The Development of Defense Mechanisms Theory, Research, and Assessment için kapak resmi
The Development of Defense Mechanisms Theory, Research, and Assessment
Başlık:
The Development of Defense Mechanisms Theory, Research, and Assessment
ISBN:
9781461390251
Personal Author:
Edition:
1st ed. 1991.
Yayın Bilgileri:
New York, NY : Springer New York : Imprint: Springer, 1991.
Fiziksel Tanımlama:
XIII, 338 p. online resource.
Contents:
I. Theory -- 1 The Concept of Defense -- 2 The Concept of Defense Mechanism Development -- 3 Denial -- 4 Projection -- 5 Identification -- II. Research: A Review of the Literature -- 6 Approaches to Measuring Defenses: The Defense Mechanism Inventory -- 7 Other Approaches to Measuring Defenses: Derived Questionnaires, Self-Report Inventories, and Self-Other Ratings -- 8 Other Approaches to Measuring Defenses: Story Completion and Clinical Interviews -- 9 Other Approaches to Measuring Defenses: Projective Tests and Perceptual Defense Paradigms -- 10 Summary of Research: Defense Mechanisms and Their Relationship to Other Psychological Variables -- 11 Experimental Studies of Defense -- III. A New Approach to Measuring Defenses -- 12 The Defense Mechanism Manual -- 13 Psychometric Features -- 14 Research Findings -- References -- Notes -- Appendix: Manual for Scoring Defenses -- Author Index.
Abstract:
The idea that the human mind-that faculty of the intellect which we use to define and discern the truth-might also be used to deceive itself is not new. The classic orator Demosthenes warned of this possibility in 349 B.C. when he wrote that "Nothing is more easy than to deceive one's self; what a man wishes he generally believes to be true." 1 Even Jean Jacques Rousseau, who suggested the possibility of man as "noble savage," alerts us to this paradox, when he writes "Jamais fa nature ne nous trompe; c'est toujours nous qui nous trompons" ("Nature never deceives us; it is always we who deceive ourselves). 2 But it was Sigmund Freud who placed this idea firmly into the field of psychopathology and then, later, into a general psychological theory. According to Freud, understanding the function of a defense mechanism means not only fathoming the origin of pathological symptoms but also comprehending a model of the mind that includes both conscious and unconscious mental processes. From this initial focus on the general process of defense, Freud and his followers went on to identify various forms this process might take, with the result that today we have a list of 3 more than 37 defense mechanisms described in the literature.
Dil:
English