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Concept
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Ego-Transcendence in Child Development

Rabia's radical dissolution of personal ego through love offers psychological language for Montessori and Waldorf's aims of developing mature, self-directed individuals.

Rabia
Why It Matters

Rabia taught that genuine spiritual maturity requires releasing the constructed self—ego's attachments to praise, fear of blame, and desire for recognition. This ancient wisdom parallels modern psychological understanding of healthy development toward autonomy and authenticity. Montessori's emphasis on the child's internal locus of evaluation—learning to assess their own work rather than seeking teacher approval—supports this ego-transcendence. Waldorf's encouragement of genuine artistic expression and thinking supports children in moving beyond performance for external validation. Both approaches implicitly teach that true competence and joy emerge when the child releases the anxious self-monitoring that blocks learning. Rabia's model suggests this isn't rejection of self but expansion beyond the small ego into something vaster. Children freed from constant self-judgment become capable of genuine creativity, authentic relationship, and intrinsic love of learning—the foundation for lifelong growth and contribution to community.

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Rabia
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