To Be or Not: Self and Authenticity, Identity and Ambivalence

  • Weigert A
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Abstract

Although the renewed academic interest in self, ego, and identity is obviously an exciting and healthy development, there is always the tenden cy for research to take on a parochial character. When boundaries are erected among different theoretical perspectives, when empirical findings are viewed in isolation, when theories are too sharply delimited and segre gated from other domains of behavior, then what may seem like progres sive, healthy, and content-increasing tendencies in a research paradigm may turn out to be, on closer inspection, merely an inchoate thrashing about. Fortunately there is an internal dynamic to scientific investigation that tends to combat this degenerating tendency. There is something about the rhythm of science that bids us to transcend parochial theoretical in terests and seek the most general theory.

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Weigert, A. J. (1988). To Be or Not: Self and Authenticity, Identity and Ambivalence. In Self, Ego, and Identity (pp. 263–281). Springer New York. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4615-7834-5_13

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