| ALFRED ADLER'S "INDIVIDUAL PSYCHOLOGY" |
Lecture
Notes
BIOGRAPHICAL
Second of 6 children. Adler couldn't walk
until 4 years old due to rickets. Was hit by a car at age 5. Skinny, weak,
sickly, and tormented by his older brother. Felt small, unattractive, and
rejected by his mother. Idolized his father, a personable, successful, wealthy
merchant. Was jealous of his older brother Sigmund. Felt like he was in
competition with his brother.
Worked hard to overcome his handiciaps and
inferiorities. Became very outgoing and social. His brother despised him because
he was different and made friends easily with everyone -- people from all group
in the multicultural neighborhood in Vienna where he grew up.
At the
University of Vienna, he became an opthalmologist. He read frued and a criticism
of Freud, and felt prompted to write a defense of Freud. Freud wrote to him and
invited him to join the Viennese Psychoanalytic Society. Adler became one of 4
charter members of Freud's group in 1902. For about 10 years they were good
friends, until he resigned his presidency of the Society in 1911 and broke with
Freud. He came to view Freud as inflexible in his views, a power triper, and
obsessed with sex and death.
Was a doctor in the Austrian Army during World
War I, wrote readable popular books, and organized child guidance clinics in the
Viennese school syßtem. Influenced Karen Horney (social factors), Gordon Allport
(unity of personality), Henry Murray (individual traits), E.C. Tolman (purpose),
Julian Rotter (expectancies), and Abraham Maslow (Self-actualization. Maslow,
Rollo May, and Carl Rogers all studied under Adler, and all gave him credit for
having influenced their thinking. He could be characterized as the forerunner of
humanistic psychology.
SOCIAL CHARACTER OF LIFE.
Person must
be seen in social situation. All important problems and values are social
problems and values. Adler's approach was a kind of holistic social "field
theory" that predated Lewin. .
Adler was not so interested in the
unconscious or spirituality. Emphasis on the social. He viewed people as mostly
conscious rather than mostly unconscious creatures
Referred to private logic
-- our own inner chatterbox that tells us what to do.
A COMPREHENSIVE
VIEW. Like Freud, Adler gave us an all-encompassing view of the human being.
An alternative to Freud. For Adler, it was useless to focus on drives and
impulses without giving attention to how the person creatively directs the
drives.
MASCULINE PROTEST. Early in his career Adler put forth
the idea of "Masculine protest." The desire to be above, like a "real man". In
so doing he replaced biological, external, objective causal explanations with
psychological, internal, subjective causal explanation.
IN MEN:
Feminine traits are carefully hidden by exaggerated masculine wishes and
efforts. This is a form of overcompensation, because the feminine tendency is
evaluated negatively in a patriarchal, masculine-dominated culture.
This can
lead to setting the highest, often unattainable goals for oneself. It develops a
craving for satisfaction and triumph, intensifies both abilities and egotistical
drives, including avarice and ambition. Defiance, vengeance, and resentment
accompany it, sometimes leading to continuous conflicts. Pathological fantasies
of grandeur result from overly strong masculine protests. The child may seek to
surpass the father in every respect and thereby come into conflict with him.
IN WOMEN. The masculine protest in women is usually covered up and
transformed, seeking to triumph with feminine means. In our culture one may find
a repressed wish to become transformed into a
man. Neurotic mechanisms such
as sexual anaesthesia may result.
Comments by Adler's editors
Heinz and Rowena Ansbacher: "When the striving for superiority and
overcoming replaced the masculine protest [in Adler's thinking], the term became
limited to the more restricted meaning of the preceding paragraph. It referred
to manifestations in women protesting against their feminine role....
"When
the masculine protest is increased, it produces such symptoms as...'frigidity,
few children, sometimes a late marriage, a weak husband; and nervous disorders
which are often related to the menses, pregnancy, childbirth, and the
menopause'.
But the masculine protest may also result in positive
adjustment. "The girl...develops a pronounced feeling of inferiority and pushes
on vigorously. She thus discloses a more thorough training which often gives her
marked traits of greater energy. This...can produce a vast number of both good
and bad conseqequences [including] all sorts of human excellents and
shortcomings."
Adler was still thinking of the aggressive drive as the
basic dynamic principle when he was young and striving to assert his own ideas
in opposition to Freud.
NEED FOR AFFECTION.
The need for
social relationships is present from the start. If satisfaction is denied to the
outgoing seeking for affection, then the child may turn in on himself or herself
in narcississtic self-love.
STRIVING FOR SUPERIORITY (OR PERFECTION)
The basic dynamic force between all human activity -- striving from a
feeling of inferiority to one of superiority.
"To be a human being," he
wrote, "means to feel oneself inferior." Adler believed that inferiority felings
are the source of all human striving. All individual progress, growth and
development result from the attempt to compensate for one's inferiorities, be
theyor real.
For Adler, we're all overcoming an inferiority. Feeling
unattractive, or don't belong somewhere. Not strong enough or smart enough. So
everyone is trying to overcome something that is hampering them from becoming
what they want to become.
