How to be happy though human / by W. Béran Wolfe.
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Individual Psychology. Individual Psychology bears the
same relation to older psychiatric theories that Einstein’s
theory of relativity bears to Newtonian physics.
All modern psychiatric theories prefer the dynamic
point of view to the old static classification of neuroses
according to their symptoms. Adler has pointed out that
the important thing to know about any neurosis is its
goal or purpose, in contradistinction to older psychiatrists,
including Freud, who focussed their attention on its cause
or origin. The word “ hormic ’’j1 like its synonyms
conation, intrinsic teleology, or Adler’s own term
“ immanent ”, or in-dwelling, teleology, is applied in
modern psychiatry to dynamics of human behaviour,
both normal and neurotic.
To quote MacDougall,2 “ those of our activities which
we can at all adequately describe are unmistakably and
undeniably teleological ... we undertake them in the
pursuit of some goal, for the sake of some result which we
foresee and desire to achieve. And it holds that such
activities are the true type of all mental activities, and of
all truly vital activities, and that, when we seek to
interpret more obscure instances of human activity, and
when we observe activities on the part of animals that
clearly are goal-seeking, we are well justified in regarding
them as of the same order as our own explicitly teleological
or purposive actions.” Adler was the first of the great
modern psychiatrists to apply this hormic point of view
to the understanding of the neuroses. We shall take the
key Adler and other exponents of the hormic philosophy
of human behaviour have given us, and apply it to the
various forms of neurotic behaviour.
We may consider the neurosis as the strategy of the
evasion ot the complete solution of the three great
problems of society, work, and sexual fulfilment. To
understand the dynamics of this strategy we have three
points to consider : the problem, the method of evasion,
1 First used by P. T. Nunn in his Education, its Data and First
Principles.
2 William MacDougall, in The Psychologies of 1930.