More on the Enneagram
The day has gotten away from me so this is going to be really short but today I dug deeper than before in this page that gives a history of "the traditional Enneagram".
In the system there are 9 "holy ideas" and 9 "virtues" that correspond to them. Here is an interesting statement, related to these:
"While everyone has the capacity to embody all of the Holy Ideas and Virtues, one pair of them is central to the soul's identity, so the loss of it is felt most acutely, and the person's ego is most preoccupied with recreating it, although in a futile, self-defeating way."
This reminds me of the dynamic of the Suggestive in Model A. A person is always seeking to fill the void of their Suggestive, and for the most part they do it without understanding or mindfulness.
I think I now understand enough about the Enneagram to say that its model starts with the idea of "otherworldly" realities, and asserts that human personalities are distributed in such a way that they map to these realities ("divine ideas"). Where as the Jungian model starts with observation of people and builds the model up from there.
That's all I've got at the moment.
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