Organ inferiorities become psychologically
effective through the intervention of feelings of inferiority.
The meaning
of superiority changed through the years. Later it came to mean perfection,
completion, or overcoming. Unlike at the beginning, the frame of reference was
no longer the neurotic, but the mentally healthy individual. It came to mean not
superior over, not competition. Rather it became like self-realization.
A
ceaselessness and universality of striving. The striving for perfections is
innate in the sense that it is a part of life.
Trhoughout a person's life,
Adler believed, he or she is motivated by the need to overcome the sense of
inferiority and strive for ever higher levels of development.
Inferiority
complex: When an inability to overcome inferiority feelings heightens and
intensifies them.
In the mentally ill, the goal of superiority turns in the
direction of wanting to domineer over others, lean on others, leave tasks of
life unsolved in order not to suffer sure defeats. These goals contradict
reason.
FICTIONALISM (Hans Vaihinger)
Vaihinger defined
"fictions" as ideas, incl. unconscious notions, which have no counterpart in
reality, yet enable us to deal wi_h it better than we could otherwise. Ex: "All
men are created equal". It contradicts reality, yet as an idea has great
practical value in everyday life.
Compare to a hypothesis: Whereas a
hypothosis submits its reality _o test and demands verification, the
fiction is a sort of auxiliary construct. Dogma, by contrast, refers to an idea
which is considered definitly established.
FICTIONAL FINAL GOAL.
Based in subjective reality. Something we are all trying to reach, that we
strive for. we have within ourselves. Child develops this as a safeguard to deal
with the world around.
Fictions are no_ reducible tocauses. They are mental
states.
A fictional final goal became for Adler the principle of internal
subjective causation of psychological even_s. A basic asp´ct of our orien_ation
in the world, and one aspect of compensation for felt inferiorities.
THE "CREATIVE SELF" Known by its effects. We have freedom to act,
determine our fate, determine our personality and affect our style of life.
Creative power of the self means we consciously shape our personalities and
destinies. The creative power of the self is the essential principle of human
life. Heredity gives us "certain abilities," environment gives us "certain
imporessions, These, along with the way we interpret and experience them, make
up the bricks we use in our own creative way to construct our individual
atttudes toward life and our relaions to the outside world. We consciously shape
our personalities and destinis.
LIFE PLAN: Our strategy to deal
with the world around us. Life play and FFG are similar, they're related. In
life plan the child develops a strategy, then tries to get a handle on what's
going on around them. This becomes the fictional final goal and ultimately the
lifestyle.
Adler viewed Freud as too concerned with the past. He
himself was oriented toward the future. We look to the future, to our
expectations, rather than to the past to explain our behavior.
STYLE
OF LIFE . Comparable to the psyche, personality. It is what we are, who we
are, what we want to be. The life style is usually set in motion by age 4 or 5.
It is involved in the uniqueness of each person, and that person's unique way of
striving for superiority. Includes the goal, the person's opinion of self and
world, and his or her unique way of striving for the goal in his or her
particular situation.
Our basic personality, our uniqueness and how we live
our life, comes from the creative power of the self. Heredity,
environment, conscious, unconscious all contribute to this.
Everything Adler
says ties into the lifestyle. For Adler, meanings are not determined by
situation, but we are self-determined by the meaning we attribute to a
situation.
Style of life is equated with self or ego, a unity of personality.
Individuality is seen as th´individual form of creative activity. There is a
focus on the direction potentialities are taking. This is heavily influenced by
childhood experiences.
SUCCESS, in Adler's terms, dealt with how
we fit into the environment while being true to ourselves. You're individual,
unique. If you're successful only in doing what others want you to, you're not
really successful if it doesn't fit you personally.
SOCIAL INTEREST.
Gives us basically a positive outlook on life. An interest in furthering
the welfare of others. We can all work together toward this goal. If we don't
have a faulty lifestyle, we will progress together to help society.
IDEAL PERSONALITY: THE SOCIALLY USEFUL PERSON.
Wise socialization is achieved not through repression but
through social interest,. This is a potential to cooperate with others to
achieve personal and social goals. This became Adler's criterion for normality
and maturity. People can be trained in this direction starting in infance.
Social interest gives us basically a positive outlook on life. An interest in
furthering the welfare of others. We can all work together toward this goal. If
we don't have a faulty lifestyle, we will progress together to help society.
SOCIAL INTEREST AND INTELLIGENCE. Adler saw social interest as an
important part of a person's intelligent functioning in a given situation. The
degree of a person's social interest determines whether his or her intellectual
solution of a problem will have general validity, that is, will be reasonable or
not.
Good intellectual functioning produces solutions to problems which make
sense not only to the individual but also to the group.
GENIUS, acc.
to Adler, is primarily a person of supreme usefulness. The essence of genius
lies neither in inherited qualities nor environmental influences, but in that
third sphere of individual reaction which includes the possibility of socially
affirmative action. It is only when someone's life is recognized by others
as having significance for them that we call him or her a genius.
