1. Acknowledgments 2. Introduction 3. Part I: Discussing with oneself 4. 1. Debating with myself and debating with others (by Dascal, Marcelo) 5. 2. Being in accordance with oneself: Moral self-controversy in Plato and Aristotle (by Schulz, Peter J.) 6. 3. Conversion and controversy (by Leone, Massimo) 7. 4. Controversies and the logic of scientific discovery (by Ferreira, Ademar) 8. 5. Controversies and dialogic intersubjectivity (by Cossutta, Frederic) 9. 6. Disagreement, self-agreement, and self-deception (by Frogel, Shai) 10. Part II: The first person 11. 7. Intersubjectivity in controversy: A story from the Taoist philosopher Zhuangzi (by Chang, Han-liang) 12. 8. Subjectivist and objectivist interpretations of controversy-based thought (by Cattani, Adelino) 13. 9. Temporality, reification and subjectivity: Carneades and the foundations of the world of subjectivity (by Szivos, Mihaly) 14. 10. First person singular in 17th century controversies (by Fritz, Gerd) 15. 11. Subjective justifications: Introspective arguments in empiricism (by Mishori, Daniel) 16. 12. Early modern controversies and theories of controversy: The rules of the game and the role of the persons (by Gloning, Thomas) 17. 13. Externalism, internalism, and self-knowledge (by Senderowicz, Yaron M.) 18. Part III: The politics of subjectivity 19. 14. Liberals vs. communitarians on the self (by Barrotta, Pierluigi) 20. 15. Ethical implications of de-dichotomization of identities in conflict (by Barghouti, Omar) 21. 16. The role of subjectivity in public controversy (by Gross, Alan G.) 22. 17. The Sokal affair: The role of subjectivity in shaping the controversy (by Olive, Leon) 23. 18. Archaic subjectivity and/as controversy in psychoanalytic thinking (by Sharon-Zisser, Shirley) 24. The contributors to this volume 25. Indexes
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