Title: Man and Postmodernist Pluralism: Implications for Personal Growth
1Man and Postmodernist PluralismImplications for
Personal Growth
- Günther Fleck
- Institute for Human and Social Sciences
- National Defense Academy
- Vienna, Austria
2Contents
- Part I Existential Conditions of Every Day
Life and Human Development - Part II Pluralism Challenge of
Postmodernism - Part III The Self in the Postmodern World
- Part IV Personal Relatedness Understanding
Fundamental Forms of Self-Experience and
Identity Formation - Part V Implications for Personal Growth
3Part I Existential Conditions of Every Day
Life
- Fulfilling of Daily Demands
- Demands from Outside
- Self-Defined Demands
- Self-Regulation of Subjective Well-Being Wishes
- Needs
- Interests
4Differentiation and Integration
- The general mode of individual adaptation can be
understood as a never ending consequence of two
opposed processes The process of differentiation
and the process of integration. According to
Watkins (1978) differentiation is the perceptual
recognition of differences and discrimination
between two different things integration is the
bringing together of two or more elements so that
they are consonant or can interact constructively
with each other.
5Individual-Environment-Interaction, Personal
Growth and Self-Complexity (I)
- The processes of differentiation and integration
are embedded in individual-environment-interaction
s promoting mental (cognitive) development (e.g.,
various intellectual abilities, value
orientation, world view, belief systems,
self-reflection), affective development (e.g.,
affect-regulation, affect maturity, empathy, need
satisfaction), and motor development (e.g.,
various motor skills, sports, dancing). -
6Individual-Environment-Interaction, Personal
Growth and Self-Complexity (II)
-
- Under optimal conditions these processes will
produce personal growth and self-knowledge.
According to Linville (1987) self-knowledge is
represented in terms of multiple self-aspects.
Greater self-complexity involves representing the
self in terms of a greater number of cognitive
self-aspects and maintaining greater distinctions
among self-aspects.
7Present Uncertainties
- Epistemological Uncertainties
- Social Uncertainties
- Economic Uncertainties
- Ecological Uncertainties
- Political Uncertainties
8Central Question
9Part II
- Pluralism
- The Challenge of Postmodernism
10The Postmodern Worldview(after Brent Wilson,
1997)
- I. Postmodernism, as the term implies, is
largely a response to modernity. Whereas
modernity trusted science to lead us down the
road of progress, postmodernism questioned
whether science alone could really get us there.
Whereas modernity happily created inventions and
technologies to improve our lives, postmodernism
took a second look and wondered whether our lives
were really better for all the gadgets and toys.
11The Postmodern Worldview(after Brent Wilson,
1997)
- II. Postmodernism looked at the culmination of
modernity in the 20th century the results of
forces such as nationalism, totalitarianism,
technocracy, consumerism, and modern warfare
and said, we can see the efficiency and the
improvements, but we can also see the
dehumanising, mechanising effects in our lives.
The Holocaust was efficient, technical, coldly
rational. There must be a better way to think
about things.
12Key Features of Postmodern Thinking(after Dennis
Hlynka Andrew Yeaman, 1992)
- I. A Commitment to Plurality of Perspectives,
Meanings, Methods, Values - Everything! - II. A Search for and Appreciation of Double
Meanings and Alternative Interpretations, Many of
Them Ironic and Unintended.
13Key Features of Postmodern Thinking(after Dennis
Hlynka Andrew Yeaman, 1992)
- III. A Critique or Distrust of Big Stories Meant
to Explain Everything. This Includes Grand
Theories of Science, and Myths in Our Religions,
Nations, Cultures, and Professions That Serve to
Explain Why Things Are the Way They Are. - IV. An Acknowledge That - Because There Is a
Plurality of Perspectives and Ways of Knowing -
There Are Also Multiple Truths.
14Part III The Self in the Postmodern World
-
- The Self is Ones inclusive sense (or
symbolization) of ones own being. - Robert Jay Lifton (1993)
15The Protean SelfThree Manifestations
- 1. It is sequential a changing series of
involvements with people, ideas, and activities,
as was especially during the late 1960s and early
1970s, but has continued to occur more quietly
(and as a sustained pattern) in much of American
culture.
16The Protean SelfThree Manifestations
- 2. Proteanism can also be simultaneous, in the
multiplicity of varied, even antithetical images
and ideas held at any time by the self, each of
which it may be more or less ready to act upon
a condition sometimes referred to as multimind.
17The Protean SelfThree Manifestations
- 3. And it is social , so that in any given
environment office, school, or neighborhood
one may encounter highly varied forms of
self-presentation everything from a
conventional, buttoned-down demeanor, to jeans
and male beads and earrings, to the blissed-out
states of members of religious cults, to any
conceivable in-between.
18The Fragmented SelfThe Dark Side of the Protean
Self
- Fragmentation can be associated with different
kinds of self-processes, all of them precarious
with contradictory fundamentalism, with defensive
self-constriction, and with various forms of
negative or caricatured proteanism. The
fragmented self is radically bereft of coherence
and continuity, an extreme expression of
dissociation.
19Part IV
- Personal Relatedness
- Understanding Fundamental Forms of
Self-Experience and Identity Formation
20Areas of Personal Relatedness
- I. Relatedness to Oneself
- II. Relatedness to Other Single Persons
- III. Relatedness to Groups
- IV. Relatedness to Society, Nation, World
and Universe
21Fundamental Forms of Self-Experience and Identity
Formation
- Numerous personality theorists have postulated
and discussed two central processes in
personality development differentiation and
integration - Angyal (1941, 1951) Autonomy vs. Surrender
- Bakan (1966) Agency vs. Communion
- Balint (1959) Philobatic vs. Ocnophilic
Tendencies - McAdams (1985) Power vs. Intimacy
- Spiegel Spiegel (1978) Fission vs. Fusion
- Koestler (1972) characterized man with respect
to these basic tendencies as a Janus-Faced
Holon.
