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Adler, Alfred |
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Adler, Alfred (1870–1937)Austrian psychologist. He saw the ‘will to power’ as more influential in accounting for human behaviour than the sexual drive. A dispute over this theory led to the dissolution of his ten-year collaboration with psychiatry's founder Sigmund Freud. The concepts of inferiority complex and overcompensation originated with Adler.
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But there were also the psychological Nietzsches of Alfred Adler and
Otto Rank, the cynical-satirical Nietzsches of G. The idea that people naturally seek to
improve their perceived position with regard to their goals and
aspirations is suggested generally in the work of many personality
theorists, including, for example, Alfred Adler (in Ansbacher &
Ansbacher, 1956), Carl Rogers (1963), and Abraham Maslow (1964), all of
whom described people as inherently seeking to overcome perceived
personal and situational deficits. Functionalism's
influence can be seen in the work of Alfred Adler, who reinterpreted the
Freudian family dynamic of sexuality into a struggle for dominance: his
"inferiority complex" struck a much more responsive chord in
America than Freudian seduction theory. |
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