Psychology, asked by ishikachoudharyjohal, 7 months ago

what is the subject object shift according to kegan???..​

Answers

Answered by GorgeousRocky18
1

who does the work called SUBJECT

Twhen we ask a question about what, which,where,how the result says the object

Answered by skyfall63
0

To become an "adult" requires to pass to higher developmental stages. It implies developing a self-confident sense & acquiring the characteristics of knowledge  & social maturity. This ensures that our actions, our interactions and our social influences are best controlled, becoming more self-aware and controlled.

Explanation:

Kegan’s theory outlines 5 distinct stages of development (Stages 1 -5). Most of us are in transition between stages. Transitioning to higher stages needs a "subject-object shift" — moving what we 'know’" from "Subject" (where it control us) to Object (where we could control it).  It is based on the "premise" that the more in "our lives" we take as "Object", the more "clearly" we can view the world,  the people in it, & ourselves.

  1. Subject ("I AM")—We bind ourselves to self-concepts and can not then represent or look at them objectively. We include personalities, theories about the world's working environments, attitudes, behaviours, feelings etc.
  2. Object ("I HAVE") — We must separate ourselves from ideas of ourselves. It is something we should look at, focus about, interact, monitor and link to.

For example: Several of us experience a "subject-object shift" concerning  religion. When we are young our religion is "subjective". We do not have the "capacity" to analyse/question these "beliefs". When we are older, religion becomes more objective, that is - we are humans with "beliefs" who can "step back":, reflect on and decide what to believe in.

To know more

Which stage of human development signifies fastest growth ...

https://brainly.in/question/10907000

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