This essay examines the categories of subject, temporality and modernity, from the theoretical enterprise of Koselleck, considering the contemporary debate on the articulation between philosophy, history and politics. Following the conceptual changes experienced by the idea of subjectivity, from its origin to the most recent formulations, the essay explores to think History, that is, human agency, in a post-subjective age characterized by the disruption of any proposal of meaning.
subject; subjectivity; temporality; Conceptual History.