000 01764pab a2200169 454500
008 180718b2002 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
100 _aKogo, Yoshiyuki
245 _aAum Shinrikyo and spiritual emergency
260 _c2002
300 _ap.82-101.
362 _aFall
520 _aThis article investigates the phenomenon the dark night of the soul and how it has developed into a serious spiritual emergency in Japan. Japanese society is highly interdependent, which prevents people from developing a strong sense of individuality. For Japanese people, social harmony has the highest priority, and they are presured to sacrifice their individuality to maintain that harmony. In psychodynamic terms, they develop a strong group ego to compensate for their vulnerable individual ego structure. When a Japanese person recognizes that group ego is an unsatisfactory construct, he or she faces an existential isolation of his or her vulnerable ego. some cannot put up with the fear of the dark night of the soul and look for an alternative group ego on which to depend. They tend to embrace this new group ego as a way to resist fear from deep unconscious realms. If this alternative group ego is not accepted by mainstream society, it may become radicalized and even hostile to society. The Aum shinrikyo cult, which in 1994 and 1995 killed many people in poison gas attacks, provides an extreme example of an alternative group ego. In this article, the author explains the mechanism of how individuals came to embrace a radical group ego by applying Washburn's developmental model to this particular cult. - Reproduced.
650 _aSocial systems - Japan
650 _aSocial systems
773 _aJournal of Humanistic Psychology
909 _a54481
999 _c54481
_d54481