1945
DOI: 10.2307/2018981
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The Ego-Alter Dialectic and the Conscience

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Cited by 7 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…Our thinking is an inner conversation in which we may be taking the roles of specific acquaintances over against ourselves, but usually it is with the “generalized other” that we converse. (Mead , 272; see Niebuhr , 354). Niebuhr thinks this is a good place to begin thinking about conscience but he offers the qualifications that a person does not live in one society but many and so we would do better to speak of multiple generalized others. Moreover, Niebuhr argues, it is not with whole groups that we interact at any particular moment but with particular individuals.…”
Section: Revising Conscience Out Of Existence: From Niebuhr To Hauerwasmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Our thinking is an inner conversation in which we may be taking the roles of specific acquaintances over against ourselves, but usually it is with the “generalized other” that we converse. (Mead , 272; see Niebuhr , 354). Niebuhr thinks this is a good place to begin thinking about conscience but he offers the qualifications that a person does not live in one society but many and so we would do better to speak of multiple generalized others. Moreover, Niebuhr argues, it is not with whole groups that we interact at any particular moment but with particular individuals.…”
Section: Revising Conscience Out Of Existence: From Niebuhr To Hauerwasmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Such impartiality does not reside in general indifference or disinterest, but rather in “profound attachments to certain beings, values, or modes of conduct,” which include the self but also exceed it. In other words, the impartiality of the social other concerns its specific impartiality to the self, which follows from its partial interest “in a cause, in some value which is common to the self and to the other or, more frequently, in the society which it represents and to which the self belongs” (Niebuhr , 355). The language of cause here reflects the influence of Josiah Royce.…”
Section: Correcting Niebuhr's Reading Of Meadmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To conceive of the self's social constitution in terms of some generalized other understood in abstraction, is to assume either that the self lives in one society rather than multiple communities, or that these communities can be concentrically related, family nested in nation nested in humankind. In fact, Niebuhr insists, “The self does not deal with one ‘generalized other’ only but with many, and not all its ‘others’ are ‘generalized.’” Moreover, proper relations to these multiple others are contextually particular: what the self expects from and aspires to in response to particular other selves changes depending on whether these others are family members, colleagues, fellow citizens, co‐religionists, or even God (Niebuhr , 354). What is at stake here is the possibility of refiguring those moral conflicts within the self that we refer to as cases of conscience.…”
Section: Correcting Niebuhr's Reading Of Meadmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…For religious socialization also provides the occasion for apprehending what theologians broadly describe as revelation. That is to say, under the mellow encouragement of the community of faith, religious socialization induces selves to be conditioned from a new point of view which--following Niebuhr's (1960) useful distinction between observed and lived history-transforms the events of secular, scientifically understood history into existentially meaning-laden experiences infused with a special parabolic significance for reordering the personal biographies of selves entering the confessional community. Inner history refers to that complex of meanings which deepen superabundantly one's understanding of and relationship to the world as apprehended through the eyes of faith.…”
Section: Reference Groups and The Establishment Of The Role Of Spiritmentioning
confidence: 99%