answer has to be narrative. To answer
the question ‘Who?’ as Hannah Arendt has so forcefully put it, is to tell the story of a life. The story told tells about the
action of the ‘who.’ And the identity of this ‘who’ therefore itself must be narrative identity. Without the recourse to
narration, the problem of personal identity would in fact be condemned to an antinomy with no solution. Either we must
posit a subject identical with itself through the diversity of its different states or, following Hume and Nietzsche, we must
hold that this identical subject is nothing more than a substantialist illusion, whose elimination merely brings to light a pure
manifold of cognitions, emotions, and volitions. This dilemma disappears if we substitute for identity in the sense of being
the same (idem), identity understood in the sense of oneself as self-same [soi-même] (ipse). The difference between idem
and ipse is nothing more than the difference between a substantial or formal identity and a narrative identity. Self-
sameness, ‘self-constancy’, can escape the dilemma of the Same and the Other to the extent that its identity rests on a
temporal structure that conforms to the model of dynamic identity arising from the poetic composition of a narrative text.
The self characterized by self-sameness may then be said to be refigured by the reflective application of such narrative
configurations. Unlike the abstract identity of the Same, this narrative identity, constitutive of self-constancy, can include
change, mutability, within the cohesion of one lifetime. The subject then appears both as a reader and writer of its own life,
as Proust would have it.” Notice here Ricoeur identifies ipse-identity with narrative identity while in Oneself as Another he
claims narrative identity mediates ipse- and idem-identity.
[8] Alasdair MacIntyre has a strikingly similar account of a narrative self, and although Ricoeur takes the time to
differentiate his view from MacIntyre’s, the intersubjective elements remain the same.
[9] “Reflections on a New Ethos for Europe” in Paul Ricoeur: The Hermeneutics of Action. ed. Richard Kearney. London:
Sage Publications, 1996. p. 4
[10] “Reflections on a New Ethos for Europe” p. 5
[11] “Reflections on a New Ethos for Europe” p. 7
[12] “Reflections on a New Ethos for Europe” p. 10
[13] OA, p. 318
[14] OA, p. 318
[15] OA, p. 318
[16] OA, p. 334
[17] OA, p. 337
[18] OA, p. 331
[19] OA, p. 341
[20] OA, p. 341.
[21] Martin Heidegger, Being and Time (trans. John Macquarrie and Edward Robinson. New York: Harper & Row, 1962) p.
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341.
[22] “From Metaphysics to Moral Philosophy,” Philosophy Today Winter 1996, pp. 443-458. p. 454.
[23] OA, p. 355.
[24] OA, p. 289 f. 82. There are two articles which critically address Ricoeur’s account of attestation, Pamela Sue
Anderson’s “Agnosticism and Attestation: An Aporia Concerning the Other in Ricoeur’s Oneself as Another” (The
Journal of Religion 74 (1994) pp. 65-76) and Mark Muldoon’s “Ricoeur’s Ethics: Another Version of Virtue Ethics?
Attestation is not a Virtue” (Philosophy Today Fall, 1998 pp. 301-309).
[25] OA, p. 298.
[26] OA, p. 318.
[27] “From Metaphysics to Moral Philosophy,” p. 453
[28] OA, p. 23.
[29] See, for example, Calvin Schrag’s The Self After Postmodernity(New Haven: Yale University Press, 1997)
[30] OA, p. 22.
[31] OA, p. 73.
[32] OA, p. 302.
[33] “From Metaphysics to Moral Philosophy,” p. 450.
[34] OA, p. 302.
[35] OA, p. 318. One might ask why I haven’t attempted to connect attestation and narrativity. Jean Greisch does just that
in his article “Testimony and Attestation” (in Paul Ricoeur: The Hermeneutics of Action, pp. 81-98) by introducing the
concept of “narrative attestation.” Greisch claims that narrative, as the key to the establishment of the self, is effectively
attestation. I believe he has extended the term attestation beyond its meaning in Ricoeur’s work. Certainly there must be a
connection between narrative and attestation, narrative identity is the self and attestation attests to the self, but this is not
to say narrating is attesting or that attestation is narratival. In fact to make the connection as close as Greisch does is to
introduce too much content into attestation and to undermine its connection to suspicion rather than doubt.
[36] “From Metaphysics to Moral Philosophy,” p. 454.
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