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From Charles
Horton Cooley, Human Nature and the Social Order. New York: Scribner's,
1902, pp. 179-185.
Charles
Horton Cooley
The Looking-Glass Self
The social self
is simply any idea, or system of ideas, drawn from the communicative
life, that the mind cherishes as its own. Self-feeling has its chief
scope within the general life, not outside of it; the special endeavor
or tendency of which it is the emotional aspect finds its principal
field of exercise in a world of personal forces, reflected in the
mind by a world of personal impressions.
As connected with the
thought of other persons the self idea is always a consciousness
of the peculiar or differentiated aspect of one's life, because
that is the aspect that has to be sustained by purpose and endeavor,
and its more aggressive forms tend to attach themselves to whatever
one finds to be at once congenial to one's own tendencies and at
variance with those of others with whom one is in mental contact.
It is here that they are most needed to serve their function of
stimulating characteristic activity, of fostering those personal
variations which the general plan of life seems to require. Heaven,
says Shakespeare, doth divide
"The state of man
in divers functions,
betting endeavor in continual
motion,"
and self-feeling is one
of the means by which this diversity is achieved.
Agreeably to this view
we find that the aggressive self manifests itself most conspicuously
in an appropriativeness of objects of common desire, corresponding
to the individuals need of power over such objects to secure his
own peculiar development, and to the danger of opposition from others
who also need them. And this extends from material objects to lay
hold, in the same spirit, of the attentions and affections of other
people, of all sorts of plans and ambitions, including the noblest
special purposes the mind can entertain, and indeed of any conceivable
idea which may come to seem a part of one's life and in need of
assertion against some one else. The attempt to limit the word self
and its derivatives to the lower aims of personality is quite arbitrary;
at variance with common sense as expressed by the emphatic use of
"I" in connection with the sense of duty and other high
motives, and unphilosophical as ignoring the function of the self
as the organ of specialized endeavor of higher as well as lower
kinds.
That the "I"
of common speech has a meaning which includes some sort of reference
to other persons is involved in the very fact that the word and
the ideas it stands for are phenomena of language and the communicative
life. It is doubtful whether it is possible to use language at all
without thinking more or less distinctly of some one else, and certainly
the things to which we give names and which have a large place in
reflective thought are almost always those which are impressed upon
us by our contact with other people. Where there is no communication
there can be no nomenclature and no developed thought. What we call
"me," "mine," or "myself" is, then,
not something separate from the general life, but the most interesting
part of it, a part whose interest arises from the very fact that
it is both general and individual. That is, we care for it just
because it is that phase of the mind that is living and striving
in the common life, trying to impress itself upon the minds of others.
"I" is a militant social tendency, working to hold and
enlarge its place in the general current of tendencies. So far as
it can it waxes, as all life does. To think of it as apart from
society is a palpable absurdity of which no one could be guilty
who really saw it as a fact of life.
"Der Mensch erkennt
sich nur im Menschen, nur
Das Leben lehret jedem was er sei." *
If a thing has no relation
to others of which one is conscious he is unlikely to think of it
at all, and if he does think of it he cannot, it seems to me, regard
it as emphatically his. The appropriative sense is always the shadow,
as it were, of the common life, and when we have it we have a sense
of the latter in connection with it. Thus, if we think of a secluded
part of the woods as "ours," it is because we think, also,
that others do not go there. As regards the body I doubt if we have
a vivid my-feeling about any part of it which is not thought of,
however vaguely, as having some actual or possible reference to
some one else. Intense self-consciousness regarding it arises along
with instincts or experiences which connect it with the thought
of others. Internal organs, like the liver, are not thought of as
peculiarly ours unless we are trying to communicate something regarding
them, as, for instance, when they are giving us trouble and we are
trying to get sympathy.
"I," then,
is not all of the mind, but a peculiarly central, vigorous, and
well-knit portion of it, not separate from the rest but gradually
merging into it, and yet having a certain practical distinctness,
so that a man generally shows clearly enough by his language and
behavior what his "I" is as distinguished from thoughts
he does not appropriate. It may be thought of, as already suggested,
under the analogy of a central colored area on a lighted wall. It
might also, and perhaps more justly, be compared to the nucleus
of a living cell, not altogether separate from the surrounding matter,
out of which indeed it is formed, but more active and definitely
organized.
The reference to other
persons involved in the sense of self may be distinct and particular,
as when a boy is ashamed to have his mother catch him at something
she has forbidden, or it may be vague and general, as when one is
ashamed to do something which only his conscience, expressing his
sense of social responsibility, detects and disapproves; but it
is always there. There is no sense of "I," as in pride
or shame, without its correlative sense of you, or he, or they.
Even the miser gloating over his hidden gold can feel the "mine"
only as he is aware of the world of men over whom he has secret
power; and the case is very similar with all kinds of hid treasure.
Many painters, sculptors, and writers have loved to withhold their
work from the world, fondling it in seclusion until they were quite
done with it; but the delight in this, as in all secrets, depends
upon a sense of the value of what is concealed.
I remarked above that
we think of the body as "I" when it comes to have social
function or significance, as when we say "I am looking well
to-day," or "I am taller than you are." We bring
it into the social world, for the time being, and for that reason
put our self-consciousness into it. Now it is curious, though natural,
that in precisely the same way we may call any inanimate object
"I" with which we are identifying our will and purpose.
This is notable in games, like golf or croquet, where the ball is
the embodiment of the player's fortunes. You will hear a man say,
"I am in the long grass down by the third tee," or "I
am in position for the middle arch." So a boy flying a kite
will say "I am higher than you," or one shooting at a
mark will declare that he is just below the bullseye.
In a very large and interesting
class of cases the social reference takes the form of a somewhat
definite imagination of how one's self--that is any idea he appropriates--appears
in a particular mind, and the kind of self-feeling one has is determined
by the attitude toward this attributed to that other mind. A social
self of this sort might be called the reflected or looking glass
self:
"Each to each a
looking-glass
Reflects the other that doth pass."
As we see our face, figure,
and dress in the glass, and are interested in them because they
are ours, and pleased or otherwise with them according as they do
or do not answer to what we should like them to be; so in imagination
we perceive in another's mind some thought of our appearance, manners,
aims, deeds, character, friends, and so on, and are variously affected
by it.
A self-idea of this sort
seems to have three principal element: the imagination of our appearance
to the other person; the imagination of his judgment of that appearance,
and some sort of self-feeling, such as pride or mortification. The
comparison with a looking-glass hardly suggests the second element,
the imagined judgment, which is quite essential. The thing that
moves us to pride or shame is not the mere mechanical reflection
of ourselves, but an imputed sentiment, the imagined effect of this
reflection upon another's mind. This is evident from the fact that
the character and freight of that other, in whose mind we see ourselves,
makes all the difference with our feeling. We are ashamed to seem
evasive in the presence of a straightforward man, cowardly in the
presence of a brave one, gross in the eyes of a refined one, and
so on. We always imagine, and in imagining share, the judgments
of the other mind. A man will boast to one person of an action--say
some sharp transaction in trade--which he would be ashamed to own
to another.
It should be evident
that the ideas that are associated with self-feeling and form the
intellectual content of the self cannot be covered by any simple
description, as by saying that the body has such a part in it, friends
such a part, plans so much, etc., but will vary indefinitely with
particular temperaments and environments. The tendency of the self,
like every aspect of personality, is expressive of far-reaching
hereditary and social factors, and is not to be understood or predicted
except in connection with the general life. Although special, it
is in no way separate--speciality and separateness are not only
different but contradictory, since the former implies connection
with a whole. The object of self-feeling is affected by the general
course of history, by the particular development of nations, classes,
and professions, and other conditions of this sort.
* "Only
in man does man know himself; life alone teaches each one what he
is." Goethe, Tasso, act 2, sc. 3.
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