Sunday, 12 August 2012

#167 Agency, Maturation, Communion

     "Agency entails motives to advance the self within a social hierarchy: achievement, social power, or material wealth. ... Communion is expressed as benevolence to familiar others, or a more universalized concern for the well-being of disadvantaged, distant others, or the ecological well-being of the planet.
     ... dualism between self-interest and the dictates of one’s moral code may be typical for most persons; however, ... (moral) exemplars are an exception to this rule. ... they defy this dualism by integrating their personal ambitions with their moral convictions, yielding a state of 'enlightened self-interest'
     ... enlightened self-interest underlies virtuous behavior, wherein the best way to promote one’s own interests is by advancing the interests of others, and vice versa. ..."
        Frimer JA et al. The integration of agency and communion in moral personality: Evidence of enlightened self-interest. J Pers Soc Psychol 2011; 101(1): 149-63.

     As we mature psychosocially our ego boundaries become increasingly more porous; our frame of reference shifts. We increasingly identify with and care more about humanity and the universe (becoming allocentric & ecocentric); and are naturally less & less egocentric. See also: http://healthyhealers.blogspot.ca/2012/08/adult-psychosocial-development.html


     “When self-concern is quiet, heaven and earth lie open in complete generosity. That is the mind of abundance, the mind of flowing. When self-concern is noisy, the world is narrow and risky, and resources for the anxious self appear perennially scarce.”


        Murphy S. Upside-down zen. Finding the marvelous in the ordinary. Wisdom Publications, Boston, 2006.


     Intentions to meditate shift from self-regulation, to self-exploration, and finally self-liberation.
See:

Photo: Blake Shaw   www.smithsonianmag.com

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