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PHILOSOPHY

1. INTERSUBJECTIVITY
- Intersubjective human relations refers to the interactions and relationships
between individuals, where both parties have a mutual understanding of each
other's subjective experiences and perspectives. It involves acknowledging and
valuing the different viewpoints and emotions of others, which helps create
meaningful connections and promote empathy.

- People with disabilities and those from underprivileged sectors of society


have unique talents and contributions that can greatly enrich our society. It is important to recognize and appreciate
their abilities, as well as provide equal opportunities for them to showcase their talents. By doing so, we can create a
more inclusive and diverse society that benefits from the skills and perspectives of all individuals.

- Not always, being authentic or authentic dialogue can be expected from one who is authentic themselves, they explain
authentic words only if they are authentic.

Being authentic and being genuine can be well explained by individual habits and lifestyles. If they are authentic then
they would be caring and careful to explain or make a dialogue which better suits the individual traits and bring the best
of them and others as human.

2. THE HUMAN PERSON IN SOCIETY


-Society does not exist independently without individual. The individual lives and
acts within society but society is nothing, in spite of the combination of individuals
for cooperative effort. On the other hand, society exists to serve individuals—not
the other way around. Human life and society almost go together.

- When we interact with others, the context in which our actions take place plays a major role in our behavior.
This means that our understanding of objects, words, emotions, and social cues may differ depending on where
we encounter them.
Society moulds our attitudes, beliefs, morals, ideals and thereby moulds individual personality. With the course
of living and with the process of socialization man's personality develops and he became a fully fledged
individual. Man acquires a self or personality only living in a society.

- Individuals form societies by interacting with one or more other individuals. Their
pattern of interaction is what we call a society, but society is an abstraction, not a
concrete thing.

- There are many different types of society. The three main types
are early societies, developing societies, and advanced societies.
Early societies mostly focused on the cultivation of resources that were readily
available to them through hunting and gathering and taking care of domesticated
animals. As far as gaining resources was concerned, early societies used those that
they could access through walking or using basic tools. Developing societies created
systems of creating and harvesting resources through horticulture and agriculture. The
primary products of these systems were needs such as food and shelter. In advanced
societies, the major products of manufacturing and industry were wants such as
technology and advanced communication. Also, advanced societies shifted from
focusing on physical goods to spreading ideas. As a result, advanced societies have
experienced breakthroughs in scientific research.

- Individuals influence other individuals, forming them in a sense. The aggregate


influence of many individuals in society with each other goes by the short-hand of
“social influence”. As an abstraction, not a real thing, society cannot influence or
form anything.

- Human relations are shaped by the social systems within which people must necessarily interact. At the same
time, the ways people respond to one another within the constraints that their social system imposes have an
effect on the system itself. For example, to refer to a currently popular concern that I see on Quora, corruption
of institutional rules is a form of individuals exploiting opportunities to benefit themselves at the cost of the
functioning of the institutions within which they work, often leading to demands for reform, or even scrapping,
of those institutions.

- Social systems play a significant role in shaping human relationships and transforming individual human beings.
The way people interact, communicate, and form connections with others is heavily influenced by the social,
cultural, and political norms and values of their society.

3. INTERSUBJECTIVITY AND THE HUMAN PERSON IN SOCIETY


Intersubjectivity refers to a shared perception of reality between
two or more individuals. The term presupposes that we, as
human beings, cannot know reality except through our own
senses: sight, hearing, smell, taste, or tactile feeling, while the he
human person exists to relate with others. The person is by
nature a social being because he or she has a tendency to go out
of himself or herself to form bonds and relationships with others.
Society and its various aspects provide supports that ensures the
development of the human person.

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