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Discover the background to authenticity:

The authentic philosophy

Authenticity is the journey to a life based on the pursuit of your own purpose and guided by your own values, where we are true to ourselves without fear or compromise in all situations.

Authenticity is entirely compatible with modern living and even with having a job.  It absolutely does not require anyone to "drop out" or become a "hippy" (unless, of course that is who they authentically are) in fact it does not require anyone to do anything except to find out who they are and be it.

Authenticity is a process of evolving self knowledge and applying it to every situation and decision.

Wikipedia.org does not see it as being quite so clear or simple, here is what their entry on authenticity has to say:


"Authenticity is a technical term in existentialist philosophy. In this philosophy, the conscious self is seen as coming to terms with being in a material world and with encountering external forces, pressures and influences which are very different from, and other than, itself. Authenticity is the degree to which one is true to one's own personality, spirit, or character, despite these pressures. Existentialists see this process in different ways.

It is difficult to determine the origin of the contemporary notion of authenticity. Writers on the subject of authenticity have often attempted to ground their views in work from a wide variety of historical periods. Secular and religious notions of authenticity have coexisted for centuries under different guises; perhaps the earliest account of authenticity that remains popular is Socrates' admonition that the "unexamined" life is not worth living.

In the twentieth century, Anglo-American discussions of authenticity often center around the writers of a few key figures associated with existentialist philosophy, where the term originated; because most of these writers wrote in languages other than English, the process of translating and anthologizing has had a strong impact on the debate. Walter Kaufmann might be credited with creating a "canon" of existentialist writers which include:
Søren Kierkegaard
Martin Heidegger
Jean-Paul Sartre

(links to wikipedia.org)
For these writers, the conscious self is seen as coming to terms with being in a material world and with encountering external forces and influences which are very different from itself; authenticity is one way in which the self acts and changes in response to these pressures.


Authenticity is often "at the limits" of language; it is described as the negative space around inauthenticity, with reference to examples of inauthentic living. Sartre's novels are perhaps the easiest access to this mode of describing authenticity: they often contain characters and anti-heroes who base their actions on external pressures -- the pressure to appear to be a certain kind of person, the pressure to adopt a particular mode of living, the pressure to ignore one's own moral and aesthetic objections in order to have a more comfortable existence. KaosPilots poster

His work also includes characters who do not understand their own reasons for acting, or who ignore crucial facts about their own lives in order to avoid uncomfortable truths; this connects his work with the philosophical tradition.


Sartre is concerned also with the "vertiginous" experience of absolute freedom. Under Sartre's view, this experience, necessary for the state of authenticity, can be sufficiently unpleasant that it leads people to inauthentic ways of living.

In all writers, authenticity is seen as a very general concept, not attached to any particular political or aesthetic ideology.This is a necessary aspect of authenticity: because it concerns a person's relation with the world, it can not be arrived at by simply repeating a set of actions or taking up a set of positions. In this manner, authenticity is connected with creativity: the impetus to action must arise from the person in question, and not be externally imposed.

Heidegger takes this notion to the extreme, by speaking in very abstract terms about modes of living; his terminology was adopted and simplified by Sartre in his philosophical works. Kierkegaard's work (such as the "Panegyric Upon Abraham" from his Fear and Trembling) often focuses on biblical stories which are (naturally) not directly immitigable. Sartre, as has been noted above, focused on inauthentic existence as a way to avoid the paradoxical problem of appearing to provide prescriptions for a mode of living that rejects external dictates.


These considerations aside, it is the case that authenticity has been associated with various human activities. For Sartre, Jazz music was a representation of freedom; this may have been in part because Jazz was associated with African-American culture, and was thus in opposition to Western culture generally, which Sartre considered hopelessly inauthentic. Theodor Adorno, however, another writer and philosopher concerned with the notion of authenticity, despised Jazz music because he saw it as a false representation that could give the appearance of authenticity but that was as much bound up in concerns with appearance and audience as many other forms of art.

Heidegger in his later life associated authenticity with non-technological modes of existence, seeing technology as distorting a more "authentic" relationship with the natural world.


Most writers on inauthenticity in the twentieth century considered the predominant cultural norms to be inauthentic; not only because they were seen as forced on people, but also because, in themselves, they required people to behave inauthentically towards their own desires, obscuring true reasons for acting.

Advertising, in as much as it attempted to give people a reason for doing something that they did not already possess, was a "textbook" example of how Western culture distorted the individual for external reasons. Race relations are seen as another limit on authenticity, as they demand that the self engage with others on the basis of external attributes.

