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Our Inner Conflicts: A Constructive Theory of Neurosis
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1946
Year
Cognitive ScienceNeurophilosophyNeurotic HopelessnessAffective NeuroscienceInner ConflictsBiological PsychologyCognitionSocial SciencesNeurotic ConflictsPsychodynamicPhilosophical PsychologySocial CognitionPsychologyIrrationalityPhilosophy Of MindRational Decision
Unlike Freud, Horney does not regard neurosis as rooted in instinct. In her words, her theory is constructive because it allows us for the first time to tackle and resolve neurotic hopelessness. . . . Neurotic conflicts cannot be resolved by rational decision. . . . But [they] can be resolved by changing the conditions within the personality that brought them into being.