22Part VImplications for Personal Growth
- Models of Personal Growth
- Ways to Personal Growth
23Models of Personal Growth I
- Traditional View of Self-Actualisation
- (e.g., Maslow, 1962 Rogers, 1963)
- Self-Actualisation is characterised as the
increased realisation of inherent potentialities
24Models of Personal Growth II
- Alternative Views of Self-Actualisation
- ( after Butler Rice, 1963)
- Self-Actualisation generally reflects the
persons ability to create new experience and
change for himself via his own cognitive
functioning. - Expanding on Butler and Rices position, a more
elaborated view proposed by Wexler (1974) sees
self-actualisation as the degree to which the
person characteristically engages in a mode of
information processing in which he is his own
source for creating new experience.
25Models of Personal Growth III
- Self-Complexity (after Patricia
Linville, 1987) - The model assumes that self-knowledge is
represented in terms of multiple self-aspects.
Greater self-complexity involves representing the
self in terms of a greater number of cognitive
self-aspects and maintaining greater distinctions
among self-aspects.
26Ways of Personal Growth
-
- Systematic Self-reflection as a Means of
Personal Growth
27Systematic Self-reflection as a Means of Personal
Growth
- Systematic self-reflection (SSR) A special way
to tackle important events and areas of life
intentionally and regularly - Purpose Acquisition of self-knowledge
self-complexity - Empirical evidence shows people with greater
self-complexity are less susceptible to stress
than others
28Goals
- Self-Congruence
- Defining One's Position in Life
- Clarifying One's Own Roles
- Solving of Personal Problems
- Removing Self-Deception
- Self-Actualisation
- Developing a Life Plan
- Self-Knowledge
- Health
29Contents
- A. Areas of Life
- Profession, Partnership, Marriage, Family,
Religion, Arts,... - B. Life Events
- C. World View Value Orientation
- D. Thinking Habits
- E. Health Condition
- F. Sources of Stress
30Methods
- A. RATIONAL SELF-REFLECTION
- Contents are processed by means of
- logical-analytical methods including internal
- dialogue and mental imagery
- B. CONTEMPLATIVE SELF-REFLECTION
- Contents are processed by means of the
- consciousness disciplines such as
meditation and - self-hypnosis
31Contemplative Self-Reflection
- Developing the Observing Self
- The Identification- versus Dis-Identification
Principle
32Self-Identification versusDis-Identification
-
- We are dominated by everything with which our
self becomes identified. - We can dominate and control everything from
which we dis-identify ourselves. - Roberto Assagioli (1965)
33DE-REFLECTION A NECESSARY COMPLEMENT OF
SELF-REFLECTION
-
- Clinical evidence shows that people practising
self-reflection, a necessary condition to tackle
important events and areas of life, may get upset
when someone has lost subjective control of it.
As a consequence, all spontaneity may disappear
and aversive emotions emerge.
34Dynamics of Self-Reflection andDe-Reflection
- Basic assumption
- The following two states of awareness are
essential in guiding human experience and action -
- Reflective awareness
- Non-reflective awareness
35Dynamics of Self-Reflection andDe-Reflection
-
- Reflective Awareness
- Controlled information processing
- Experience is connected to meanings, plans,
functions, decisions, and possible actions - Action is guided via self-talk
- High self-awareness
36Dynamics of Self-Reflection andDe-Reflection
-
- Non-Reflective Awareness
- Automatic information processing
- Person is completely and vividly aware of his her
experience, but there are no processes of
thinking or interpreting going on - Objects are experienced as sensory qualities,
without the intrusion of interpretation - A kind of self-forgetfulness occurs, in which the
distinction between self and object dissolves
("flow experience", absorption)
37Dynamics of Self-Reflectionand De-Reflection
- Regulation of the reflective versus
non-reflective states of awareness via shifts of
attention - Ideally, people are able to guide their stream
of consciousness and to change between states of
reflective or non-reflective awareness
voluntarily. People may develop defects in
regulating the balance between these states in
two ways - Deficits in inducing reflective awareness
- Deficits in inducing non-reflective awareness
- In the case of deficits in inducing
non-reflective awareness the ability of
de-reflection as a necessary complement of
self-reflection should be acquired.
38Dynamics of Self-Reflectionand De-Reflection
- Although it is not easy to learn to look at
objects without words, the so-called
consciousness disciplines (e.g., hypnosis,
meditation) offer ways to cultivate the observing
self as a necessary condition to induce
non-reflective awareness voluntarily. - People can learn to forget themselves and to
overcome categorising and self-talk thereby
promoting their well-being, health and quality of
life. It is stressed that clinical and health
psychologists themselves should learn such
techniques enriching their therapeutic tools and
maybe helping their clients in a more
comprehensive way.
39C. Conclusions
-
- Toward a New Self-Understanding
- in Regard to Cope with Postmodernist Pluralism
40Conclusion I
- Postmodernism offers the most complex context in
history of life regarding the potentialities of
individual development. - Success or failure in individual development in
the sense of personal growth or fragmentation of
self cannot be understood as an either/or
principle. - Although early personal relationships may have a
strong impact on the generation of developmental
patterns (Verlaufsgestalt), this does not
represent an invariable fate.
41Conclusion II
- The human being is asked to take responsibility
for himself or herself with regard to his or her
relatedness to himself or herself, to other
humans and living systems, and to the universe. -
- Looking into future, we should (better we must)
accept this challenge.
42THANK YOU FOR YOUR ATTENTION!