CONCEPT
The Dialogical Self
Taylor's thesis that <em>identity is not a possession</em> but a relational achievement — constituted through encounters with others whose recognition, challenge, and accountability shape who one becomes.
Against the monological picture of the self as a bounded inner space whose identity is discovered through introspection, Taylor argues that identity is dialogically constituted — formed through ongoing relationships with significant others whose responses carry moral and emotional weight. The self becomes who it is through the recognition it receives, the challenges it encounters, and the accountability structures it is embedded in. This framework, developed most fully in Taylor's essays on multiculturalism and the politics of recognition, has acute relevance to the AI age because the machine provides a new form of recognition that satisfies some of the conditions of genuine dialogue and fails others in ways that carry consequences for the formation of moral identity.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The dialogical framework stands in tension with the expressivist ideal that identity is something one discovers within oneself and then expresses outward. Taylor does not reject expressivism but insists that the dialogical dimension is inseparable from it: the self that one expresses has been
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