Posts Tagged ‘mneme’

Certain Leading Concepts Explained - Part II

Wednesday, October 1st, 2008

(This post is the second in a series of posts which tries to explain Dr. Maria Montessori’s interpretations of certain leading concepts. The previous post dealt with her interpretation  of the concept of education. The present post provides her interpretations of the concepts of “Adaptation” and “Development”. )

Adaptation

The child adopts himself to society and the world by building a psychosomatic structure which will enable him to enjoy a maximum of happiness in the conditions to which he has become adapted.

Adaptation normally implies a negative element. Western missionaries in India, for example, may announce that they have adapted themselves to Eastern conditions, but have found the process painful. This is equivalent to saying that, in spite of tremendous efforts to appreciate the food, climate, customs and people they encounter, their adaptation has remained partial or negative. Positive adaptation is to find your happiness; spiritually and physically; in the conditions which have become yours.

Development

Development means the process of becoming; the process one goes through after birth in order to reach maturity. It is too psychosomatic, for both body and spirit are involved. This development is directed by an energy which has been called the horme: that is the iresistable drive which is inherent in all organisms (non-living organisms are also impelled by it), which urges them to assume their specific bodies and the appropriate behaviour. For instance, a fertile hen’s egg contains the germinative cell which divides and multiplies, building the structure which eventually becomes a chicken. The various cells have received their own commands as to what they should build - beak, eye, feathers, internal organs - and an inner compulsion obliges them to complete their task. Once this process has begun, nothing except destruction can interfere with it. You can maim a child but - except by killing him, you cannot prevent him from growing.

Why does the egg become a chicken, or the acorn an oak, each reproducing detail by detail the pattern of its species? In the germinative cell there appears to be present some kind of unconscious memory, to which psychologists have given the name mneme. This must be present also in inanimate matter. Solutions of certain chemicals, for instance, will always produce the same type of crystals; the molecules invariably rearrange themselves in their characteristic shape.

(The next post in this series will deal with Dr. Montessori’s interpretation of Heredity and The Unconscious)