Individuation, the making of a person or a thing as a distinct being, offers a clear way to read daily life on screens. In this view, people are not finished users who later pick tools. People and tools grow together through ongoing exchanges across phones, platforms, and networks.
For Jung, individuation is a life path in which the conscious and the unconscious come into better balance. It guides how a person forms a more whole self, including the social mask and the deeper symbols that move us. For Simondon, individuation is wider. It also concerns technical objects and groups. Change spreads step by step in a system, a process he calls transduction, and new forms arise as relations stabilize. Put simply, forms do not act from outside, they take shape inside living and technical relations.
Seen through this lens, new digital links do more than connect ready made individuals. These links help make those individuals. Profiles, feeds, and ranking systems guide what we show and what we see, and our signals in turn reshape the network. Symbols and images that flow online offer patterns to copy, resist, or remake, which bind people and groups and also set them apart.
The practical lesson is to study processes, not only finished users or finished tools. Design, rules, and learning should support healthier paths of individuation, where technical systems help people build a richer and more responsible self and community.
Understanding new digital links, the concept of individuation in Carl Jung and Gilbert Simondon – 2011
Peer reviewed essay by José Pinheiro Neves that compares Jung’s and Simondon’s concepts of individuation and applies them to socio digital mediations.
Wikipedia – Overview of Jung’s individuation
Short background explainer on individuation in analytical psychology.
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