01/27/2023
Bion described three kinds of basic assumptions in groups: dependency, fight/flight and pairing.
that speak to the unconscious ways that the group behaves in order to manage its anxiety. In Basic Assumption groups, leaders and followers collude in order to avoid facing painful realities. One way to think about it is as a defense mechanism that serves the whole group.
Since then, other practitioners have theorized new basic assumptions: oneness, me-ness, and purity/pollution. This brief extract describes these basic assumptions.
The 4th basic assumption group, added by Turquet (1974) describes a group where “members seek to join in a powerful union with an omnipotent force, unobtainably high, to surrender self for passive participation, and thereby to feel existence, well-being and wholeness.”
In one-ness groups, members act “totally undifferentiated, as if there is no difference of opinion let alone conflict within the group.” (Green and Molenkamp, 2005). Cult groups reflect this type of basic assumption functioning.
Basic Assumption-- Me-ness was proposed by Lawrence, Bain, and Gould (1996) as a response to social anxieties and fears of living in modern, turbulent society. As a result of this anxiety, an individual is pressed more and more into his or her own inner reality in order to exclude and deny the perceived disturbing realities that are in their outer environment. The group of people meeting in same time and place denies that it is a group. Group is perceived as “contaminating, impure, taboo, and in sum, all that is negative.”
In Me-ness culture, the overriding anxiety is that the individual would be lost in any group that emerges. It is as if each individual was a self¬-contained group acting in its own right.
A sixth basic assumption of purity/pollution, related to the concept of “caste” was proposed by Chattopadhyay in 2019. Caste hierarchies establish the superiority or purity of one dominant group over the other. Basic Assumption Purity/Pollution groups behave as if their survival depends on keeping the higher “pure” group or caste separated from the lower “polluted” ones. With this basic assumption, the “impurities” of the upper caste are projected onto the lower, polluted castes.
The complete video can be found on my YouTube Channel-- .
Do you see evidence of Basic Assumption behavior in your group or team?