The odd thing, to me at least, is the depth of Meta's resistance. — creativesoul
I put it to the reader that Meta has shown few, if any, original thought/belief. Parroting another's ancient argument or extrapolating upon it without overt mention doesn't count as a private mental ongoing, unless that which has been made public for centuries counts as being private... — creativesoul
What I want to avoid, and for us all to avoid, is any suggestion in this discussion that 'I' or 'we' speak (for) the collective mind. Imagine one neurone claiming to have 'the answer'. — unenlightened
creative wrote:I want to attempt to ascertain, determine, and/or set out what exactly an individual adopts from the collective, particularly with regard to self-worth, self-value, self-awareness, etc. It seems to me that that would be a good method for working towards your aim, as well as perhaps helping to explain some of the reasons why that particular style of therapy is and/or would be so effective/affective.
Un replied:When members of a 'primitive' tribe visit the West, one of the things they find hardest to understand is how we can, in so much abundance wealth and power, abide that our brothers are homeless and hungry on our streets. To them it looks like an untended wound. To the disconnected individual it is not even apparent that this untended wound is the price of self regard.
The odd thing, to me at least, is the depth of Meta's resistance.
— creativesoul
My resistance is simple defence. That person, unenlightened, attacked the creative function of all individual human minds, claiming the mind is a "responsive sensitivity". It was then insinuated that as an individual person, I am not real, I am an hallucination. It is not a selfishness which I express, because defence is concerned with the motives of the attacker, not the self which is being defended. — Metaphysician Undercover
I put it to the reader that Meta has shown few, if any, original thought/belief. Parroting another's ancient argument or extrapolating upon it without overt mention doesn't count as a private mental ongoing, unless that which has been made public for centuries counts as being private...
— creativesoul
Now you have attacked me personally, with the charge of plagiarism. — Metaphysician Undercover
If you have any reason whatsoever to believe that anything which I wrote in this thread has already been said by another person before me, then show me, get right to it and produce your evidence, in the form of a quote please, with reference.
Seemed like it was based upon Heraclitus' bit about not stepping into the same river twice. — creativesoul
There's something very very odd about one using language that is not of his/her own creation to claim that everything that they think, believe, mean, and/or write is entirely of their own and no one else has ever thought, believed, meant, and/or written the same thing... — creativesoul
However, this bit about suggesting that 'I' or 'we' speak (for) the collective mind seems to be headed in the direction of setting the collective mind outside the boundaries of the individual's knowledge capability. — creativesoul
Seems to me that from a methodological naturalist bent, the 'primitive' people, particularly those in smaller groups, have much more to lose on a personal level by virtue of another member of the group suffering. Co-dependence between trustworthy people is not a bad thing. I would strongly assert that it is utterly imperative to the survival of such groups and thus quite possibly everyone in it. — creativesoul
My resistance is simple defence. That person, unenlightened, attacked the creative function of all individual human minds, claiming the mind is a "responsive sensitivity". It was then insinuated that as an individual person, I am not real, I am an hallucination. It is not a selfishness which I express, because defence is concerned with the motives of the attacker, not the self which is being defended.
— Metaphysician Undercover
What if there was no attack? Then what? — creativesoul
He is quick, thinking in clear images;
I am slow, thinking in broken images.
He becomes dull, trusting to his clear images;
I become sharp, mistrusting my broken images,
Trusting his images, he assumes their relevance;
Mistrusting my images, I question their relevance.
Assuming their relevance, he assumes the fact,
Questioning their relevance, I question the fact.
When the fact fails him, he questions his senses;
When the fact fails me, I approve my senses.
He continues quick and dull in his clear images;
I continue slow and sharp in my broken images.
He in a new confusion of his understanding;
I in a new understanding of my confusion. — Robert Graves
I asked:
Did you invent the strict notion of "same" and/or "sameness" that you employed earlier when talking to Wosret? Seemed like it was based upon Heraclitus' bit about not stepping into the same river twice. What about the law of identity, did you invent that? Did you come up with that all by yourself, or does ancient Greek thought/belief underpin your writing?
I didn't say anything about a river, we were talking about thoughts. That's a category difference and you're making a category mistake with your accusation. — Metaphysician Undercover
It is a myth that smaller groups have more to lose, we all have our whole skin in the game, and we will all be destroyed by the people, the feelings, the consciousness that we reject. Co-dependence is the reality of individuated beings, and independence is the dangerous fantasy. — unenlightened
You need not talk about a river to employ and/or be influenced by Heraclitus. — creativesoul
You asserted that all your thought/belief was original to your own individual and private mental ongoings. — creativesoul
Oh, so being influenced by someone is what you count as having the same thoughts as that person. Get real. — Metaphysician Undercover
I am not asserting that all my thoughts and beliefs are original to myself, I am asserting that I have original thoughts, and therefore I have private mental ongoings. It doesn't require that all my thoughts are original to conclude that I have private mental ongoings, all that is required is that I have some originality. — Metaphysician Undercover
Rather I want to question where the idea of self, and the idea of interiority come from. Once they are given, solipsism becomes possible, the other becomes possible, morality/immorality becomes possible. — unenlightened
How (and why) does one come to draw the boundaries of self, so as to separate self from world? It seems to me to be just as mysterious as the drawing of national boundaries. One side of the river is self, and the other side is foreign, but if you follow the river back to its source, there is no division. — unenlightened
We can say that the river has a beginning and the river has an end, but the only boundary between these two is the river itself. — Metaphysician Undercover
I agree. Also, the relationship between individual, environment, and group forms the basis of a continuous, circular, process of communication which produces cultural development. — Galuchat
Too bad they could not share an actual session with a patient. — Cavacava
Yes indeed, and I cannot find much patient testimony either. It's understandable. The best I can find so far is a couple of case histories here, and this newspaper report. — unenlightened
Our social identity is constructed by adapting our actions to those of others; and even more, knowing me myself as such is only possible by me seeing myself through the eyes of the other (Bakhtin, 1990).
