Main Article Content

The Emplotted Self: Self-Deception and Self-Knowledge


Rachel Brown

Abstract

The principal aim of this paper is to give a positive analysis of self-deception. I argue that self-deception is a species ‘self-emplotment.' Through narrative self-emplotment one groups the events of one's life thematically in order to understand and monitor oneself. I argue that self-emplotment is an unextraordinary feature of mental life that is a precondition of agency. Self-emplotment, however, proceeds according to certain norms, some of which provide apparent justification for self-deceptive activity. A secondary aim of the paper is to sketch the common characteristics between self-deception and self-knowledge. The framework of self-emplotment from which self-deception can emerge is also the framework that delivers self-knowledge; to the extent that the activity of self-emplotment is partially constitutive of what it means to possess self-knowledge, the self-deceiver may be closer to a state of self-knowledge than the person who fails to engage in significant introspective narrative.



Philosophical Papers Vol.32(3) 2003: 279-300

Journal Identifiers


eISSN: 0556-8641