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18 J. Value Inquiry 3 (1984)

handle is hein.journals/jrnlvi18 and id is 1 raw text is: J. Value Inquiry 18:3-12 (1984).
© 1984 Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, The Hague. Printed in the Netherlands.
Articles
ON KNOWING ANOTHER PERSON
MRINAL MIRI
North-Eastern Hill University, India
The claim is frequently made now-a-days that the sciences of man cannot be value
neutral, that any genuine knowledge of man and society cannot be free from a
commitment to values. And this cannot expresses not just an empirical impos-
sibility, but an impossibility of a somewhat stronger sort. There are several, more
or less related, routes to this position. In this paper I wish to consider the rather
limited issue of my knowledge of another person, and see if there is a philosophical
route to such a position at least on this issue. It will be natural to assume that we
shall be able to learn lessons concerning the general problem from this particular
exploration.
I am not, for the purpose of this paper, interested in the classical problem of
scepticism about other minds. In connexion with this problem I merely reiterate
the position, so convincingly argued for by several philosophers,' that insofar as
one is at all in possession of the knowledge that one is a self-conscious creature,
one must, for that very reason, also be in possession of the knowledge that there
are other self-conscious creatures as well. My problem in this paper is rather, what
I might call, the real life problem of the accuracy and justice of one's claim to
know another person.
My use of the word justice here is deliberate. It is meant to encompass two
points, namely, (i) the point that any claim to know another person must be just
in the sense of its being justifiable; and (ii) the point that any such claim must be
capable of being seen as doing justice to the person who is the object of the knowl-
edge claim. I shall argue that the two senses of justice here are interlinked; and
to show that this is so is also to have shown that my knowledge of another person
is embedded in a commitment to values.
In his brilliant, though somewhat neglected, paper, entitled, Freedom and Re-
sentment,2 Strawson makes a distinction which I find very useful for my purpose
in this paper. This is the distinction which he makes between an objective at-
titude and a reactive or participatory attitude in one's relationship with other
human beings. I present the distinction, as far as possible, in Strawson's own words.

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