Which is exactly what I've been getting at in the thread, that it is something one is told, has to be told, as one has to be told everything about oneself - to some extent. The narrative self is a community affair.I've been told I've had psychotic episodes. — believenothing
I think what Heidegger is describing is also more basic than the below Bakhtin quote since before we can adapt our actions to those of others (consciously I assume), we already are, as dasman, an other to ourselves. — bloodninja
First let me say that I am glad you shared and I hope you find this a safe place to do so, for without sharing there is no way to know one another.Trying to ruminate — believenothing
Oh really? >:O Is that it, dishonesty is insanity, and it rocked your world? Is that why when I told you that one of Peterson's core teachings is the centrality of honesty in the prevention and treatment of psychopathy, you laughed at me, and said it is trivial? >:OIdentity is fragmentation, and dishonesty is insanity. That alone is enough to rock my world. — unenlightened
Many GOOD therapists (psychologists) are already doing that anyway. So these people from Finland are keeping secrets - either their results are not as great as they claim them to be - OR - they don't want to share their real secret. — Agustino
Hmm, but I disagree with your basic premise that identity is fragmentation... and probably so would Peterson. I think that quite the contrary, a strong identity is required for good mental health. Lack of identity can lead to depersonalisation, anxiety and other such symptoms. In order to withstand the vicissitudes of this world, and the evil that exists, one must have a developed individuality. Indeed, it is the role of society to help one achieve such an individuality - and once this is achieved, it cannot be taken away, it remains the individual's. To make an analogy with a baby, it is alright if the baby is unable to walk without his mother's help at first, but there comes a point when he must stand on his own two feet, independent from the mother.As to what rocks my world, you missed out the first half, and it is the juxtaposition that makes something non-trivial. If identity is fragmentation, then what is honesty? — unenlightened
Hmm, but I disagree with your basic premise that identity is fragmentation... and probably so would Peterson. — Agustino
Sir, why are you such a gangster?Yes, I know. I won't argue it here, I just wanted to point out that there is a big difference between the half-quote and the whole, and so between what Peterson is saying and myself. — unenlightened
How do you think this contributes to better outcomes? How would you imagine this goes in a practical situation? I imagine that people with - say - schizophrenia - who have hallucinations, would be asking about what they should do to deal with those when they have them, etc. What would the therapists say?I think one of the 'secrets' is that they do not operate alone. The patient is seen in their community, and the therapist also brings their community with them. — unenlightened
I agree, obviously. The guru aspect is essential, a good therapist is, in essence, a guru. Part of this has to do with subtle features of method that cannot be articulated. For example, I know when my dog makes an "angry", "attack-ready" face, but I cannot tell you what exactly makes me know that that respective face is the "angry", "attack-ready" face - but I do know it. Likewise, the guru cannot convey his method fully - he or she is needed.This partly explains why there is often a guru-like emphasis on having been trained by the originator of a therapy. And it means it is impossible to separate the GOOD therapist from the BAD in terms of their method, though one knows who is helpful to one's own situation - or does one? — unenlightened
Hmm, so have you suffered from any diagnosable mental disorder then?I don't have a personal story to relate, in the sense that I have always made myself responsible for my own madness, and so have only been a witness to encounters of others with therapy, the institution and the individuals. — unenlightened
Hmm, so have you suffered from any diagnosable mental disorder then? — Agustino
I think one of the 'secrets' is that they do not operate alone. The patient is seen in their community, and the therapist also brings their community with them.
— unenlightened
How do you think this contributes to better outcomes? How would you imagine this goes in a practical situation? I imagine that people with - say - schizophrenia - who have hallucinations, would be asking about what they should do to deal with those when they have them, etc. What would the therapists say? — Agustino
And your username and password Sir? >:OI did manage to get myself thrown off a counselling course, a long time ago, see here, if you want all the sordid details. — unenlightened
Okay, right. Well, I agree that that is important, however, that is just the beginning - by itself it doesn't solve any problems. That just gets the patient to be open and willing to collaborate with the therapist, and not think that the therapist is going to do something harmful to them, or that they don't agree with. That is indeed really important, but it's just the beginning. It doesn't actually address how to deal with hallucinations when the patient has them for example.I think it is terribly important. It fosters exactly that openness and honesty - we are not talking about you behind your back, you are not being singled out and separated from your family/community before any intervention. We are all together trying to sort out a problem. — unenlightened
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