CONCEPT
The Greening of the Self
Joanna Macy’s term for the expansion of identity beyond the skin-encapsulated ego to include the larger living systems of which the individual is a momentary, localized expression—the perceptual shift from intelligence-as-possession to intelligence-as-participation that dissolves the competitive frame dominating AI discourse.
The greening of the self is
Joanna Macy’s name for a perceptual shift that her framework treats as the most foundational of the three dimensions of the
Great Turning. It is not the dissolution of individual identity but its accurate grounding: the recognition that the self is not the thing inside the boundary but the entire pattern of relationships that the boundary provisionally encloses. Drawing from
Gregory Bateson’s insight that the unit of survival is the organism-plus-its-environment and from the Buddhist doctrine of
dependent co-arising, Macy argued that the skin-encapsulated ego is a useful fiction that becomes a dangerous error at the scale of civilizational crisis. The whirlpool does not own the water; it
is the water, organized in a particular way for a particular duration. A whirlpool that believes it is independent of the river is deluded and fragile; a whirlpool that knows it is the river, organized