The Philosophy Thread

Shame is an interesting word. Is its origin inside or outside of a person?
 
I wonder about that. Shame, to me, is toothless without exile, which isn't really a thing anymore.
Is it though? Shame is far more dangerous when it's internalized than it is by outside forces. And there's plenty of that in existence.
 
They say the difference between guilt and shame is that with guilt, you feel bad about something you did (the behavior) and with shame you feel bad about who you are "I am bad."

I think guilt can be constructive, but shame is destructive. No room for improvement?

Shame is far more dangerous when it's internalized than it is by outside forces

Totally agree. it judges the person, not the behavior
 
Is it though? Shame is far more dangerous when it's internalized than it is by outside forces. And there's plenty of that in existence.
I think of guilt more as the internally driven one, and shame as the external one. Some say the narcissists feel shame but not guilt.
They say the difference between guilt and shame is that with guilt, you feel bad about something you did (the behavior) and with shame you feel bad about who you are "I am bad."
This seems about right. However, if no one knows, and know one will ever know, will you still feel shame?
 
Does it? What about earthquakes, tornados, hurricanes, etc.?

In mythology, the mother earth goddess is normally associated with fertility / motherhood / creation

gods of death and destruction are difference archetypes
 
I think of guilt more as the internally driven one, and shame as the external one. Some say the narcissists feel shame but not guilt.

This seems about right. However, if no one knows, and know one will ever know, will you still feel shame?
To my knowledge, it is reversed. Guilt is generally thought to be the external one with social accountability. Shame is an intense internal feeling of the person themselves being flawed.
In mythology, the mother earth goddess is normally associated with fertility / motherhood / creation

gods of death and destruction are difference archetypes
I think if you research Gaia you'll find differently. "Force of nature" isn't just a colloquialism.
 
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