What if the problem is not subjectivity itself-but the fact that we never learned how to work with it?
In a culture that celebrates emotional expression but avoids emotional responsibility, individuals are increasingly ruled by unexamined reactions, rigid narratives, and internal chaos mistaken for authenticity.
Objectifying Subjectivity is a dense, uncompromising exploration of how inner life can be transformed from a governing force into a structured instrument.
This book argues that emotion is not truth, identity is not destiny, and feeling is not authority. Instead, subjectivity is treated as raw material-something to be observed, mapped, interpreted, and integrated.
Through a rigorous framework combining psychological insight, ethical structure, and social analysis, the book guides the reader through:
the tyranny of unexamined inner life
the construction and deconstruction of personal identity
emotional absolutism and its social consequences
concrete methods for working with the self
the development of deliberate action and ethical coherence
the societal impact of psychologically autonomous individuals
This is not a self-help manual.
It does not offer comfort, shortcuts, or slogans.
It offers tools-for those willing to accept responsibility for their inner world.
Written in a clear, sober, human voice, Objectifying Subjectivity is for readers who sense that modern discourse about the self has lost something essential: structure.