![]() Ancient thinkers as well as contemporary scholars have postulated that there can be no beings that are human without governance and social order. Human beings are by nature constituted for social living, and inevitably become engaged in the outer events of the social and material world as a way of meeting personal desires and needs that are determined by biological limits of humankind and physical limitations of the world we inhabit. The point here is merely this: individuals project their commonly held checking-and-balancing mental apparatus into judicial, executive and legislative mechanisms of a state in an attempt to constitute a government, and then subordinate themselves to this governmental organization. On the contrary, the state is above the individual and governs the individual. This does not mean that the individual is equal to or stands above this necessary object for governing the collective of human beings. It may be fruitful to consider this foundational relationship in which individuals give objectivity to a ‘checking and balancing’ terminal system common to individual minds in the formation of a democratic state yet do not consciously acknowledge the independence, dynamics and validity of the governing institutions in this “object” as reflections of the individual mental apparatus. It is then possible to perceive individual minds as microcosms in which the governing features of a governing macrocosm can be apprehended and in a rudimentary way understood. ![]() Plato reports that the three governing elements of a state appear to be derived from individuals who themselves possess these same elements in a terminal system he called psyche and we refer to as mind.īy fixing his analysis on the continuous tension and conflict among certain institutions of government, Plato posited that the ordering of society is a large-scale replica of the organization of the individual mind. While Pythagoras is likely among the first to record this linkage, one of the most impressive presentations of these symmetrical psychological and governmental structures is to be found in the Dialogues of Plato wherein he presented three governance mechanisms of the city-state as reflections of three psychic agencies perceived ubiquitously within the ordinary people who belong to that city-state. Pythagoras and later Plato perceived that organizing structures on two levels - the psychological/individual and governmental/societal - are governed by the same principles. This commentary appears to begin with Pythagoras’ effort to answer the questions: what is the nature of human nature, and how might this express itself in the organization of human society? To put these questions another way, may the structure and dynamics of the mind have significance for the manner in which the government of a democratic state is formed and made functional? The nature and significance of the relationship between mind and state has been commented upon since the early days of Western civilization. Consider that the judicial branch of government possesses certain essential features of the superego the executive branch functions much like the ego and the legislative branch concretely attempts in many ways to recognize and realize the manifold wishes and needs of the collective of individuals in the state and reflects the id. That these organizing institutions of a democratic state appear to emanate from common human nature has been discussed heretofore. In a similar way the words judiciary, executive and legislature are familiar signifiers of the institutions that organize human beings in a state. 55:187–222, 1968.For psychologists the terms superego, ego and id are commonplace and refer to institutions of the mind of the human being. Ego morality: an emerging psychotherapeutic concept. In Motives and Thought: Psychoanalytic Essays in Honor of David Rapaport (Holt, R., ed.) Psychol. Ideals, the ego ideal and the ideal self. New York: International Universities Press, 1958 (1939). Ego Psychology and the Problem of Adaptation. ![]() Activity and passivity of the ego in relation to the superego. Activity and passivity of the ego in hypnosis. In The Collected Papers of David Rapaport (Gill, M., ed.) New York: Basic Books, 1967, (1957), pp. The theory of ego autonomy: a generalization. In The Collected Papers of David Rapaport (Gill, M., ed.) New York: Basic Books, 1967, (1953), pp. Some metapsychological considerations concerning activity and passivity.
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