Module 1 (Defining The Self) - Lesson 2
Module 1 (Defining The Self) - Lesson 2
Chapter 1: Defining the Self: Personal and Developmental Perspectives on Self and Identity
Lesson 2: The Self, Society, and Culture
INTRODUCTION
Across time and history, the self has been debated, discussed and fruitfully conceptualized by
different thinkers in philosophy. With the advent of social sciences, it became possible for new ways and
paradigms to re-examine the true nature of self. Tired of the ideas of ancient philosophers regarding the
body and the mind, thinkers settled on the idea that whatever relationship these two have is less important
than the fact that there is a self.
In contemporary literature and even in common sense, “self” is defined by the following
characteristics: separate, self-contained, independent, consistent, unitary, and private.
• Separate: This means that the self is distinct from other selves. It is always unique and has its own
identity. One cannot be another person. Even twins have their own self-identity.
• Self-contained and Independent: Self, in itself can exist. Its distinctness allows it to be self-
contained with its own thoughts, independence, characteristics and volition. It does not require any
other self for it to exist.
• Consistent: The self has a personality that is enduring and therefore can be expected to persist for
quite some time. Consistency means that a particular self’s traits, characteristics, tendencies, and
potentials are more or less the same and allows it to be studied, described and measured.
• Unitary: The self is the center of all experiences and thoughts that run through a certain person. It
is like the chief command post in an individual where all processes, emotions and thoughts
converge.
• Private: The whole process of sorting out information, feelings and emotions, and thought
processes within the self is never accessible to anyone but the self. It suggests that self is isolated
from the external world, living within its own, however we see the clash between the self and the
external reality - that one can see that the self is always at the mercy of the external circumstances
that bump and collide with it.
• Social constructivists argue that the self should not be seen as a static entity but rather as something
that is in unceasing flux, in constant struggle with external reality, and allowing external influences
to take part in its shaping.
• The self is always in participation with social life and its identity subjected to influences here and
there. Having these perspectives should draw one into concluding that the self is truly multifaceted.
• The point is on understanding the vibrant relationship between the self and the external reality. This
points out the merged view of “the person” and their “social context” where the boundaries of one
cannot easily be separated from the boundaries of the other.
• The self is capable of morphing (or adapting) and fitting itself into any circumstance it finds itself
in.
• Personne: it is composed of the social concepts of what it means to be who he is. It has much to
do what it means to live in a particular institution, particular family, particular religion, a particular
nationality, and how to behave given the expectations and influences from others. One may
personne from time to time.
• Sample shifts in personne:
- adjusting cultures in other countries
- man courting a woman (tone and mood)
- when in church
- the use of language
- other adjustments in cultural ways
• More than his givenness (personality, tendencies, propensities, among others) one is believed to be
in active participation of shaping the self.
• Recent studies indicate that men and women in their growth and development engage actively in
shaping of the self.
• The unending terrain of the metamorphosis of the self is mediated by language.
• “Language as both publicly shared and privately utilized symbol system is the site where the
individual and the social make and remake each other.”
• While every child is born with certain givenness, disposition coming from his parents’ genes and
general condition of life, the impact of family is still deemed as a given in understanding the self.
• The kind of family that we are born in, the resources available to us (human, spiritual, economic)
and the kind of development that we will have will certainly affect the development of the self.
• Our potential of becoming human depends largely on the family starting from birth and the
nurturing times of child.
• In trying to achieve the goal of becoming a fully realized human, a child enters a system of
relationships, most important of which is the family.
• Human beings learn the ways of living and therefore their selfhood by being in a family. It is what
a family initiates a person to become that serves as the basis for this person’s progress.
• How kids are reared is reflected in their behavior and attitude. Internalizing behavior may either be
conscious or unconscious.
• Some behaviors and attitudes may be indirectly taught through rewards and punishments.
• Others, such as sexual behavior or how to confront emotions are learned through subtle means like
the tone of the voice or intonation of the models.
• Without a family, biologically and sociologically a person may not even survive or become a
human person.
• One is who he is because of his family for the most part.
Assessment 2: Answer the following questions, coherently but honestly. Answer in to five to seven
sentences.
1. How would you describe your “self”?
2. What are the influences of your family in your development as an individual?
3. Think of a time when you felt you were your “true self.” What made you think you were truly
who you are during this time of your life?
4. Following the questions above, can you provide a time when you felt when you were not living
your “true self”? Why did you have to live a life like that? What did you do about it?
5. What social pressures have shaped your “self”? Would you have wanted it otherwise?
6. What aspects of your “self” do you think may be changed and you would like to change?