Neurosis: Difference between revisions
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==Notes== | ==Notes== | ||
[[Abraham Maslow]] felt the term "neurosis" was antiquated. He described it as a spiritual disorder (see his quote below). Maslow prefers to term [[Human Diminution]] | |||
On the LP we could consider neurosis to be partially caused by [[Disjuncture]], i.e, a mis-[[alignment]] between [[Spiritual Ego]] and [[Bodily Ego]]. Definately such a misalignment would result in human diminution, failure to [[Full Realization|Realize]] ones full [[Human Potential]] | |||
== Quotes == | |||
<blockquote>Strictly speaking. neurosis means an illness of the nerves. a relic we can very well do without today. In addition. using the label "psychological illness" puts neurosis into the same universe of discourse as ulcers, lesions, bacterial invasions, broken bones, or tumors. But by now. we have learned very well that it is better to consider as rather related to spiritual disorders, to loss of meaning. to doubt about the goals of life. to grief and anger over a lost love. to seeing life in a different way, to loss of courage or of hope, to despair over the future, to dislike for oneself. to recognition that one's life is being wasted. or that there is no possibility of joy or love. etc. | |||
These are all failings away from full humanness, from the full blooming of human nature. They are losses of human possibility. of what might have been and could yet be perhaps.<ref>Maslow, A. H. ''The Farther Reaches of Human Nature''. Viking, 1971. p. 30.</ref></blockquote> | |||
==Abraham Maslow Index== | ==Abraham Maslow Index== | ||
Latest revision as of 05:00, 6 March 2026
Neurosis
Neurosis is...
Maslow considered the term to be obsolete and preferred the term Human Diminution
Concept Map
Key Terms
- Abraham Maslow
- Eupsychia Key Figures
- Eupsychian Biology
- Eupsychian Education
- Eupsychian Management
- Eupsychian Psychology
- Eupsychian Science
- Eupsychian Society
- Eupsychian Theory
- Eupsychian Therapy
- Euspychian Methods
- Humanistic Psychology
- Transpersonal Psychology
Neurosis >
Syncretic Terms
Neurosis >
Related LP Terms
Neurosis >
Non-LP Related Terms
Notes
Abraham Maslow felt the term "neurosis" was antiquated. He described it as a spiritual disorder (see his quote below). Maslow prefers to term Human Diminution
On the LP we could consider neurosis to be partially caused by Disjuncture, i.e, a mis-alignment between Spiritual Ego and Bodily Ego. Definately such a misalignment would result in human diminution, failure to Realize ones full Human Potential
Quotes
Strictly speaking. neurosis means an illness of the nerves. a relic we can very well do without today. In addition. using the label "psychological illness" puts neurosis into the same universe of discourse as ulcers, lesions, bacterial invasions, broken bones, or tumors. But by now. we have learned very well that it is better to consider as rather related to spiritual disorders, to loss of meaning. to doubt about the goals of life. to grief and anger over a lost love. to seeing life in a different way, to loss of courage or of hope, to despair over the future, to dislike for oneself. to recognition that one's life is being wasted. or that there is no possibility of joy or love. etc. These are all failings away from full humanness, from the full blooming of human nature. They are losses of human possibility. of what might have been and could yet be perhaps.[1]
Abraham Maslow Index
- Aggridant
- B-Cognition
- B-Needs
- B-Realm
- B-Values
- Being-Guilt
- Big Problem
- D-Cognition
- D-Realm
- Deficiency Diseases
- Diminished Human Being
- Eupsychia
- Eupsychian Biology
- Eupsychian Education
- Eupsychian Index
- Eupsychian Management
- Eupsychian Psychology
- Eupsychian Science
- Eupsychian Society
- Eupsychian Theory
- Eupsychian Therapist
- Eupsychian Therapy
- Euspychian Methods
- Full Humanness
- Fusion Words
- Good Chooser
- Good Person
- Good Science
- Good Society
- Good Specimen
- Growing-Tip Statistics
- Hierarchy of Basic Needs
- Hierarchy of Cognitive Needs
- Horticultural Model
- Human Diminution
- Human Motivation
- Human Potential
- Humanistic Psychology
- Inner Signals
- Intrinsic Conscience
- Jonah Complex
- Metamotivation
- Metapathology
- Motivation
- Neurosis
- Normalcy
- Normative Biology
- Peak Experience
- Plateau Experience
- Real Self
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Footnotes
- ↑ Maslow, A. H. The Farther Reaches of Human Nature. Viking, 1971. p. 30.
