And philosopher George Santayana took this full circle, by not ing that what other people think of us would matter little-except that once we know it, it "so deeply tinges what we think of our seives." Social philosophers have called this mirroring effect the "looking glass self," how we imagine others see us.
Our sense of self, in this view, dawns in our social interactions; others are our mirrors, reflecting us back to ourselves. The idea has been summed up as "I am what I think you think I am."
And philosopher George Santayana took this full circle, by not ing that what other people think of us would matter little-except that once we know it, it "so deeply tinges what we think of our seives." Social philosophers have called this mirroring effect the "looking glass self," how we imagine others see us.
Our sense of self, in this view, dawns in our social interactions; others are our mirrors, reflecting us back to ourselves. The idea has been summed up as "I am what I think you think I am."
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