GOOD ADJUSTMENT.
This is striving on the "commonly useful
side."
Poor adjustment is striving on the "commonly useless side."
Mental
disturbances are thus understood as disturbances not only in the individual, but
in the social situation as well.
Adler presumes an innate potential for
social interest. Not to want to help one's neighbor is one of the
characteristics of maladjustment. The person whose social interest is developed
finds the solution to problems, feels at home in the world, and perceives more
clearly.
POOR ADJUSTMENT
The person not interested in his or
her fellows has the greatest difficulties in life and provides the greatest
injury to others. "It is from among such individuals that all human
failures spring. "
PERSONALITY PROBLEMS. Related to a faulty
style of life, usually developed in childhood.
COMMUNITY: People
have always had to cooperate. A person must cooperate with and contribute to
society to realize both own and society's goals.
ACTIVITY.
To
a striving for superiorit¥ and social interest, Adler later added a third
primary motive of degree of activity.
FAULTY LIFESTYLES
Three
things that can interfere with social interest are.
1. Organ
inferiorities: People say, "poor kid," etc. Kid starts to think, "I'm
missing something that the other kids have. If circumstance are right for it,
these feelings will roll and roll like a big snowball. If incorrectly handled by
parents aroound the child, they can lead to faulty lifestyle.
2. The
pampered child. Spoiled brat. "Why should I love my neighbor when my
neighbor hasn't done anything for me? I'm here for myself, nobody else. Can get
paranoid if others don't give him or her what he or she wants.
This often
occurs when the parents raised the child for themselves and their own
gratification. Didn't bring him up to be a good member of, to contribute to
society.
3. The Neglected child. Also feels cheated by life. Didn't
have enough love, caring, etc. Society owes me that. I want to get it back. They
cheated on me, so I'm getting what's mine. Like the pampered child. A
self-perpetuating situation.
NEUROTIC BEHAVIOR.
The neurotic
overcompensates for feeling insecure to protect self-esteem. Points to his
symptom to justify lack of social interest. Overindulged child may become
self-centered, neglected child may seek revenge against society.
The
safeguarding aspect. To overcompensate for feelings of insecurity and protect
his self-esteem, a neurotic can alwa¥s point toward his s¥mptom as justification
for lack of social interest.
Neurotic approaches to life include:
1) A
distancing attituded
2) Detours
3) A narrowed path
4) A hesitating
attitude.
The person is a victim of a wrong attitude toward life that
they learned during childhood. People push their difficulties on others and
evade realities.
A TYPOLOGY. Emerges from combining degrees of
activity with social interest.
Socially useful person. High social
interest and high degree of activity.
Ruling person: Low social
interest and high degree of activity. Out for own self interest, not others.
Might be tyrant or despot.
Getting person: Take all and give
nothing.
Recluse: Low social interest and low activity.
(I have
not seen high social interest and low activity mentioned.
EARLIEST
MEMORIES: In his therapeutic practice this is the first question Adler would
always ask, and use it as a basis for discovering the person's lifestyle. It
doesn't matter whether it's true or not. What's important is that you chose
those words, that incient, and vocalized it. If you're lying about it, lying and
deceit probably characterize your life.
There are no chance memories,
thought Adler. We consciously choose what we want to remember, because it will
help us in some endeavor.
DREAMS.
2 functions: Problem
solving
Forward moving.
Did not deal with nightmares, so far as I know.
Dreams serve as a bridge to what we want to attain. To a certain degree
they are prophetic. They keep us moving forward. Dream could be practice for an
event thåt is coming up. When you practice something you're moving forward and
helping solve a problem.
BIRTH ORDER.
Pioneered interest in
this area. Adler posited birth order as one of the major childhood social
influences from which the individual creates a style of life.
There is
potentially a favorable or unfavorable outcome from each birth order place.
OLDER CHILD. Can feel dethroned. Inferior to younger child
Favorable
outcome -- feel responsibility, take care of others.
Unfavorable outcome:
Insecure, overly reliant on rules.
MIDDLE CHILD. Has a model in the
older child, must share attention from the beginning. Doesn't realize until
later that the older child was alone beforee.
Favorable outcome: Be
ambitious. Want to be at least as good as the older child. Strong social
interest.
Unfavorable outcome: Rebellious and envious. Permanent tencdency
to try to surpass others. Difficulty in role of follower.
YOUNGEST. Lots
of attention. Often pampered.
Favorable: Much stimulation. Many chances to
compete.
Unfavorable: Feel inferior to everyone..
ONLY. Gets
undivided attention, often pampered, may compete with father.
PSYCHOTHERAPY: Includes
1. Understanding the specific style of
life of the patient.
2). Explaining the patient to himself or herself.
3.
Strenggthening the social interest in the patient.
In sum, Understand,
interpret, direct.
AA: Founders talked with Jung, and probably also
Adler.
http://www.sonoma.edu/users/d/daniels/adler.html