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From Irish Philosophy to Irish Theatre: The Blind (Wo)Man Made to See

Publication at Faculty of Arts |
2017

Abstract

This article traces the motif of the blind man made to see, also known as the Molyneux ‎problem, from the writings of Irish philosophers of the 17th and 18th centuries to 20th century ‎Irish plays. The narrative of restoring sight to the blind is taken as a paradigmatic example of ‎overcoming a disability, with a cure that normalises the blind persons and allows them to ‎reintegrate into society.

The paper argues that this narrative was problematised by Irish ‎philosophers and playwrights from Molyneux and Berkeley to Yeats, Synge, Beckett and ‎Friel.‎