02-10-2019, 06:48 PM
(This post was last modified: 02-10-2019, 06:49 PM by Eric the Green.)
Interesting. I welcome posts of map-makers of the human condition and the mind.
I made a sort of collective conscious map myself, the philosophers wheel, and I put the Jungian functions representing types of energy E/I and J/P in the same relationship on the same angles (but exactly inverted). It seems you have used the political compass as well, since the four corners align with those positions on both maps. I didn't try to join politics with philosophy, but made some connections with other esoteric systems. It's hard to read all your correlations here, maybe I can see them at your site. I am not familiar with Rorschack except for his "blot" (same guy?).
As for art, the various schools seem to be given exclusive dates by Carnot, when that is not historically accurate. There's a lot of overlap, and myself I only correlated the basic classic vs. romantic on the philosophers wheel, and the larger cycles of art with the civilization cycle (an astrological and historically-recognized longer cycle). The idea that the quickly-changing modern art styles can be seen in the same way that previous styles within a civilization cycle were seen (e.g. early, classic, baroque, rococo, romantic, realism) is an interesting new idea to me, but at first glance it doesn't seem valid.
But I don't deal too much with psychosis. I guess I have a baby boomers' more optimistic view of the universe and human potential. Basically, as I see it psychosis has one root cause, which the Buddha described 2500 years ago or so. I don't dwell on the categories of psychosis too much. There are 32 defense mechanisms? Wow. Are these Freudian?
I could not correlate the philosophers wheel to a cycle though, generally speaking, as it is more of a static map, although it has currents (the chakra currents). The cyclic process involves the same archetypes as the philosophers wheel, but they switch around rather than go in a circle.
Astrologically, the houses of the horoscope are static, and they can be correlated more easily with the philosophers wheel. The signs of the zodiac is a seasonal cycle, and doesn't correlate as easily. Same with the generational cycle, which is also based by analogy on the seasons.
http://philosopherswheel.com
I made a sort of collective conscious map myself, the philosophers wheel, and I put the Jungian functions representing types of energy E/I and J/P in the same relationship on the same angles (but exactly inverted). It seems you have used the political compass as well, since the four corners align with those positions on both maps. I didn't try to join politics with philosophy, but made some connections with other esoteric systems. It's hard to read all your correlations here, maybe I can see them at your site. I am not familiar with Rorschack except for his "blot" (same guy?).
As for art, the various schools seem to be given exclusive dates by Carnot, when that is not historically accurate. There's a lot of overlap, and myself I only correlated the basic classic vs. romantic on the philosophers wheel, and the larger cycles of art with the civilization cycle (an astrological and historically-recognized longer cycle). The idea that the quickly-changing modern art styles can be seen in the same way that previous styles within a civilization cycle were seen (e.g. early, classic, baroque, rococo, romantic, realism) is an interesting new idea to me, but at first glance it doesn't seem valid.
But I don't deal too much with psychosis. I guess I have a baby boomers' more optimistic view of the universe and human potential. Basically, as I see it psychosis has one root cause, which the Buddha described 2500 years ago or so. I don't dwell on the categories of psychosis too much. There are 32 defense mechanisms? Wow. Are these Freudian?
I could not correlate the philosophers wheel to a cycle though, generally speaking, as it is more of a static map, although it has currents (the chakra currents). The cyclic process involves the same archetypes as the philosophers wheel, but they switch around rather than go in a circle.
Astrologically, the houses of the horoscope are static, and they can be correlated more easily with the philosophers wheel. The signs of the zodiac is a seasonal cycle, and doesn't correlate as easily. Same with the generational cycle, which is also based by analogy on the seasons.
http://philosopherswheel.com