| 英文摘要 |
Axel Honneth pointed out that when the subject forgets the relationship of self-recognition in the process of cognition, and treats his own feelings and desires as objects, it constitutes the so-called“self-reification”. I think that the“technologies of the self”in Michel Foucault’s later thoughts have a distinct color of“self-reification”, and this reification is based on certain ethical/aesthetic“constitutivism”(Konstruktivismus):“We have to create ourselves as a work of art.”The main questions in this article are: Why and how did Foucault develop such thoughts in the late period? What is the problem with this set of thinking itself? What are its possible cognitive and political effects? Compared with the massive critiques of“objectification”in the early and middle periods, Foucault’s theory in the late period rarely involves the relationship between subject and object. But the subject-object relationship never disappears; on the contrary, it becomes the condition of visibility for Foucault when he unconceals the“self”, that is to say, becomes his own“unthought”. Because of this, the subject-object relationship (some kind of dominant power relations) that was originally the object of criticism sneaked into his late thinking and became the basis of ontology, deontology and epistemology that supported his“asceticism”from within. From the perspective of genealogy and archaeology, combined with Martin Heidegger’s theory, this article internally criticizes and reflects on the conditions of possibility of late Foucault’s“self-reification”. At the conclusion, it takes Giorgio Agamben’s gesture theory to provide an approach for“aesthetics of existence”that is different from Foucault. |