An early example of the connection between inauthenticity and capitalism was made by Karl Marx, whose notion of "alienation" can be linked to the later discourse on the nature of inauthenticity.


Hence those concerned with living authentically have often led unusual lives that opposed cultural norms; the rise of the counter-culture in the 1960s in Europe and America was seen by many as a new opportunity to live an authentic existence. Many, however, have pointed out that just because one lives unusually, one is not necessarily in an authentic state of being.

The connection of the violation of cultural norms to authenticity, however, is strong and real, and continues today: among artists who explicitly violate the conventions of their profession, for example. The connection of inauthenticity to capitalism is contained in the notion of "selling out," used to describe an artist whose work has become inauthentic after achieving commercial success and thus becoming to an extent integrated into an inauthentic system.


If authenticity can only be described in very abstract terms, or as the negative of inauthenticity, what can be said about it directly? All writers agree that authenticity is:


Something to be pursued as a goal intrinsic to "the good life."
Intrinsically difficult, due in part to social pressures to live inauthentically, and in part due to a person's own character.
A revelatory state, where one perceives oneself, other people, and sometimes even things, in a radically new way.


One might add that many, though not all, writers have agreed that authenticity also:


• Requires self-knowledge.
• Alters radically one's relationships with other people.
• Carries with it its own set of moral obligations.
• Can be obtained regardless of race, gender and class."

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"Fulfillment is a by-product of making something that means something. You don't go to a restaurant and order a meal because you want to have a shit."

(misquoted from Banksy – see www.banksy.co.uk)

"I must create a system, or be enslaved by another man's - I will not reason or compare, my business it to create!"

William Blake

"Show up
Be Present
Tell the truth
Let it all go"

Harrison Owen, creator of Open Space

"Spending the best part of your day working to make someone else rich is not very motivating."


Neil Crofts, Authentic Business

"If you don't design your own life plan, chances are you'll fall into someone else's plan. And guess what they have planned for you? Not much."

Jim Rohn

"To accomplish great things, we must not only act, but also dream; not only plan, but also believe."

Anatole France

"Make no comparisons. Be whoever you are."

"Nature does not compromise,
A pelican is not a compromise between a crow and an otter
It is just a pelican."

Amory Lovins

"Avoiding danger is no safer in the long run, life is either a daring adventure or nothing"

Helen Keller

"Do
Or do not
There is no try"

Yoda

"Our deepest fear is that we are powerful beyond measure. It is our light not our darkness, that most frightens us. We ask ourselves who am I to be brilliant, gorgeous, talented, fabulous? Actually, who are you not to be? You are a child of the earth. Your playing small does not serve the world. Theres nothing enlightened about shrinking so that other people wont feel insecure around you. We are all meant to shine, as children do... And as we let our own light shine, we unconsciously give other people permission to do the same. As were liberated from our own fear, our presence automatically liberates others."

Marianne Williamson

"I think I can, I think I can, I know I can, I know I can......."

James (the red engine)

“He who never risks going beyond his limits should not complain about the mediocrity of his existence.”

Anon

"To believe in something and not live it, is dishonest"


Mahatma Gandhi

"It is our choices that show what we truly are, far more than our abilities."

Dumbledore

"It's not the mountain we conquer, but ourselves."


Sir Edmund Hillary

"The golden opportunity you are seeking is in yourself.
It is not in your environment; it is not in luck or chance, or the help of others; it is in yourself alone."

Orison Swett Marden

"dare to take the journey that begins where the path ends"

". . .if we wait for the moment when everything,
absolutely everything is ready, we shall never begin".

van Turgenev

"The highest compact we can make with our fellow is:
Let there be truth between us two forevermore."


Ralph Waldo Emerson

"Most of us seem to be coerced into conformity from a very early age by the dragon of normality. I call it a dragon not because it breathes fire or even because it is particularly nasty but because it is entirely fictitious.

There is no normal.

There is no right, which is more right than your right."

Neil Crofts - Authentic - How to Make a Living by Being Yourself

"The paradigm shift occurs when the tension of the expectations exceeds the cohesion of the limitations."

Neil Crofts, Authentic: how to make a living by being yourself

"It seems counter intuitive that the search for our deepest meaning should involve sitting around and doing nothing."

Neil Crofts, Authentic: how to make a living by being yourself

"Enjoying yourself involves being where you want to be, with the people you want to be with, doing what you want to be doing as much of the time as possible. I do not believe that this can be achieved without planning."

Neil Crofts, Authentic: how to make a living by being yourself

"All truth passes through three stages. First, it is ridiculed. Second, it is violently opposed. Third, it is accepted as being self-evident."

Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860)