Abstract
A human life is meaningful to the extent that it connects with something greater than itself in a way that produces good for others and provides future challenges, past achievements, interpersonal connection and fulfilment for the person whose life it is. Self-fulfilment depends upon self-discovery. Adapting the logic of scientific discovery I suggest that a person can best discover who she is by employing an organised and critical process of conjecture and refutation, testing kinds of life by living them and making judgements concerning her fulfilment. I discuss some practical limitations on this process, particularly our proneness to self-deception. I illustrate these points with autobiographical reflections concerning how poor self-knowledge, in part due to self-deception, brought about my descent into depression, anxiety and uncontrollable bruxism, and how that personal disaster could have been avoided if I had set out to discover myself in an organised and critical way. If one is to discover oneself and lead a fulfilling life, one must be prepared to question and criticise received views and one must welcome challenges and criticism to views that one holds dear and that even seem, at the moment, to be part of one’s identity. A philosophical autobiography should be, amongst other things, an account of the author’s progress, or otherwise, in discovering the type of life that she finds most fulfilling. For someone who pursues an organised project of self-discovery, life and philosophical autobiography become intertwined.