Of course, in so much as an environment is able to be opposed/ignored by each individual within it.
Im not sure where the conundrum lies here...if the individual subscribes to a social environment, they subscribe to the level of individuality permitted by that social environment, if any. If they do not subscribe then they have no restrictions on being an individual. If the person subscribes but doesnt always follow the rules, then they have individuality proportionate to the degree to which they go against or ignore the environment. Finally, if they subscribe to the social environment but privately (mentally or otherwise) exercise individuality then they are able to be individuals to whatever extent they are able to have privacy (of thought or otherwise). — DingoJones
You asked whether or not someone can be an individual in that specific society, not whether an individual can change that society. — DingoJones
can the individual resist the environment? — DingoJones
Its that the concept of individuality doesn't make sense - to me - when applied to a completely hegemonic population, without religious, cultural or social differences. It seems to me that the individual "dies" when an absolute truth has been completely reached and everyone believes in it. — Gus Lamarch
The individual's existence is already an eternal battle against the external environment. I don't see a "truce" being made between the individual and the collective. — Gus Lamarch
Am I misunderstanding? — DingoJones
It seems like you are essentially asking “if there was an environment with no individuality would there be any individuality?” — DingoJones
in fact id go so far as to say that its only the conformity to society that weakens this natural instinct of individuality. — DingoJones
I dont know that it would factor in per say. — DingoJones
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