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INTERSUBJECTIVITY ONLY IN COMMUNICATION AM I MYSELF NOT MERELY LIVING BUT FULFILLING LIFE. - KARL JASPERS Sensitivity Check: Answer the following as honestly as you can and learn more about your temperament and sensitivity in dealing with others. 1. 2. Intensity How strong are your emotional reactions? Do you find yourself becoming easily upset or more low key? 1 2 3 4 5 (1 = mild reaction, 5 = intense reaction) Persistence If you are involved in an activity and you are asked to stop, can you do so easily? When a task is frustrating, do you find yourself letting go easily or pushing to continue? 1 2 3 4 5 (1 = easily let go, 5 = lock in, don’t let go) 3. 4. Sensitivity How aware are you of slight noises, differences in temperature, taste, and textures? Do you react easily to certain foods, tags in clothing, or irritating noises? 1 2 3 4 5 (1 = usually not sensitive, 5 = very sensitive) Perceptiveness How keenly aware are you of people, colors, noises, and objects around you? Do you frequently forget to do what you were going to do because something else has caught your attention? 1 2 3 4 5 (1 = hardly ever notice, 5 = very perceptive) 5. 6. 7. Adaptability Do you quickly adapt to changes in your schedule or routine? How do you cope with surprises? 1 2 3 4 5 (1 = slow to adapt, 5 = adapt quickly) Regularity How regular are your eating times, sleeping period, and other bodily functions? 1 2 3 4 5 (1 = regular, 5 = irregular) Energy Are you always on the move and busy or quiet? Do you need to run and exercise in order to feel good? 1 2 3 4 5 (1 = quiet, 5 = active) 8. First Reaction How do you usually react to new places, people, or activity? 1 2 3 4 5 (1 = jump right in, 5 = reject at first) 9. Mood Do you feel mostly happy compared to the analytical and serious? 1 2 3 4 5 (1 = usually positive, 5 = more serious and analytical) Here’s what your scores mean. 9 – 18 Cool or calm 19 – 28 Lively or spunky 29 – 45 Very Spirited Objectives: Realize that intersubjectivity requires accepting differences and not to imposing on others PPT11/12-IIc-6.1; Appreciate the talents and contributions of persons with disabilities and those form the underprivileged sectors of society PPT11/12-IId-6.1; Explain the authentic dialog means accepting others even if they are different from themselves PPT11/12-IId-6.3; and Perform activities that demonstrate the talents of person with disabilities and those form the underprivileged sectors of society PPT11/12-Iie-6.4. Human Existence of Intersubjectivity 1 Direction: Write the names of people with whom you have a genuine relationship. Inside the space provided, write how they have contributed to your growth as a person. ME Intersubjectivity refers to interhuman encounter. • More than recognition of Understanding Intersubjectivity existence • Acceptance of the individuality Acceptance means embracing differences and diversity in terms of attitudes, skills, physical and mental attributes, and even choices and sense of decision-making in life. The concept of love is the most fundamental theme in discussing intersubjectivity. Intersubjectivity is viewed as how people interact with others and how others influence them to become ‘someone’ in the truest and sincerest sense of the word. For Edmund Husserl, intersubjective experience plays a significant role in the framework of a person as both objectively existing and experiencing subject; interhuman experience is an emphatic experience, as one is mirrored by his/her kind and more often than not, subrogates himself/herself into another’s shoes. Intersubjectivity is also about accepting people in different walks of life – people who may not share the same views and beliefs as the others; people who may look beyond the ordinary; people who have disabilities. Religion Gender DIFFERENCES Political views Race Person with disability (PWD) 2 The World Health Organization estimates that 15% of any country's population has some form of disability. In the Philippines in 2022, that figure is good for almost 17 million Filipinos. (http ://www.philstar.com, May 6, 2022) List of PWD illness (defined by DOH) RA 10524 oAccording to RA 10524, disabled individuals (PWDs) have long-term physical, mental, intellectual, or sensory impairments that, combined with other impediments, may prevent them from fully and equally participating in society. RA 7277 oPsychosocial disability, chronic illness-related disability, learning disability, mental disability, visual disability, orthopedic disability, and communication impairment are the seven different types of disabilities mentioned in RA No. 7277. Department of Health A.O. No.2009-0011 Psychosocial Disability “Any acquired behavioral, cognitive, emotional or social impairment that limits one or more activities necessary for effective interpersonal transaction and other civilizing process or activities for daily living such as but not limited to deviancy or antisocial behavior.” Disability due to Chronic Illness “Chronic Illness describes a group of health conditions that last a long time. It may get slowly worse over time or may become permanent or it may lead to death. It may cause permanent change to the body and it will certainly affect the person’s quality of life.” Learning Disability “Any disorder in one or more of the basic psychological processes (perception, compression, thinking, etc.) involved in understanding or in using spoken or written language.” Mental Disability “Disability resulting from organic brain syndrome (i.e. Mental retardation, acquired lesions of the central nervous system, or dementia) and or mental illness (psychotic or non-psychotic disorder).” Visual Disability “A person with visual disability (impairment) is one who has impairment of visual functioning even after treatment and/or standard refractive correction, and has visual acuity in the better eye of less than (6/18 for low vision and 3/60 for blind), or a visual field of less than 10 degrees from the point of fixation. oA certain level of visual impairment is defined as legal blindness. One is legally blind when your best corrected central visual acuity in your better eye is 60/60 or worse or your side vision is 20 degrees or less in the better eye.” Orthopedic Disability “Disability in the normal functioning of the joints, muscles or limbs.” Communication Disability “An impairment in the process of speech, language or hearing: Hearing impairment is a total or partial loss of hearing function which impedes the communication process essential to language, education, social and/or cultural interaction “Speech and Language Impairment” mean one or more speech/language disorders of voice, articulation, rhythm and/or the receptive and expressive process of language.” oPWDs can also be classified as Qualified Persons with Disabilities, which comprise people with disabilities who, with appropriate accommodations, can carry out the responsibilities of the job they now have or desire. oPWDs with non-obvious disabilities like psychosocial, learning, mental/intellectual, visual, and hearing impairments must obtain a certification attesting to their impairment from the Department of Health through one of its regional hospitals, medical centers, or specialty hospitals to be eligible for accreditation. How will you show your appreciation for the contributions of the PWDs in the society? 