Basic Principles
Adler was influenced by the mental construct ideas of the philosopher Hans Vaihinger (The Philosophy of As If / Philosophie des Als Ob) and the literature of Dostoevsky. While still a member of the Vienna Psychoanalytic Society he developed a theory of organic inferiority and compensation that was the prototype for his later turn to phenomenology and the development of his famous concept, the inferiority complex.
Adler was also influenced by the philosophies of Immanuel Kant, Friedrich Nietzsche, Rudolf Virchow and the statesman Jan Smuts (who coined the term "holism"). Adler's School, known as "Individual Psychology"—an arcane reference to the Latin individuus meaning indivisibility, a term intended to emphasize holism—is both a social and community psychology as well as a depth psychology. Adler was an early advocate in psychology for prevention and emphasized the training of parents, teachers, social workers and so on in democratic approaches that allow a child to exercise their power through reasoned decision making whilst co-operating with others. He was a social idealist, and was known as a socialist in his early years of association with psychoanalysis (1902–1911). His allegiance to Marxism dissipated over time (he retained Marx's social idealism yet distanced himself from Marx's economic theories). Adler had a greatly appreciated influence on the foremost founders of Humanistic Psychology, Abraham Maslow, Carl Rogers, and Rollo May, all of whom learned from him in New York or Vienna. As expected, the basic principles of Humanistic Psychology and Adler's Individual Psychology show various similarities.
Adler was a very pragmatic man and believed that lay people could make practical use of the insights of psychology. He sought to construct a social movement united under the principles of "Gemeinschaftsgefühl" (community feeling) and social interest (the practical actions that are exercised for the social good). Adler was also an early supporter of feminism in psychology and the social world, believing that feelings of superiority and inferiority were often gendered and expressed symptomatically in characteristic masculine and feminine styles. These styles could form the basis of psychic compensation and lead to mental health difficulties. Adler also spoke of "safeguarding tendencies" and neurotic behavior long before Anna Freud wrote about the same phenomena in her book The Ego and the Mechanisms of Defense. ?
Adlerian-based scholarly, clinical and social practices focus on the following topics:
- Mental Health Prevention
- Social Interest and Community Feeling
- Holism and the Creative Self
- Fictional Finalism, Teleology, and Goal constructs
- Psychological and Social Encouragement
- Inferiority, Superiority and Compensation
- Life Style / Style of Life
- Early Recollections (a projective technique)
- Family Constellation and Birth Order
- Life Tasks & Social Embeddedness
- The Conscious and Unconscious realms
- Private Logic & Common Sense (based in part on Kant's "sensus communis")
- Symptoms and Neurosis
- Safeguarding Behaviour
- Guilt and Guilt Feelings
- Socratic Questioning
- Dream Interpretation
- Child and Adolescent Psychology
- Democratic approaches to Parenting and Families
- Adlerian Approaches to Classroom Management
- Leadership and Organisational Psychology
From its inception, Adlerian psychology has always included both professional and lay adherents. Indeed, Adler felt that all people could make use of the scientific insights garnered by psychology and he welcomed everyone, from decorated academics to those with no formal education to participate in spreading the principles of Adlerian psychology.
Read more about this topic: Alfred Adler
Famous quotes containing the words basic and/or principles:
“The research on gender and morality shows that women and men looked at the world through very different moral frameworks. Men tend to think in terms of justice or absolute right and wrong, while women define morality through the filter of how relationships will be affected. Given these basic differences, why would men and women suddenly agree about disciplining children?”
—Ron Taffel (20th century)
“When great changes occur in history, when great principles are involved, as a rule the majority are wrong.”
—Eugene V. Debs (18551926)