Jack Cummins
Pantagruel
Pantagruel
Or it may mean your ego* is completely satisfied. — ArielAssante
Jack Cummins
Tate
Laing also looks at the idea of 'ontological security', and he argues that a 'basically ontological secure person will encounter all the hazards of life, social, ethical, spiritual, biological from a centrally firm sense of his own and other people's reality and identity. — Jack Cummins
Pantagruel
Jack Cummins
Tate
As far as others' opinions, it may vary how much one can step outside of social expectations. However, part of who one is may be about choices of moving outside specific circles, including family or communities, such as those of a church. Often, to break with certain social ties can involve courage as most people rely on a certain amount of social support. — Jack Cummins
Jack Cummins
Alkis Piskas
Where does the idea of "true self" come from? What is it based on?I am asking the question of what it means to find the "true" self. — Jack Cummins
Jack Cummins
Jack Cummins
Pantagruel
How can it be considered as "true"? As opposed or compared to what? False, fake, divided, imagined, idealized? — Alkis Piskas
Joshs
I am asking the question of what it means to find the "true" self. It is a fairly complex question because it involves the social and existential sense of selfhood? How important is the idea of a 'true' self? To what extent is the self bound up with relationships with others, or as being, alone, in relation to the wider cosmos, and making sense of this? — Jack Cummins
Jack Cummins
Jack Cummins
180 Proof
To my mind, in sum, each one of us is a heteronomous¹ (e.g. natal-embodied, socialized, historicized ...) being who, at best, strives for integrity – to do what one says and say what one does – in living according to one's ability to keep one's expectations aligned, or consistent, with reality.I am asking the question of what it means to find the "true" self. It is a fairly complex question because it involves the social and existential sense of selfhood? How important is the idea of a 'true' self? To what extent is the self bound up with relationships with others, or as being, alone, in relation to the wider cosmos, and making sense of this? — Jack Cummins
Pantagruel
Jack Cummins
Jack Cummins
180 Proof
Insofar as "God" is a three-letter swear word for ego, I believe my own "loss of God" made me less ego-centric rather than more, though not nearly as other-centric as Buber seems (or, even moreso, Levinas). The I-Thou relationship without "the eternal Thou" (or thou separate from the I-Thou encounter) speaks morally and existentially to me; and so, paraphrasing the famed Cartesian bumpersticker, You (We) are, therefore I am. :smirk:in some ways the loss of God as the significant other may lead to a far greater narcissism — Jack Cummins
Jack Cummins
Tom Storm
I am asking the question of what it means to find the "true" self. It is a fairly complex question because it involves the social and existential sense of selfhood? How important is the idea of a 'true' self? To what extent is the self bound up with relationships with others, or as being, alone, in relation to the wider cosmos, and making sense of this? — Jack Cummins
Jack Cummins
Tom Storm
a fragmentary or fragile self that it becomes unstable. — Jack Cummins
180 Proof
... ergo anatta. :flower:t may be that there is no 'true' self and it is a mythic concept. — Jack Cummins
Agent Smith
Agent Smith
there is no 'true' self — Jack Cummins
Alkis Piskas
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