However, I've noticed a trend happening in the field of psychology where this tendency of the analysis of the self is being replaced with the analysis of the self in respect to reality. This can be seen in CBT and some other forms of therapy, such as 'Reality Therapy'. — Posty McPostface
This just seems an example of what many have realised - we are socially constructed beings. — apokrisis
Of course, that leads to the political/economic question of whether that society is the right kind of world in the first place. A poor personal fit could reflect on the society itself. And it might be the good copers who suffer a kind of pathology in becoming so well adapted to the demands of their social environment. — apokrisis
Then, more optimistically, there is also the Positive Psychology movement that says "Reality Therapy" should be taught to everyone. It is not just there to fix the ill. It is the learnable basics of being mentally healthy. — apokrisis
Learning about how social construction works - how we get programmed for life by our early social influences - is also how we can transcend that early programming to make what might be more adaptive choices in terms of our attitudes and beliefs. — apokrisis
Meaning, that for much of the past history of psychology, the importance of the self has been elevated over the concerns of society, giving rise to what I call delusional psychology — Posty McPostface
here's also a deep and insidious ad hominen hidden in what you call "A poor personal fit" here, think the label "mental disorder". — Posty McPostface
That's a futile task. I'm reminded of the man who spent a week to detail one day of his life, who was never able to complete his autobiography in time. — Posty McPostface
I don't really see that at all. — apokrisis
But regular psychology has been focused on society's need to jam round pegs into square holes most of the time. — apokrisis
But it is me pointing that out! — apokrisis
You say it is futile. But your responses are anecdotal rather than evidential. And one of the skills that positive psychology would aim to teach here is to be able to break out of that kind of self-fulfilling circle where you assume stuff - like that typical psychology is highly egocentric - and then brush off all suggestions to the contrary ... in egocentric fashion. — apokrisis
I think for a correct approach to this we need to look into both aspects of what makes us - a balance between the self and social existence. — TheMadFool
To focus on one at the cost of the other would be missing something important in my view. — TheMadFool
The trend in our world (I may be wrong) is that now we're in a position to allow individuals to achieve a greater degree of freedom from the limitations of social existence. It is possible, in the modern world, to isolate yourself from society - to not care about friendship, love, family, etc. - and yet derive all the benefits of a social existence like safety and security. — TheMadFool
Do you see where this is going? — TheMadFool
Well, just take the Prisoners dilemma for example or the tragedy of the commons, or the fact that economics treats what is rational with self interest. All of these situations arise because we place a higher value of our own welfare than that of others in much of Westernized society. — Posty McPostface
I don't want to turn this thread into a critique of modern society; but, it's almost inevitable that this thread will take that turn. Why is that? — Posty McPostface
Yeah, so doesn't that prove the point that psychology is in need of a paradigm shift from the ego-centric model? — Posty McPostface
I'm not saying all of psychology is egocentric; and I sure hope it isn't, but there's really no way to frame the issue otherwise, or is there? — Posty McPostface
But to the degree these are models of how collaborative good can arise out of selfish actions, then they are hardly egocentric. — apokrisis
They speak to the social science understanding that flourishing requires a self-organising and adaptive balance of competitive and co-operative actions. Both are right as both are needed. And that is what the psychological fixes would be targeting as the reality. — apokrisis
So the commons are a good thing - so long at the personal vs group dynamic is balanced by "market forces". — apokrisis
Because we are changing everything so fast. Humans are socially constructed and humans are changing the society that constructs them. When else in history has there been such a need to consider the kinds of people we are making? — apokrisis
And it cuts both ways. The Millennials could be making the right world for them, so Baby Boomers and Gen Xers should be shoving over, letting the change happen quicker. — apokrisis
You mean like Positive Psychology? Which is a paradigm shift I've been tracking for some time. Where I live, it's been part of the damn national educational curriculum for a decade now. You can't get much more officially mainstream than that. — apokrisis
And among Millennials generally, it is one of their supposed hallmarks - a pro-social individualism. It expresses itself in social enterprise, the sharing economy, and other economic philosophies meant to roll back the excesses of funny money capitalism. — apokrisis
Social constructionism does not deny individuality. — apokrisis
You want people who have some assertiveness, self-esteem and motivation. Society needs creative energy as well as its generalised habits of constraint and collaboration. — apokrisis
So yes, there is definitely another way to frame the issues. But one that incorporates the natural thing of self-interested competition as part of the productive mix. — apokrisis
Yes, so how do we arrive at that balance or golden mean? — Posty McPostface
The purpose of reality therapy from my short read on the matter is to build a relationship with the world, not the self. — Posty McPostface
psychologists and psychiatrists have been lured like some angler trap into this idea that deep issues can be brought into the light and then the process of healing can occur. — Posty McPostface
That's the million dollar question nobody knows the answer to. — TheMadFool
Ethics is much easier within the family and even friends. A smaller community makes for an ideal state to practice morality. — TheMadFool
In a way I think we need to, instead of trying to unite society and the individual, actually separate them from each other. — TheMadFool
So the world is on one end of the relationship bridge; what is on the other end, if not some self? How did the self manage to get to a point where it doesn't have a relationship with the world any more? — Bitter Crank
There is no escaping the world, or reality; it's a lion prowling in the dark savanna, silently slipping through the shadows, about to ambush us, once again. One of these nights will be the last time, and then the ambiguous self will vanish. — Bitter Crank
You want a relationship with reality? Let me tell you: reality is out to kill you and it will eventually succeed--if not this time, then the next time. — Bitter Crank
The critical step in therapy is always accepting reality. — Bitter Crank
We don't have to like it, we can certainly commit ourselves to changing it, but we can not ignore it. So, our reality therapy patient must begin by accepting whatever he or she is. IF what one is is very bad (like, really very badly screwed up) then that's just going to be a tough piece to look at. But then there's acceptance, and absolution. Easy? Nope. Quick? Usually not. Difficult to make progress? Oh, yes -- very much so. But, you know, we keep working at it and at some point in the future we notice... "hey, I can see progress here!" And we keep on. — Bitter Crank
What do you mean by that? — Posty McPostface
So, instead of finding the golden mean we let both flourish - let them go their separate ways. All we need from the group is safety. That can easily be achieved through an army of bots (AI). With safety ensured the individual is no longer bothered or ''burdened'' by having to adjust him/herself in society. — TheMadFool
Safety from what? What threat's are we talking about here? — Posty McPostface
What do you need from society? — TheMadFool
Not much. Just food, clothing, and some shelter or domesticile. Everything else is just a luxury of sorts. — Posty McPostface
Pareto optimal (comparative more Pareto optimal, superlative most Pareto optimal)
(game theory, economics) Describing a situation in which the profit of one party cannot be increased without reducing the profit of another. — Wiki
You are still talking as if I said something different. — apokrisis
But to the degree these are models of how collaborative good can arise out of selfish actions, then they are hardly egocentric. — apokrisis
Economic self-interest is rational - so long as it is framed within a generally shared social context that generates sufficient real equality of opportunity (and factors in the true long-term costs of its economic activities). — apokrisis
That's because you assume that rational self interest is always optimal, — Posty McPostface
Economic self-interest is rational - so long as it is framed within a generally shared social context that generates sufficient real equality of opportunity (and factors in the true long-term costs of its economic activities). — apokrisis
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