I-hood
See also: Ihood
English
editAlternative forms
editEtymology
editFrom I + -hood, chiefly a calque of German Ichheit (“selfhood”). Compare also Dutch ikheid (“individuality”).
Noun
edit- The state of one's own self or identity; one's conscious personality.
- 1653, J. Sparrow tr. J. Boehme, Considerations upon Esaiah Stiefel:
- Our Humane Will dyed away in the Death of Christ from its own I-hood, and own Willing.
- 1662, J. Sparrow tr. J. Boehme, Apol. Perfection in Remainder Bks.:
- The Man Christ is..the First who in the Anointing dyed to the Humane I-hood.
- 1662, J. Sparrow tr. J. Boehme, 2nd Apol. B. Tylcken in Remainder Bks.:
- He inclineth himself to my Minehood, and my Ihood inclineth it self up into him.
- 1871, H. Macmillan, True Vine (1872) iii.:
- He has no autarkia, or self-sufficingness—no ichheit, or I-hood, as the Germans would say.
- 2000, S. Connor, Dumbstruck:
- The voice, as pure, lyric, unselfconscious I-hood spilling or erupting into the world, suddenly becomes part of that world and recoils upon its originator.
- 2010, Cia Van Woezik, God - Beyond Me:
- Hence, in that respect Henrich's theory of more modest I-hood is definitely an improvement. I heartily support Henrich's attempts to bring the I 'down to earth' and to base a theory of I-hood on daily life's experiences.