Mole
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- Joined
- Mar 20, 2008
- Messages
- 20,282
The hallmark of literate cultures is individuality, while the hallmark of spoken cultures is the collective.
And the hallmark of individuality is psychology. We see this in all modern art forms: they are suffused with the psychology of the individual. We take it for granted and regard ourselves as individuals.
And the hallmark of psychology is the pathological psyche. This is the psyche who has failed the life task of individuation.
Individuation is a difficult life task to successfully complete, as we start in symbiosis with our mother, and must start to see ourselves as separate from our mother, then as separate from our family, and separate from our cultural tradition. No wonder so many of us fail to completely individuate.
And failing to individuate, failing to become a whole, self sufficient individual, we seek pathological substitutes such as mbti, where the whole individual is replaced by sixteen types.
The sixteen types fall short of the collective we find in spoken cultures, and the sixteen types fall short of the individuation we find in literate cultures.
The sixteen types are a kind of halfway point between the individual and the collective.
And the hallmark of individuality is psychology. We see this in all modern art forms: they are suffused with the psychology of the individual. We take it for granted and regard ourselves as individuals.
And the hallmark of psychology is the pathological psyche. This is the psyche who has failed the life task of individuation.
Individuation is a difficult life task to successfully complete, as we start in symbiosis with our mother, and must start to see ourselves as separate from our mother, then as separate from our family, and separate from our cultural tradition. No wonder so many of us fail to completely individuate.
And failing to individuate, failing to become a whole, self sufficient individual, we seek pathological substitutes such as mbti, where the whole individual is replaced by sixteen types.
The sixteen types fall short of the collective we find in spoken cultures, and the sixteen types fall short of the individuation we find in literate cultures.
The sixteen types are a kind of halfway point between the individual and the collective.