Do We All Live Story-Shaped Lives? Narrative Identity, Episodic Life, and Religious Experience
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Understanding the Ethical and Psychological Narrativity Theses
2.1. The Ethical Narrativty Thesis: Achieving Narrative Unity to Live a Virtuous Life
And the unity of a virtue in someone’s life is intelligible only as a characteristic of a unitary life, a life that can be conceived and evaluated as a whole… it has been necessary to say something of the concomitant concept of selfhood, a concept of a self whose unity resides in the unity of a narrative which links birth to life to death as narrative beginning to middle to end.
2.2. The Psychological Narrativity Thesis: We Are the Stories We Tell
3. Against Narrativity: Does Everyone Have a Story-Shaped Life?
3.1. Diachronics vs. Episodics
It seems to me that MacIntyre, Taylor, and all other supporters of the ethical Narrativity thesis are really just talking about themselves. It may be that what they are saying is true for them, both psychologically and ethically. This may be the best ethical project that people like themselves can hope to engage in. But even if it is true for them it is not true for other types of ethical personality, and many are likely to be thrown right off their truth by being led to believe that Narrativity is necessary for a good life.
3.2. Living Episodically as the Unstoried Self
I have a past, like any human being, and I know perfectly well that I have a past. I have a respectable amount of factual knowledge about it and I also remember some of my past experiences ‘from the inside’, as philosophers say. And yet I have absolutely no sense of my life as narrative with form, or indeed as a narrative without form. Absolutely none. Nor do I have any great or specific interest in my past. Nor do I have a great deal of concern for my future.
4. The Case Study of Leo Tolstoy’s Religious Experience
I felt…that something had been broken within me on which my life had always rested, that I had nothing left to hold on to, and that morally my life stopped. An invincible force impelled me to get rid of my existence, in one way or another. It cannot be said exactly that I wished to kill myself, for the force which drew me away from life was fuller, more powerful, more general than any mere desire. It was a force like my old aspiration to live, only it impelled me in the opposite direction. It was an aspiration of my whole being to get out of life… I did not know what I wanted. I was afraid of life; I was driven to leave it; and in spite of that I still hoped something from it.(Tolstoy 1887; Quoted in James [1902] 2002, p. 153)
I remember one day in early spring, I was alone in the forest, lending my ear to its mysterious noises. I listened, and my thought went back to what for these three years it always was busy with—the quest for God. But the idea of him, I said, how did I ever come by the idea? And again there arose in me, with this thought, glad aspirations towards life. Everything in me awoke and received a meaning.(Tolstoy 1887, pp. 64, 65; Quoted in James [1902] 2002, p. 185)
5. The Episodic Becoming Diachronic Through Religious Experience
To be converted, to be regenerated, to receive grace, to experience religion, to gain an assurance, are so many phrases which denote the process, gradual or sudden, by which a self hitherto divided, and consciously wrong, inferior, and unhappy, becomes unified and consciously right, superior and happy, in consequence of its firmer hold upon religious realities.
6. Conclusions: We May Be Blends of Both
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
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1 | I focus on analyzing the ethical narrativity thesis of MacIntyre and the psychological narrativity thesis of McAdams because these two are among the narrativist scholars that Strawson argues against in his anti-narrative discourse. |
2 | The period of 18 to 25 years of age is often called “emerging adulthood,” which is a phase of the lifespan between adolescence and full-fledged adulthood that encompasses late adolescence and early adulthood, proposed by Jeffrey Arnett in 2000. See (Arnett 2000, pp. 469–80). |
3 | McAdams adopts a moderately reconstructive view of autobiographical recollections. Reconstruction involves the selection and interpretation of certain memories as self-defining memories. People grant privileged status to those self-defining memories in their narrative identities. |
4 | In 1887, another version of Tolstoy’s memoir was published and titled, My Confession and the Spirit of Christ’s Teaching. |
5 | In The Principles of Psychology, James divides the Me or empirical self into three components: (1) the material self—including the physical body and all possessions intimately associated with it; (b) the social self—including the recognition a person receives from his or her significant relationships; and (c) the spiritual self—including the entire collection of one’s state of consciousness (See James [1890] 1950, pp. 291, 292). |
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Cho, E.D. Do We All Live Story-Shaped Lives? Narrative Identity, Episodic Life, and Religious Experience. Religions 2021, 12, 71. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12020071
Cho ED. Do We All Live Story-Shaped Lives? Narrative Identity, Episodic Life, and Religious Experience. Religions. 2021; 12(2):71. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12020071
Chicago/Turabian StyleCho, Eunil David. 2021. "Do We All Live Story-Shaped Lives? Narrative Identity, Episodic Life, and Religious Experience" Religions 12, no. 2: 71. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12020071
APA StyleCho, E. D. (2021). Do We All Live Story-Shaped Lives? Narrative Identity, Episodic Life, and Religious Experience. Religions, 12(2), 71. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12020071