Johari House with four rooms. Room one is the part of ourselves that we and others see. Room two contains aspects that others see but we are unaware of. Room three is the private space we know but hide from others. Room four is the unconscious part of us that neither ourselves nor others see.
There are 3 selves (identities)
1. Who others think you are (So)
2. Who you think you are (Ss)
3. Who you really are (Sr)
Sr = So + Ss — Agent Smith
Small talk certainly can be important. It's like a dance. It's not the content, but the near play of it, the feeling the other person out on trivia or not very important things. Getting sense of voice tone, how much emotion a person is comfortable with and what strikes them on that level. Hi, nice to meet you, I am depressed and I get the impression you're on the pompous side is something to work up to in baby steps.Recently, I have been engaged in a plethora of relationships that all insist on the importance of small talk, creating a superficial expanse of which my real identity seemingly cannot traverse. — john27
Do you mean 'if you went beyond small talk'? It seems here and above that the small talk itself is a way to meet the real other, in some people's opinion? I do think that can be true, but it's certain not the main moments one meets what many would call the real person. I suppose I can go with the facade and real personality model, though not always. I think it has pros and cons.These interactions have begged the question of if I WERE to cut across the other side, what would I find? What would constitute their real self? — john27
Can you expand on this. Convenient illusion I can understand in a very broad way, but how do you think it is convenient? then how is one's real identity - in general, as a rule, it seems here - immensely perverted? Or is the idea perverted?A part of me believes that a real identity is simply a convenient illusion, the other believes that any real identity is immensely perverted — john27
Or projecting what you judge to be perverted that others may or may not also 'have.'However, that could also just be me projecting my innate perversion on the rest of the world... — john27
However, knowledge (epistemology, not ontology) of the self consists of the self to the self or the self to others; there's no third alternative, — Agent Smith
As you can see we run into trouble in trying to get a fix on the self - it's in the simplest sense the thinker and I'll leave it at that. — Agent Smith
What's left then to be the true self? — Agent Smith
In me humble opinion combining the two selves makes more sense than opting for either alone even though both [...] are illusions. — Agent Smith
illusions to whom? — javra
I'd say sure, if by "thinking thing" one would include all forms of awareness as thoughts; thereby, for example, granting that lesser lifeforms are also thinking things. (I'm not big on Cartesian implications of the cogito.)
At any rate, good enough for me to agree. — javra
There are 3 selves (identities)
1. Who others think you are (So)
2. Who you think you are (Ss)
3. Who you really are (Sr) — Agent Smith
As I said we could be, probably are, deluded. The self is non-predicable. It can't be said to be this or that, it just is (patior ergo sum) ... as a/the thinker, a thinking thing. — Agent Smith
Well the way I see it, as one delves deeper into oneself more primitive wants or needs become the motivations for various things we hold true to our identity. For example: I go to the gym to workout, which follows that I do so because I want to be revered, which follows that I do so because I want women to want me, Which follows that I just want sex. — john27
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.