Kindest Regards, and welcome, to Satanist, Mindfreak and Seattlegal!
It’s nice to see an old thread brought back.
The subject of “ego” has been on my mind a bit lately, so here’s my take:
I think Baud most closely approached what I would initially have to say, in that:
if you take Freud's definition of the ego, which does not seem so different from Jung's ("sense of identiy" to be compared with "what we think we are", sense=think and identity=are), and add to it the id and super-ego concepts, I would agree with him. I always felt that at least some animals, if not the majority of the "advanced" spiecies, gave me the impression of having some sense of identity. But again, it is a question of definition.
Now, where Satanist and Mindfreak seem to imply that humans are
no more than animals, I have mixed thoughts. On one level I can agree. On another, there is a component to humans that distinguishes us from typical animals: rational thought. With this in mind,
So there is nothing that separates us from animals. We are just smarter, more and live longer.
That that makes us “smarter” is what
does separate us from animals. Conscious rational thought distinguishes us from other animals. Reasoning has led to important moments in human development like tool-making and the harnessing of fire. Congruent with this is “foresight,” which arguably connects with understanding of consequences of our actions in a given moment. In what studies I have looked at pertaining to human communication with gorillas, porpoises and parrots, these creatures do not have this ability to use foresight. They cannot use foresight towards comprehension of consequences of actions.
Now, I can qualify this by saying animals do comprehend experience. A close call with danger will instill a sense of caution the next time they are in a similar situation. This is called “hindsight.” Humans have this ability as well.
and emotions/instints are all based on intelligent stimuli (perceiving a treat in the first place).
So, I can see where one could say something like this regarding instinct, but it does not cover all of the bases. I am not seeing the connection between emotion and instinct. The emotion of fear could be said to stem from a primal drive to survive, of caution, to prevent one from being eaten. But what of the emotion of love? Is it instinctual? How? What survival purpose does it serve, and can it be shown to exist across all other animals? I can see the possibility of love (in the “motherly”or “parental” sense) existing among some mammals, but I do not see love exhibited among reptiles, fish or insects, whereas fear seems endemic among almost all of them. Could love only be endemic among brains with “higher” development? I do not see “Eros”, sex, as love in the emotional sense of the word.
As for perceiving threats, again I would say that is based on experience. Animals do not seem to have the capacity to convey experience directly to others. Instinct seems to me very related to Jung’s concept of collective consciousness, but instinct does not account for foresight. Collective consciousness seems to be applied collective experience at this level, resulting in instinct.
At the same there is no super ego or conscience that separe ourselves from animals. In addition I believe in an emotional intelligence that means that our intincts are not separated from rational thoughs.
Conscience is very closely connected to foresight. Understanding of consequences is what drives conscience. After the fact, experience, is hindsight. Hindsight can be applied forward into the “now” by animals, but without foresight animals cannot perceive consequences of actions they have not experienced previously. Humans, through conscience, can and do use foresight to understand consequences prior to action, even in actions they have not individually experienced before, in part because we can also learn from experiences of others without direct experience ourselves. Mom can teach a child to do or not to do something, as some animals might do. But as the child grows and learns s/he can also learn by watching and applying concepts beyond mere experience, and through conscience experience shame, remorse and guilt for improper actions, and through foresight know not to do certain actions, including those not previously experienced.
I see a strong connection between “Super-Ego” and conscience.
Which is why we should people have different and personal usages of "Ego".
Just as no two animals of a species are identical, so too no two humans are identical. Our experiences build a library from which we can help guide our judgements, and no two libraries are the same. Our sub-conscious “collective” experiences may be the same, and provide a foundation from which to draw our judgements, but we each as individual humans also apply our experiential libraries to our judgements and can arrive at different conclusions, even over-riding our collective conscience / experience. Much of our experiential library is religious in essence, therefor much of our morality is learned, and people “have different and personal usages of "Ego". There is a component of morality that is outside of experience, and it is this component I believe that is the initial drive towards religion in the personal sense. It is this “natural” morality that is displayed by herding and social animals such as apes, wolves and deer. As human brains developed consciousness and rational thought, there was a basic natural morality to build on, and foresight was applied toward understanding of the spiritual dimension of nature, leading to religion in the personal sense. From this, humans in time developed a more complex morality.
Institutional religion, as the term “religion” is commonly applied, did not come until much later in human psycho-social development.
Morality and religion are just illusions and confused information.
If morality and religion are illusions, then they are the grandest of grand illusions. So, after what I have written above, I do not think one would be surprised if I disagreed.
Morality is no illusion, a great deal of nature beyond humanity displays a natural form of morality. And depending what exactly one means with the term “religion,” it is no illusion either. The personal search for understanding and meaning within the universe by a rational and conscious mind endemic thoughout all societies at the earliest known stages of civil development leading into the modern era shows that religion is no illusion. Because religion is displayed in many different manners is not evidence of illusion, it is evidence of multiple perspectives. When one considers that the major world faiths seem to be attempting to reach what seems in essence to be the same thing, and each is drawing from its own experiential library to describe the indescribable, and this reach is endemic around the world (perhaps even “instinctual”!), religion in the personal sense, and in the purest form of the institutional sense, is no illusion at all. If it were, then why have effectively all societies participated in this reach for understanding?
I can agree on one level that institutional religion can, and has, become perverted in its quest for political power and social dominance. This is the hand of “man,” not spirit. Unless one cares to distinguish between “good” and “bad” spirit guiding “man”…which I think is a discussion better carried elsewhere.
That more than anything shows that the person does not know whe he is or know himself.
Religion in the personal sense is an attempt by an individual to understand “who ‘he’ is,” and his/her place in the universal scheme of things.
Morality and religion are irrational and paradoxal collections of loose ideas that are further modified my selfish wants and personal flaws.
If morality is irrational, then nature is irrational. I do not see this as being so.
By religion here, I presume you mean institutional religion. Paradox is inherent when attempting to understand something beyond understanding. Paradox is not irrational, it is reaching beyond simplistic explanation. A selfish human may use wants and desires to over-ride inherent morality, both natural and collective (conscience), but that does not mean morality or religion are irrational. It means the human is being irrational. Irrationality is a flaw of humans. One must have the capability of being rational in order to be irrational. Animals are not rational, and so cannot be irrational. Instinct leads animals to behave in certain ways. A dog does not act like a monkey.
In all, I see ego as the internal “self talk” that leads to the outward expression of personality. Without ego, we are without personality, or in essence “vegetative” in the medical sense of the term. To be “egoist,” or “egotistical,” to me seems to imply “selfish” in the negative sense of the term.