The Dissolution of the Self: How Ontological Instability Reconfigures Identity, Ego, and the Nature of Selfhood
Description
This thesis examines the profound implications of Ontological Instability for our understanding of identity, self, and ego, arguing that if being itself is fundamentally unstable, then traditional conceptions of stable, unified selfhood become not merely problematic but ontologically impossible. Building upon the theoretical foundation of Fluctuational Ontology, this work develops a comprehensive framework for understanding selfhood as a dynamic process of becoming that never achieves stable being. Through rigorous philosophical analysis, novel theoretical innovations, and visual modeling, the thesis demonstrates that the dissolution of stable identity opens new possibilities for understanding consciousness, agency, and human flourishing that are more adequate to the fundamental instability of existence. The work introduces unprecedented concepts including Identity Flows, Fluctuational Personas, Existential Uncertainty Relations, and Rhizomatic Selfhood, providing a systematic alternative to both unified and fragmented models of identity. The implications extend beyond academic philosophy to encompass psychology, neuroscience, social theory, and practical approaches to mental health, education, and personal development.
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The Dissolution of the Self - How Ontological Instability Reconfigures Identity, Ego, and the Nature of Selfhood.pdf
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(8.5 MB)
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