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#1 (permalink) |
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Member
Join Date: Jun 2008
Type: INFP
Location: Kentucky
Posts: 98
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Have you folks heard of Integral Philosophy? I have been reading through one of Ken Wilbur's books and find it very fascinating. He mentions studying typology such as the MBTI as a tool for personal development working with AQAL or all quadrants all levels and also including all lines, all states and all types. Anyway, I really do not know much about Integral Philosophy or the MBTI for that matter but find them fascinating. It seems to be a very comprehensive way of looking at things from many perspectives especially with the four quadrants (see below). Has anyone done any study into this system and how the MBTI fits into it? Thoughts? Opinions?
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Happy colored marbles that are rolling in my head..." - Ween |
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#2 (permalink) |
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Wonderer
Join Date: May 2008
Type: ENTP
Location: Manhattan
Posts: 1,058
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Ken Wilbur's system is something of a rehash of other similar systems... which is not to say it isn't loaded with merits... but it's not, fundamentally, new...
See Gurdjieff (read the books by Ouspensky, like In Search of the Miraculous and The Fourth Way) See Yoga and Advaita Vedanta philosophy... Pick up some Madhyamika Buddhist texts... Integral Philosophy reminds me most of the sort of syncretistic magpie philosophico-psychologizing of the Theosophy school.
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Madman's azure lie: a zen miasma ruled. Realize us, Madman! I razed a slum, Amen. ............................................... |
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#3 (permalink) |
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Member
Join Date: Jun 2008
Type: INFP
Location: Kentucky
Posts: 98
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Somehow I knew that you would post to this thread Samuel.
I am aware that concepts in integral philosophy are not entirely new and I am familiar with Advaita Vedanta. In fact it is my favorite school of philosophy. I also like the Yogic philosophies. The Indians just have it going on in this department. I will have to check out Gurdjieff, I am not familiar and I will look into Madhyamika Buddhist texts. I hadn't thought of it before but I do see parallels between integral philosophy and the theosophical perspective. Interesting... but I guess Wilbur would say that his system encompasses them all. One thing I can't get about Wilbur is that he seems to make a distinction between the pre-rational non-dual perspective and the post-rational non-dual perspective. But when I read the older texts such as the work of Shankara and some Taoist poetry they seem very aware of non-duality and not just in a mythical or mystical way. I think the direct experience of it hasn't changed much and I don't think the non-dual perspectives of today are any "higher level" then they always were.
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Happy colored marbles that are rolling in my head..." - Ween |
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#4 (permalink) |
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Wonderer
Join Date: May 2008
Type: ENTP
Location: Manhattan
Posts: 1,058
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I'm going to say something here... Ken Wilber's might be one of the biggest, most bulgingest brains in the world... and I'd have to read a lot more of him to get into this... which is why I'm going to get back to you within the next four days...
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Madman's azure lie: a zen miasma ruled. Realize us, Madman! I razed a slum, Amen. ............................................... |
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#6 (permalink) |
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Senior Member
Join Date: May 2008
Type: INXX
Posts: 198
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I've read Ken Wilber's A Brief History of Everything and started but not finished one of his larger tomes. I like Wilber's project of trying to build a philosophy in which all valid human ways of knowing and fields of knowledge can be integrated. Of course he's been criticized for his "orienting generalizations" being overgeneralizations and oversimplifications.
What you said suggested to me that his interest in MBTI lies in his quest to develop every part of his personality so that he is not limited to one type. Is that sort of what he is trying to do? |
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#7 (permalink) |
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Member
Join Date: Jun 2008
Type: INFP
Location: Kentucky
Posts: 98
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What I get from it is that maybe for a given situation one would think how all types such as the MBTIs would fit into a given scenario and then do this in all quadrants, all levels, all stages etc. I guess typology just adds more things to consider when using integral philosophy as a way of getting at the heart of a matter. That is just my guess. Although if Ken Wilbur can change his preferences like he can change his brain activity he probably can change types too.
Here is a video of him messing around with an EKG machine
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Happy colored marbles that are rolling in my head..." - Ween |
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#8 (permalink) | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2007
Type: INFP
Location: Tenkay Lakes
Posts: 276
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Quote:
I very much value the Integral Philosophy, and I have found both pleasure and understanding in Wilbur's writing. I have read most all of his books, and own many of them, and I think and feel they are well worth the time. In particular, I very much enjoy his Integral Psychology. I do think there is the potential to create a typer that would map in a constructive way to all quadrants, all levels, but I suspect it would be some real work. I can intuit to some degree how MBTI might map to it now, but I suspect that it would be quite incomplete. cheers, Ian |
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#9 (permalink) | ||
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Member
Join Date: Jun 2008
Type: INFP
Location: Kentucky
Posts: 98
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Quote:
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All these pre post pre etc. terms drive me crazy but I can't think of any other way to phrase this stuff.
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Happy colored marbles that are rolling in my head..." - Ween |
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