Nah, unless you're using some overly narrow definition of "ego", I don't think this is true at all.
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That many egos then go rogue is a sort of social cost of reifying this tool as an identity. It is *not*.
You need your ego for safety. It is not you, will never be you, and you don't need to take it so seriously when it's not doing its primary job.
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A properly assigned ego is a very small thing.
It shows up occasionally to offer feedback ("this offends me") or guidance ("that would hurt"), but does not pretend at agency.
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I understood it to be a sort of "ego is enemy" framework, common when rubbing up against outsize egos (one's own or that of others).
My idea is that this is giving ego a lot more power and importance than it merits, and is also an unfair dismissal of a useful tool.
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Right. In my perspective that would be an example of a maladaptive egoic activity, rather than ego per se.
Still, I agree fully within the scope of your framing.
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Siloing and dissociation.
