ABSTRACT

Extensively investigated across disciplines such as psychology, psychiatry, education, and social policy, self-esteem has been comparatively under-researched in philosophy. 1 However, a number of theories and notions relevant to the understanding of self-esteem and related experiences have been put forward in both classical and contemporary phenomenology of emotion. Drawing upon this body of research, in this chapter, I will present a phenomenological account of self-esteem. First, I will suggest that this is best understood as a particular kind of background affective orientation, and, more specifically, as a narratively shaped “existential feeling”. I will then move to explore the relevance of such an account for the philosophical understanding of pride, embarrassment, and shyness, thus providing an example of the influence exerted by self-esteem on other self-related affects and traits.