Ge 101 - Uts
Ge 101 - Uts
Ge 101 - Uts
101
UDERSTANDING THE
SELF
INTRODUCTI
ON
Understanding the Self is one of the core courses under the General Education
Curriculum. It covers the nature of identity, the factors and forces that affect personal
development and the maintenance of personal identity. Understanding oneself is an
integral process one needs to undergo to set direction for current and future actions
and behaviors. It is important to be able to address issues about the self –
philosophical, psychological, sociological, anthropological, and even the dilemma of
viewing the self from the eastern and western perspectives – to define one’s purpose
and act accordingly.
Understanding the Self presents a broad range of topics under the themes the
self from various perspectives, deconstructing or unpacking the self, managing and
caring for the self. It must be emphasized that understanding the self is a
multidisciplinary approach and endeavor, and that no discipline supersedes other
disciplines in comprehending the self. Various perspectives on the self, offering a wider
view or even just a fragment or glimpse of oneself are available at one’s disposal.
MODULE
1
Intended Learning
Outcomes
Socrates: Know
Yourself
Socrates is principally concerned with man. He considers man from the point of
view of his inner life. The famous line of Socrates, “Know yourself”, tells man to bring
his inner self to light .He was the first philosopher who ever engaged in a systematic
questioning about the self. For Socrates, every man is composed of body and soul.
This means that every human person is dualistic, that is, he is composed of two
important aspects of his personhood. For Socrates, this means all individuals have an
imperfect, impermanent aspect to him and the body, while maintaining that there is also
a soul that is perfect and permanent.
Plato, Socrates’s student, basically took off from his master and supported the
idea that man is a dual nature of body and soul. According to Plato, man was
omniscient or all-knowing before he came to be born into this world. In addition to what
Socrates earlier espoused, Plato added that there are three components of the soul;
the rational soul, the spirited soul, and the appetitive soul. The rational soul forged by
reason and intellect has to govern the affairs of the human person, the spirited part
which is in charge of emotions should be kept at bay, and the appetitive soul in charge
of base desires like eating, drinking, sleeping and having sex are controlled as well.
When this ideal state is attained, then the human person’s soul becomes just and
virtuous.
John Locke holds that personal identity [the self] is a matter of psychological
continuity. For him, personal identity is founded on consciousness [memory] and not on
the substance of either the soul or the body.
David Hume, a Scottish philosopher. Has a very unique way of looking at man.
As an empiricist who believes that one can know only what comes from the senses and
experiences. Hume argues that the self is nothing like his predecessors thought of it.
The self is not an entity over and beyond the physical body.
To David Hume, the self is nothing else but a bundle of impressions. If one
tries to examine his experiences, he finds that they can all be categorized into two:
impressions and ideas. Impressions are the basic objects of our experience or
sensation. They, therefore form the core of our thoughts.
Thomas
Aquinas
Thomas Aquinas, the most eminent thirteenth century scholar of the medieval
philosophy, appended something to this Christian view. Adapting some ideas from
Aristotle, he said indeed, man is composed of two parts: matter and form. Matter or
hyle in Greek, refers to the common stuff that makes up everything in the universe.
Man’s body is part of this matter. Form on the other hand, refers to the “essence of a
substance or thing”.
Gilbert
Ryle
Gilbert Ryle solves the mind-body dichotomy that has been running for a long
time in the history of thought by blatantly denying the concept of an internal, non-
physical self. For Ryle, what truly matters is the behavior that a person manifests in
his day-to-day life.
Merleau-
Ponty
Intended Learning
Outcomes
1. explain the relationship between and among the self, society and culture; 2.
describe and discuss the different ways by which society and culture shape the
self; 3. examine one’s self against the different views of self that were discussed
in the class.
What is the
self?
The self, in contemporary literature and even common sense, is commonly
defined by the following characteristics: separate, self-contained, independent,
consistent, unitary and private. By separate, it is meant that the self is distinct from
other selves. The self is always unique and has its own identity. One cannot be
another person. Even twins are distinct from each other. Second, self is also self-
contained and independent because in itself it can exist. Its distinctness allows it to be
self-contained with its own thoughts and characteristics. It does not require any other
self for it to exist. It is consistent because it has a personality that is enduring and
therefore can be expected to persist for quite some time. Consistency also means that
a particular self’s traits, characteristics, tendencies and potentialities are more or less
the same. Self is unitary in that it is the center of all experiences and thoughts that run
through a certain person. It is like a chief command post in an individual where all
processes, emotions and thoughts converge. Finally, the self is private. Each person
sorts out information, feelings and emotions, and thoughts processes within the self.
