CONCEPT
The Promise
The paradigmatic expression of
ipse-identity in
Ricoeur's philosophy—the self's commitment to maintain a way of being across time and change, binding precisely because it is independent of character's stability, and the answer to what remains when AI commoditizes traits.
The promise is the act by which the self commits to a future course of action or mode of being, regardless of changes in circumstance or disposition. Ricoeur distinguished the promise from prediction: a prediction relies on the stability of character (
idem-identity), while a promise commits the self to fidelity (
ipse-identity) even when character changes. When a builder promises 'I will maintain the discipline of knowing what matters,' the promise does not depend on the stability of skills, tools, or market conditions. It depends on the self's capacity for
self-constancy—the willingness to be bound by a commitment made when the commitment was easy, even when circumstances make it difficult. In the AI transition, the promise is the mechanism by which the self survives the disruption of every stable trait: the builder whose skills are commoditized retains identity through the commitments that persist when skills are shared.