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    We do not become full human agents or define our identity... — Carmelics
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    Home/Personal Identity
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    Supports→Human identity is formed dialogically, through interaction and struggle with significant others, not in isolation.

    We do not become full human agents or define our identity in isolation from others.

    Personal Identity
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    Personal Identity

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    Human identity is formed dialogically, through interaction and struggle with sig...Identity is always defined in dialogue with, and sometimes in struggle against, ...

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    Human identity is formed dialogically, through interaction and struggl...

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    SEP: multiculturalism
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    An ontologically holist view of collective identities and cultures underlies Taylor’s argument for a “politics of recognition.” Drawing on Rousseau, Herder, and Hegel, among others, Taylor argues that we do not become full human agents and define our identity in isolation from others; rather, “we define our identity always in dialogue with, sometimes in struggle against, the things our significant others want to see in us” (1994, 33). Because our identities are formed dialogically, we are depend

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