Action Without the Doer is an existential-phenomenological inquiry into the psychological structure of action, identity, and relationship. The paper examines how discrimination, understood as psychological division, creates the sense of a doer separated from action itself. Through direct observation of consciousness, it explores how concepts such as help, sacrifice, compromise, attachment, expectation, and comparison emerge from dualistic perception and sustain the continuity of the self. Rather than proposing a moral system or spiritual ideal, the work investigates whether action can exist without psychological accumulation, self-image, or the movement of becoming. The paper argues that when the division between observer and observed dissolves, action becomes whole, immediate, and free from the burden of identity.
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Mayank Singh (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a080b84a487c87a6a40daaa — DOI: https://doi.org/10.17605/osf.io/6rkmz
Mayank Singh
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