『Anna Freud & The Architecture of Defense』のカバーアート

Anna Freud & The Architecture of Defense

Anna Freud & The Architecture of Defense

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概要

Defense mechanisms, Anna Freud, and the philosophy of self-knowledge — that's the focus of our first episode of Philosophy for Lunch.

We start with Anna Freud’s life and work, from growing up as Sigmund Freud’s youngest daughter to publishing The Ego and the Mechanisms of Defense in 1936. Then we walk through some of the defense mechanisms you’ll recognize from everyday life: repression, projection, reaction formation, rationalization, sublimation, and displacement.

Along the way, we ask the philosophical questions her work raises:

  • How much of yourself can you really know if your mind is actively hiding things from you?
  • What happens to moral responsibility if our “reasons” are often after-the-fact stories?
  • Is the examined life always better, or do we also need a little healthy opacity to stay human?

At the end of the episode, we take listener questions about denial, whether defense mechanisms ever stop, what this looks like in children, and how to work on your own defenses without turning therapy into a perfection project.

Big ideas. Human conversations. About 30 minutes. Perfect for a lunch break, commute, or slow Sunday morning.

Sources & further reading:

  • Anna Freud, The Ego and the Mechanisms of Defense (1936/1966). The classic statement of her theory of defense mechanisms.
  • Anna Freud, Normality and Pathology in Childhood (1965). On development, resilience, and how defenses show up in children.
  • Anna Freud & Dorothy Burlingham, War and Children (1943). Clinical observations of children separated from parents during World War II and how they defended against trauma.
  • Ernst Kris, Anna Freud, & colleagues, The Hampstead War Nursery reports. Case material on children’s defenses under extreme stress.
  • Jonathan Haidt, The Righteous Mind: Why Good People Are Divided by Politics and Religion (2012). For the “press secretary” model of moral reasoning we discuss when talking about rationalization.
  • Daniel Kahneman, Thinking, Fast and Slow (2011). A broader look at intuition, reasoning, and why our explanations often come after the fact.
  • George E. Vaillant, Ego Mechanisms of Defense: A Guide for Clinicians and Researchers (1992). A modern clinical take on defense mechanisms and how they function in adult life.
  • Nancy McWilliams, Psychoanalytic Diagnosis (2nd ed., 2011). Accessible overview of personality structure and defenses from a contemporary psychoanalytic perspective.

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