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"Self and Acervo" is a major philosophy book of Abdel Hernández San Juan developing his theory of the self as part of a phenomenology of cultural subjetivity, the book focuss on the self in three levels, level one includes the self and the social, evolving internatizations of the social, individualizations from the internal simbolic universe of the subject, and socializations of such internal simbolizations, level two includes the pair of experience and acervo wich creates a memory and a collection which the first microlevel of culture, and self perception that cross beyond the…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
"Self and Acervo" is a major philosophy book of Abdel Hernández San Juan developing his theory of the self as part of a phenomenology of cultural subjetivity, the book focuss on the self in three levels, level one includes the self and the social, evolving internatizations of the social, individualizations from the internal simbolic universe of the subject, and socializations of such internal simbolizations, level two includes the pair of experience and acervo wich creates a memory and a collection which the first microlevel of culture, and self perception that cross beyond the representational level of concience to join the process of subjectivity formation and cultural identity, discussing how the phenomenologically of the self considered both as a universal abstraction and as an empirical experience of subject, must work as a theory of culture, the book continue with the author theory of the hermeneutic nature of the intramundane horizont and its several sobreordinated forms of reflexions, memorization and repetition, unveinling and discovering new paths between philosophy, phenomenological sociology and cultural theory to explore the hermeneutics of culture.
Autorenporträt
Abdel Hernández San Juan, Thinker, Theoretician and writer, author of books of philosophy, semiotic theory and cultural anthropology, guest scholar of the College of Fine Art of the University of Texas at Austin, to discuss the issue of anthropology and the globalization of culture.