Fr. 136.00

Beyond Marginality - Constructing a Self in the Twilight of Western Culture

English · Hardback

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Identification of the phenomenon of marginality in The Marginal Self-the failure to become one's authentic, best self, by refusing to actualize this potential that is inherent in us all-turns on recognizing that freedom, and its misuse, underlie most human behavior, normal and pathological. Jean-Paul Sartre insisted that people don't just have freedom, they are freedom. Most philosophical anthropologies, including Freudian psychoanalysis, and the current medical model of mental illness propagated by the American Psychiatric Association and typified in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM), do not acknowledge this essential reality.

Beyond Marginality came out first eleven years after the initial 1987 publication of The Marginal Self. The author, in the meantime, had become acquainted with the Zen philosophy of D. T. Suzuki, of whom Martin Heidegger said that if he understood this man's work correctly, Suzuki had accomplished what Heidegger had been trying to do all his life. What did Heidegger see in Suzuki's anthropology? That the Cartesian duality-ultimately the dissociation of our inner lives from the world around us and from one another-was a distortion created by us that we could overcome through Zen's actionable intuition of human wholeness.

How this overcoming might be brought about is the theme of Beyond Marginality, starting with Suzuki's intuition and embracing the work of many allied thinkers. Equally compelling are vivid testimonials from those who had stumbled into marginality, some eventually recognizing the negative consequences of their misused freedom, then freely willing themselves out of their marginal states. Helping people move beyond marginality and its attendant psychic pathology parallels the present enthusiasm of the mental health community for a positive psychology. Gestalt psychologist Kurt Lewin left us with the counter-Cartesian, Zen-like insight that nothing is so practical as a good theory.

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By René J. Muller

Summary

Beyond Marginality: Constructing a Self in the Twilight of Western Culture explores the phenomenon of the marginal self using the anthropology of Zen. Muller shows how an intrinsically pathological Western culture can be partially reconstructed to go beyond marginality by incorporating elements of Zen's more authentic world view.

Product details

Authors Ren? J Muller, René Muller, Rene J Muller, René J Muller, Rene J. Muller, René J. Muller
Publisher Rowman and Littlefield
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 04.02.2024
 
EAN 9781538192818
ISBN 978-1-5381-9281-8
No. of pages 140
Subjects Humanities, art, music > Philosophy
Non-fiction book > Philosophy, religion > Philosophy: general, reference works

PHILOSOPHY / General, Philosophy

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