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Passibility is the capacity to experience suffering, an openness to experience, a quality which has been central to changing interpretations of personality, from medieval to modern times.
Personality
editClassical thought counterposed to the Stoic ideal of Impassibility an alternative view of personality, that of experiential engagement with multiple circles of social reality.[1] Galen might stress the material aspect of such engagement, Justinian the socio-legal,[2] Cicero one's various roles and social obligations:[3] the quality of openness and passibility was common to them all.
The transition to modernity saw Descartes's vision of the self as a detached autonomous consciousness, prior to political, human, and bodily activity and exchange, increasingly replace passibility as a central metaphor for the self.[4]
Other applications
editLearning theory
edit- Wolff-Michael Roth argues that passibility through sensation must inevitably precede Constructivism in human learning: it is cognition via passibility that brings the emotional element into learning.[5]
Music
edit- Lyotard saw the convergence of listening to music with a sense of belonging as creating a state of passibility:[6] what he called obedient listening necessarily entailed experiencing passibility.[7]
Religion
edit- John Donne saw passibility as the essential feature distinguishing the human from the divine.[8]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ T. Reiss, Mirages of the Selfe (Stanford 2003) p. 162
- ^ T. Reiss, Mirages of the Selfe (Stanford 2003) p. 212
- ^ P Gray, Shakespeare and the Fall of the Roman Republic (Edinburgh 2019) p. 49
- ^ P Gray, Shakespeare and the Fall of the Roman Republic (Edinburgh 2019) p. 104
- ^ W-M Roth, Passibility (2011) p. 248 and p. 21
- ^ K Wurth, Musically Sublime (2009) p. 104
- ^ M Scherzinger, Music in Contemporary Philosophy (2016) p. 86
- ^ P Gray, Shakespeare and the Fall of the Roman Republic (Edinburgh 2019) p 106
Further Reading
edit- P Gavriluyk, The Suffering of the Impassible God (Oxford 2004)