Joseph Sverker

Human Being and Vulnerability


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points out, essentialism enters in many disguises and in biology it is found in the assumption of innate traits. Oyama writes correctly that

      In chapter 1 Judith Butler’s theory of performativity is explained in relation to its implications for her view of the self and the subject. I argue that the human subject is constituted by norms outside of the subject’s control. For Butler, one is called, or interpellated, into subjecthood. As such, Butler develops a relational view of the human where vulnerability and precariousness become more and more significant, as does embodiment. I show how this embodied relationality even takes on an ontological meaning in Butler. Notions such as interpellation, vulnerability and “the other” will thus be discussed in some detail.

      The next chapter expounds on Pinker’s understanding of evolutionary psychology and its implications. I suggest that Pinker’s