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The Identity Dissonance of Our Times Comes From the Struggle Between the Inner and Outer Self
(powerknowledge.substack.com)
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A well written and substantial exploration, but I can't agree with the author's conclusion:
There is always a need to escape the prison, and anyone who has spent time in a cell will confirm that it confines the mind as much as the body. There is no prison that does not hinder a prisoner's well-being. Imprisonment creates a cognitive dissonance that will only increase the more one tries to conform to the rules of the prison (whether it be metaphorical or physical).
I would argue that instead, the solution to the prisoner's dilemma is to maintain the appearance of conformity as much as it benefits their position, while engaging in acceptable overt action to engender change that makes that repressive conformity obsolete.
If overt actions of social change that engender freedom are prohibited, subversive actions of non-conformity are justified, and are often the only outlet to maintain one's sanity.
Acceptance of the prison doesn't lead to greater enlightenment, only despair and silence of the soul. If you must conform, give them your smile, but always keep a spark ready for the right moment when the tinder is dry: