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The tension between the self as a unique, autonomous agent and the self as a socially constructed node. We experience ourselves as free, coherent individuals with an inner essence ("me"). Yet neuroscience, sociology, and psychology reveal that our thoughts, desires, and identities are shaped by genes, culture, language, and circumstance. The hard problem is: Where is the "true" individual in that web of influences? If you remove all the social programming and biological determinism, is anything left? The concept of the sovereign individual may be a necessary fiction for law and morality, but a fiction nonetheless.
Example: You choose a career as an artist, feeling it's your authentic passion. But how did that "passion" form? Through childhood exposure to certain books, a teacher's encouragement, and societal messages about creative expression. Your "free choice" is the output of a million inputs. The hard problem: To hold you responsible for your actions, society must treat you as an indivisible, choosing self. But to understand you, science must dissolve you into constituent processes. The individual is both the foundational unit of modern life and a philosophical mirage that disappears upon close inspection. Hard Problem of the Individual.
by Enkigal January 24, 2026
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