Abstract

This article traces two trends in the evolution of subjectivity in philosophy: the concept of subjectivity introduced by Protagoras and the Sophists, which is related to the characterization of human knowledge, and the understanding of subjectivity in Descartes, who viewed it as a special reality that determines the essence of the individual as a “thinking thing.” The author examines the major turning points in interpreting subjectivity: Protagoras’ empirical interpretation, the metaphysical shift in Descartes, and the anti-metaphysical shift in postmodernism that signified a return to the empirical understanding of subjectivity, predicting its “disappearance” along with the concepts of individuality and human in the “post-human” reality. In addition, the article discusses the trend of “de-subjectivizing” the human in contemporary philosophy. There are two ways of eliminating the subject: traveling backward from its metaphysical to its empirical understanding as its consequence of redefining the goals and essence of philosophy (using R. Rorty as an example) and rethinking the concept and nature of the human as a post-human stage of antropogenesis in the context of the anthropological and digital revolution.

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