Antinomien des alternden Selbst
Abstract
Perspectives on old age are characterized by an antinomy of veneration and contempt. This paper explores how this antinomy is spelled in philosophical discourses and how it intersects with the antithesis of fool and sage. According to a Platonist or Antiochean account of ontogenesis, an individual’s development is conceived as an approximate instantiation of an ideal form of “man,” which tends to divide old people into successes and failures. In contrast to this, the Stoic theory of oikeiōsis envisages a continuous process of self-constitution and self-integration that allows for continuous progress and a fundamental reorientation at any age. The elderly and ailing Stoic thus exemplifies not resignation but hope, that it is never too late to turn one’s life into a success story.