Unisa Institutional Repository

Self-transcendence and Eros : The human condition between desire and the infinite

Show full item record

Title: Self-transcendence and Eros : The human condition between desire and the infinite
Author: Du Toit, Cornel W.
Abstract: This article treats self-transcendence – like all transcendence – as a fact of human life. Inter alia this means that the human mind perforce operates in terms of binary concepts such as finitude–infinity, inner world–outside world, self–other, desire–fulfilment, separation–union and the like. We find these concepts in most myths of origin. The concept of desire (Eros), combining unfulfilment and the infinite, particularly epitomises self-transcendence. Ralph Waldo Emerson is cited as a precursor of the mid-19th century transcendentalists, whose ideas are resurfacing in present-day secular spirituality. In this article, we examined desire in the Christian conception of the Fall as envisioned by the Jewish philosopher Martin Buber and by Hegel, who integrates mind and nature in his philosophy of Spirit. The works of Emmanuel Levinas and Paul Ricoeur are used as points of reference to help us understand self and other in a framework of self-transcendence. The impact of these ideas on a postmetaphysical epistemology was also explored. Affectivity is a neglected area in Western thought and displays the same infinitude as rationality. The article concluded with present-day strategies of self-construction in a techno-scientific consumer culture.
Description: Peer reviewed
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10500/5024
Date: 2011-07-12
Citation: Du Toit, C.W. 2011,'Self-transcendence and Eros : The human condition between desire and the infinite', HTS Theological Studies, vol. 67,no. 3, pp. 1-12.


Files in this item

Files Size Format View
Selftranscendence Eros 944-8183-1-PB1 (3).pdf 584.7Kb PDF View/Open

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show full item record

Search UnisaIR


Browse

My Account

Statistics