Thanks, Mona. Good point about Piaget. I never thought of it that way and, from the perspective of cognitive psychology, I get it. As you know, I think of human subjectivity as infinitely complex. Ergo, it can only be approached from one viewpoint at a time. Thanks for reading and commenting on my pieces.
Aka, Piaget's accommodation vs assimilation. An event is traumatic when it overpowers our ability to assimilate it into preexisting categories of experience. The more the event deviates from what we know, the more traumatic it is.
Thanks, Mona. Good point about Piaget. I never thought of it that way and, from the perspective of cognitive psychology, I get it. As you know, I think of human subjectivity as infinitely complex. Ergo, it can only be approached from one viewpoint at a time. Thanks for reading and commenting on my pieces.
Aka, Piaget's accommodation vs assimilation. An event is traumatic when it overpowers our ability to assimilate it into preexisting categories of experience. The more the event deviates from what we know, the more traumatic it is.