I carefully chose the word
encounter. I could have used the word
rendezvous but for someone like me a rendezvous with the world of Philosophy is no less than an encounter. I mean a guy who's never been away from the
objectives of science and
technology is suddenly asked to get into the subjective ocean of
philosophy.
It's not that I've never come close to reading
philosophy and
it's subset
psychology. For that matter I've read a bit of Freud. But something like
Penis envy is a new phrase. Let me just scrape something from wikipedia on
penis envy.
"Penis envy in Freudian psychoanalysis refers to the supposed reaction of a girl during her psychosexual development to the realization that she does not have a penis. Freud considered this realization a defining moment in the development of gender and sexual identity for women. According to Freud, the parallel reaction in boys to the realization that girls do not have a penis is Castration anxiety.
In contemporary culture, the term is sometimes used inexactly or metaphorically to refer to the idea that adult women wish they had a penis, or to refer to anxieties between men about the size of their genitals."
I might be sounding crazy as to why I am having this
unimportant discussion on
penis envy. The reason is because I am still trying to understand what
psychology is. Contextually it's been said that Psychology is the Mother of All Sciences. However, physicist believe that
psychologists have physics envy. Physics Envy; now this is what brought me into discussing penis envy. Anyways before I confuse myself and/or my readers with all the hoopla about the philosophical essence of psychology, I'll move into putting down the flavor of my first day of class at MDI.
The class was about the "Philosophy & Methodologies of Creating Knowledge" popularly known as
PMCK. I must say my first stint with Professor Rajen Gupta has created a very strong impression about the class of the man and his eternal quest for being an assimilator (knowledge assimilation). And after having the privilege of hearing him the quote
“Somewhere, something incredible is waiting to be known” has a sense of completeness.