Baruch Menache's Podcast
Books Related: Theory of Social Exchange and Personhood by Baruch Menache Reciprocity, Identity, and the Foundations of Social Being Kindle eBook [https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0GD2H6LND] | Paperback [https://www.amazon.com/dp/1971928283] | Apple Books [https://books.apple.com/us/book/isbn9798284863749] What happens when a person becomes either hyper-visible or completely irrelevant in society? This episode explores the psychology of social objectification, irrelevance, identity formation, and the tension between individuality and communal representation. Discover how both extremes shape mental health, social behavior, and the search for authentic selfhood. Episode Description: To become part of the social process is to risk becoming an object within it. When an individual is elevated into communal awareness, they are no longer engaged as a person but as a symbol, a reference point, a fixed entity within a broader structure. Their humanity becomes secondary to their function. This is not chosen. It is imposed through attention, interest, and collective use. At the other end stands the individual who is not seen at all. The one who exists in irrelevance, outside the focal points of society, yet still defined by that absence. Their identity becomes shaped not by overexposure, but by negation. This episode explores how both conditions mirror each other. The objectified individual loses mobility through over-definition, while the “irrelevant” individual loses grounding through under-recognition. In both cases, personal development is disrupted by a social representation that cannot be escaped. The question is not how to escape society, but how to live within this duality without losing psychological movement. Freedom may not lie in rejecting these conditions, but in learning how to move between them without becoming fully consumed by either.
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