Soulagogy: to lead the soul with Dobeing: to do my being
From the first days
of life and uninterruptedly, until the end, this partnership of growth and
development continues. Body (doing) and mind (being) are co-operating as
indivisible parts of one whole. The mind is like a motor, dragging with it all
the potentialities which it can discover in the body, helping to bring the body
into a position of safety and dominance over all difficulties. In every
movement of the body, in every expression and symptom, we can see the impression
of the mind's purpose. A person moves- There is meaning (being) in his/her movement
(doing).
The term Dobeing coined by Nir Golan means to realize one's full
potential and fulfill it- to do the being. It is a core term according to
the Soulagogy approach. Dobeing is a combination between
Self-realization and self-actualization. In Goldstein's view, it is the
organism's master motive, the only real motive: "The tendency to actualize
itself as fully as possible is the basic drive... the drive of self-actualization."
The only way to "actualize itself" is by using the passion that you
have to do what you do best, and spread your uniqueness all around.
Dobeing is a combination of doing and being.
Golan assumes that
Education is all about helping the soul to Dobeing its self. Education is that
process, by which thought is opened out of the soul and Dobeing is to express
and activate all the passion, capabilities and uniqueness of the organism.
Soulagogy is a
brand-new educational perception, coined by Nir Golan, that comes from the
Greek words psycho which means “soul” and gogy which means “to
lead”, and literally refers to “leading the soul”. It is based on the
assumption that Soulagogy: to lead the soul, means educating the soul.
Soulagogy is about
educating the soul. “Education is that process, by which thought is opened out
of the soul and, associated with outward things, is reflected back upon itself,
and thus made conscious of its reality and shape. It is Self-Realization. As a
means, therefore, of educating the soul out of itself, and mirroring forth its
ideas, the external world offers the materials."/ Amos Bronson Alcott.
Bronson was an American teacher, writer, philosopher, and reformer. As an
educator, Alcott hoped to perfect the human spirit. Soulagogy also refers to
the term Psychogogy: a German word that was first coined by the German author
of "Psychogeneses und Psychotherapies Korperlicher Symptom" (1925),
Oswald Schwartz, who used the term to describe a possible process for helping
people to become self-actualized. Psychogogy – the Greek words psycho
means ‘mind’ and gogy means ‘to lead’ – literally refers to ‘leading the
mind’.
Later, Abraham
Maslow borrowed that term Psychogogy for his classic treatise on Eupsychian
Management (1965). In one of his short essays "The Farther Reaches of
Human Nature" (1971), Maslow defined Psychogogy as the education of the
psyche. Whitehurst (2002) has defined it as the “integration of professional
wisdom with the best available empirical evidence in making decisions about how
to deliver instruction”.
Students are living in
challenging times these days because the world around them is rapidly evolving
and transforming. They need many more teachers who will guide them through the
maze of change into a world of tomorrow that is better than today. The heart of
Soulagogy is the term Dobeing. Plato believed that the human soul
possesses latent knowledge, which could be brought out and elucidated by a
specific type of discourse which he called dialectic: a bringing to birth from
the depths of a person's higher being. The Soulagogy process starts with self-awareness
to the being. A higher consciousness is needed in order to do this, and the
result will bring forth a literal enlightenment and a furthered understanding
of human nature.
"Dialectic is the only philosophical process which seeks for
wisdom by anagogically uplifting our Intellectual foundations so that our Higher
Self ascends to the Origin."
— Plato, The
Commonwealth VII, 533d
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