This book looks at the 'self' in Western, Asian and African societies
passing though Greek philosophy, Buddhism, Hinduism, Confuscism, Tao and
African philosophy and ending with contemporary feminism. Scholarly and
written in a lucid style, free of jargon, this work is written from an
anthropological perspective with an interdisciplinary approach. Morris
emphasises the varying conceptions of the self found cross-culturally
and contrasts these with the conceptions found in the Western
intellectual traditions.