The Return of Alcibiades: an Approach to the Meaning of Human Sexuality through the Works of Freud and Merleau-Ponty

Philosophy Today 22 (1):89-98 (1978)
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Abstract

The goal of this article is to develop several implications which can be drawn from two twentieth century reflections on sexuality. It situates the meaning of human sexuality in relation to the notions of expression, Symbolic consciousness, Bodilessness, Intersubjectivity, Rationality, And finitude; through a comparison and contrast of the works of freud and merleau-Ponty. Both thinkers are viewed as philosophical mythologists who see sexuality as a peculiarly revelatory and representative feature of human existence as a whole. The article concludes with a reflection on the significance human sexuality might have for philosophy's own self-Understanding

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