Cheatography
https://cheatography.com
This is only a summary of chapter 16 in the textbook Personology: From individual to ecosystem by C Moore, HG Viljoen and WF Meyer. Thus all credit goes to the publishers of the textbook.
This is a draft cheat sheet. It is a work in progress and is not finished yet.
Introduction and Background
Western Psychology |
Eastern Psychology |
- Scientific, analytical and reductionistic, with the goal of analysing, predicting and controlling human behaviour and is influenced by the Western rational, individualistic and more extroverted lifestyle. |
- Originate from a religious and metaphysical tradition with subjective observation and direct subjective experience as its paradigm, and it reflects the more introverted, collectivist and mystical Eastern lifestyle. |
- The focus is on the object of experience |
- The focus is on the person having the experience. |
- Based on the method of third-person observation and measurement. |
- The method is based on first-person introspection |
- In modern times, is strongly embedded in a positivist objective view of the person and the empirical paradigm. |
- Typified as intuitive and integrating, with its major aims to acquire knowledge of the soul and of how to set the soul free through self-realisation. |
- Person believes ‘in doing’ |
- Person believes ‘in doing’ |
- Revolves around individualism focusing on the personality of the individual, |
- Centres around collectivism and is more interested in the person’s harmonious connectedness to fellow humans, society, nature and the cosmos. |
- In Western psychology, the ego, ‘I’ or self is central and must be preserved, extended or actualised at all costs. |
- In the East, self-actualisation refers to transcendence of the self rather than the extension of the self, which is how it is understood in the West. |
- Aim is to ‘fortify the individual’s ego’ in order to become less neurotic and function better in society. |
- Aim is to ‘dissolve rather than to strengthen the ego’ |
Personality According to Vedanta
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