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"This book presents the case that there are forms of human interaction which should be understood as properly second-person plural. It engages with the work of Sartre, Levinas and contemporary phenomenology to show that this claim is not just about grammatical forms of address, but about the phenomenology and structure of our intersubjective experience. While there has been plenty of recent work exploring the phenomenology of the second-person singular and the first-person plural, we have not so far seena systematic account of the second-person plural: the I-yous or we-you. This book outlines the phenomenology of the specific structures of interlocking intersubjective reciprocity which need to be in place between multiple subjects for an interaction to be properly second-person plural. The author considers and defends her account from various possible objections-both a conceptual worry, and a range of empirical worries. These objections are shown to be misguided, and the thread that runs through them-a problematically disembodied conception of the human subject-is exposed. She proceeds to offer a positive account of the second-person plural, supported by an understanding of subjectivity as necessarily embodied and embedded in the world. This account opens an exciting path for further analyses of complex multi-person intersubjectivities in small group contexts. The Phenomenology of the Second-Person Plural will appeal to scholars and graduate students working in phenomenology, social ontology, and the philosophy of intersubjectivity"--

This book presents the case that there are forms of human interaction which should be understood as second-person plural. It engages with the work of Sartre, Levinas and contemporary phenomenology to show that this claim is not just about grammatical forms of address, but about the phenomenology of our intersubjective experience.



This book presents the case that there are forms of human interaction which should be understood as properly second-person plural. It engages with the work of Sartre, Levinas and contemporary phenomenology to show that this claim is not just about grammatical forms of address, but about the phenomenology and structure of our intersubjective experience.

While there has been plenty of recent work exploring the phenomenology of the second-person singular and the first-person plural, we have not so far seen a systematic account of the second-person plural: the I-yous or we-you. This book outlines the phenomenology of the specific structures of interlocking intersubjective reciprocity which need to be in place between multiple subjects for an interaction to be properly second-person plural. The author considers and defends her account from various possible objections – both a conceptual worry, and a range of empirical worries. These objections are shown to be misguided, and the thread that runs through them – a problematically disembodied conception of the human subject – is exposed. She proceeds to offer a positive account of the second-person plural, supported by an understanding of subjectivity as necessarily embodied and embedded in the world. This account opens an exciting path for further analyses of complex multi-person intersubjectivities in small group contexts.

The Phenomenology of the Second-Person Plural will appeal to scholars and graduate students working in phenomenology, social ontology, and the philosophy of intersubjectivity.

Arvustused

This is an impressive book with robust arguments in support of a more complete account of the second-person. It represents a welcome and important contribution to our understanding of second-person plural phenomena.

Eric Chelstrom, St. Marys University, USA

Introduction
1. Context, Method, Presuppositions
2. Categorising Intersubjectivities
3. Multi-Person Intersubjectivity
4. A Category Mistake?
5. An Empirical Mistake?
6. Developing the Plurality of Second-Personal Address Conclusion

Sarah Pawlett Jackson is Tutor in Philosophy, Religion, and Ethics at the University of London, UK. Her published work has appeared in journals such as Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences, Phenomenology and Mind, and Synthese.