This whole process is never accessible to anyone but the self.
According to Marcel Mauss, the French Anthropologist, every self has two
faces: personne and moi. Moi refers to a person’s sense of who he is, his body and
his basic identity. Personne, is composed of the social concepts of what it means to
be who he is. Personne has much to do with what it means to live in a particular
institution, a particular family, a particular religion, a particular nationality and how to
behave given expectations and influences from others.
The Self and the Development of the Social
World
So how do people actively produce their social world? How do children growing
up become social beings? How do twins coming out from the same mother turn out to
be terribly different when giving up for adaption? More than his given ness, one is
believed to be in active participation in the shaping of the self. We think the human
persons are just passive actors in the whole process of the shaping of selves. That
men and women are born with particularities that they can no longer change. The
unending terrain of metamorphosis of the self is mediated by language. “Language as
both a publicly shared and publicly utilized symbol system is the site where the
individual and the social make and remake each other”.
Mead and
Vygotsky
For Mead and Vygotsky, the way that human persons develop is with the use of
language acquisition and interaction with others. The way that we process information
is normally a form of an internal dialogue in our head. Those who deliberate about
moral dilemmas undergo dialog. “Should I do this?” “But if I do this, it will be like this”.
So cognitive and emotional development of a child is always a mimicry of how it is
done in the social world.
Self in
Families
Apart from the anthropological and psychological basis for the relationship
between the self and the social world, the sociological likewise struggled to understand
the real connection between the two concepts. In doing so, sociologists focus on the
different institutions and powers at play in the society. Among these, the most
prominent is the family.
Human persons learn the ways of living and therefore their selfhood by being in
the family. It is what a family initiates a person to become that serves as the basis for
this person’s progress. Without the family, biologically and sociologically, a person
may not even survive or become a human person.
Another important aspect of the self is gender. Gender is one of those loci of
the self that is subject to alteration, change and development. We have seen in the
past years how people fought hard for the right to express, validate and assert their
gender expression. Many conservatives may frown upon this and insist on the
biological. However, from the point-of- view of the social sciences and the self, it is
important to give one the leeway to find.
Nancy Chodorow, a feminist, argues that because mothers take the role of taking
care of children, there is a tendency for girls to imitate the same and reproduce the
same kind of mentality of women as care providers in the family.
Men on the other hand, in the periphery of their own family, are taught early on
how to behave like a man. This normally includes holding in one’s emotion, being
tough, fatalistic, not to worry about danger and admiration for hard physical labor.
Masculinity is learned by integrating a young boy in the society. The gendered self is
then shaped within a particular context of time and space. Gender has to be personally
discovered and asserted and not dictated by culture and the society.
MODULE
3
Intended Learning
Outcomes
1. identify the different ideas in psychology about the “self”; 2. create your own
definition of the “self” based on the definition from psychology; 3. analyze the
effects of various factors identified in psychology in the formation of the
“self”.
Introducti
on
As discussed in the previous lessons, every field of study at least in the social
sciences have their own research, definition and conceptualization of the self and
identity. There are various definitions of the “self” and other similar or
interchangeable concepts in psychology. Self is the sense of personal identity and of
who we are as individuals.
William James was one of the earliest psychologists to study the self and
conceptualized the self as having two aspects—the “I” and the “me”. The “I” is
thinking, acting and feeling self. The “me” is the physical characteristics as well as
psychological capabilities that make who you are.
Two types of
Comparison
MODULE
4
Intended Learning
Outcomes
There are actually a lot of sources in which you can analyze the perspective of
each culture and country about the concept of the self. In this lesson, we will look at
religious beliefs and political philosophies that greatly influenced the mindset of each
nation or culture. Since almost all the theories about the self, which were discussed,
also came from the Western scientific research, we will highlight the Eastern thoughts
in this lesson.
Confuciani
sm
Taoism Taoism is living in the way of Tao or the universe. However, Taoism rejects
having one definition of what the Tao is, and one can only state clues of what it is as
they adopt a free- flowing, relative, unitary, as well as paradoxical view of almost of
everything. Taoism rejects the hierarchy and strictness brought by Confucianism and
would prefer a simple lifestyle and each teaching thus aim to describe how to attain that
life.
Buddhism There are various groups who have adopted Buddhism, thus, you may find
differences in their teachings but more likely, their core concepts remained the same.
The self is seen as an illusion, born out of ignorance, trying to hold and control things or
human centered needs, thus, the self is also the source of all these sufferings.
The Western culture is what we would call an individualistic culture since
their focus is on the person. The Asian culture is called a collectivist culture as a
group and social relations that is given more importance than individual needs and
wants.