The Dilemma of Authentic Self Ideology in Contemporary Japan |
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Authors: | Michiko Maekawa |
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Affiliation: | Graduate School of Arts and Social Sciences, University of Tokyo, Japan |
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Abstract: | This paper examines dilemmas inherent in the pursuit of the modern ideology of authentic self, which first emerged in the 1960s and is now widespread in contemporary cultures. The ideology is exemplified, in a religious scene, as self-transformative religions wherein seekers seek to transform themselves spiritually in order to realize their authentic, or sacred selves. Through an examination of Aum Shinrikyo, which began as a typical self-transformative religion but later transformed into a destructive cult, I will explain the intrinsic moral imperatives of the ideology of authenticity. This study of Aum explores the introverted lifestyle and extreme desocialization, which resulted in obsession with the central guru, being legitimated by the ideology. This search for authenticity resulted in the members cutting themselves off from the reality of the world. The final analysis suggests that possible consequences of the endless pursuit of the authentic self are a vacuum self and a loss of empathy with other people. The ontological conditions created by this bring about potential destructiveness, either internal or external. |
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Keywords: | Aum Shinrikyo violence in religions modern spirituality |
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