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Making Sense of What We Are: A Mythological Approach to Human Nature

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posted on 2025-07-30, 15:22 authored by Michael Hauskeller
The question what makes us human is often treated as a question of fact. However, the term 'human' is not primarily used to refer to a particular kind of entity, but is a 'nomen dignitatis' - a dignity-conferring name. It implies a particular moral status. That is what spawns endless debates about such issues as when human life begins and ends and Whether human-animal chimeras are "partly human". Definitions of the human are inevitably "persuasive". They tell us about what is important and how we should live our lives as humans, and thus help us to make sense of what we are.

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There is another ORE record for this item in ORE at http://hdl.handle.net/10036/3668 There is another ORE record for this item in ORE at 10036/3668

Journal

Philosophy

Publisher

Cambridge University Press

Language

EN

Citation

Vol. 84, Issue 327, pp. 95 - 109

Department

  • Social and Political Sciences, Philosophy, and Anthropology

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