1. Research about a product made by some groups of Filipino PWDs. State why you chose this product. 2. Create a short essay about a PWD whom you appreciate best. Highlight this person’s endeavors which you think may inspire other people. 3 Intersubjectivity of Human Beings Intersubjectivity presupposes human being’s connectivity with other human beings sharing the same situation to create shared meanings. Shared meanings do not eliminate individuality. The unveiling of myself to other human beings leads me to a deeper knowledge of myself: self-knowledge towards the manifestation and realization of selfhood. 1. Human being is a social being. Endowed with reason, a human being establishes a relationship with other created beings. Such relationship is mediated by actions expressed in words to transform their environment. Communication among humans is a necessity and irreplaceable for it transforms the social context and their perspective on existence and meaning. Communication is a dialogue between thinking and acting persons who continuously unveil, discover, and create themselves. 2. Human being is born and creates himself in social interaction. The existence of human being is the consequence of social interaction particularly between two unique individuals. Social interaction becomes the matrix in which a person participates, adopts, and absorbs the value system, beliefs and worldview that pervade and harmonize among the individuals. The social interaction among the members of the family can be concretized in the Filipino family in the spirit of ‘sakop’, a mechanism in establishing a wider family relations which result to extended ties. The Dimensions of a Nonrelational Self Man cannot become himself in isolation. - Karl Jaspers The Self in Isolation One form of isolation is not recognizing the existence of other human beings, that is, not establishing an open communication with others. Another is consciously leaving the communicative situation; hence, unable to unveil and discover himself. Jaspers points out that if this becomes absolute, there is a danger of making a judgement and using it as a basis of understanding of realities around him. The Self in Realm of Pretentions Deception is a hindrance toward the establishment of communicative situation. If one pretends, the other person accepts false image; then unfolding is impossible. The Self in Realm of Manipulation Manipulation between or among persons occurs when one says to the other “I create your world and you must only think, feel, and act within its boundary.” “Your world view and understanding about the world are according to the world that I have created for you. You act according to the image that I set. As you do it, I find satisfaction and security.” The freedom to express and unveil one’s uniqueness and the truth of oneself are not manifested and shared. Hence, growth is impossible to attain. The Self in Realm of Selfishness Self-centeredness is another factor that hinders the communicative manifestation or vocative situation, or dialogue between or among human beings. A person cannot grow and find his selfhood The “I” does not recognize other person as a ‘subject’. Others are considered means to attain personal satisfaction. A LIFE OF DIALOGUE The Human Being as Being-in-Dialogue Man’s supreme achievement in this world is communication from personality to personality. - Karl Jaspers ME, MYSELF, AND MY FRIEND List down five good traits that you and your best friend share. Reflect how these common traits contribute to the bond of your friendship. My Good Traits 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. My Best Friend’s Traits 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. SELF-CONSCIOUSNESS AND DIALOGUE •Self-consciousness begins with the consciousness of another’s consciousness communicating each other in a vocative situation or in a dialogue. The existence of one’s consciousness depends on the existence of other person’s existence. •Gabriel Marcel believes that “self-consciousness is in co-existence with other consciousness, that is, the “self” (the I) only exists in so far as it treats itself as being for another, with reference to another. •Self-consciousness must always be expressed and experienced in dialogue in mutual recognition of each other’s being and subjectivity. SELFHOOD AND DIALOGUE •Human being’s selfhood is its individuality, selfbeing, self-realization and well-being. •Selfhood is not: being isolated that makes a human being ambiguous deciding to break oneself from communicative manifestation •Karl Jaspers affirms that dialogue fosters individuality, self-identity and self-being of each person in a dialogical situation, where every experience unfolded becomes a tangible expression of the self, and where everyone creates meaning to sustain manifestation of selfhood. •In a dialogue, each human being recognizes and respects, accepts, and affirms one another’s selfhood. FREEDOM AND DIALOGUE: UNFOLDING OF THE SELF •The true expression of freedom occurs when it is expressed both for one’s self-being but for the other’s self-being. •Human freedom can only find its true meaning in relation to the freedom of another human being. TRUTH AND DIALOGUE: MAKING PRESENT •Truth about one’s self-being is always relational; and it is unveiled through dialogical situation or communicative manifestation. •As a human being constantly communicates his selfhood with another, he at the same time is unveiling – making present – the truth of himself. •Truth of self-being can never be revealed if one enters into a pseudo relationship by choosing to live in the world of seeming or ‘make believe world’. Thinking Out Loud • Make a short reflection on the kind of relationship that you have established with one of your family members. Consider the following points: 1. Why did you choose this relationship with that person? 2. What kind of relationship you have established with the person? 3. Does the relationship help you discover, accept, and love your self more?