Tag: Inner World


THEATER OF CONSCIOUSNESS

The Conceptual Foundations of the Theater of Consciousness The Theater of Consciousness metaphor, primarily developed by cognitive psychologist Bernard Baars in his seminal 1988 work, serves as a cornerstone for the Global Workspace Theory (GWT). This framework was designed to bridge the gap between subjective experience and the objective observations of neuroscience. By utilizing the […]

Read More

INTERPRETIVE RESPONSE

Defining the Interpretive Response The interpretive response is a sophisticated and crucial element within various evidence-based practices (EBPs) in psychotherapy, representing the therapist’s deliberate articulation and explanation of the client’s underlying psychological processes, experiences, and behavioral patterns. Fundamentally, it involves the clinician moving beyond mere reflection or validation to offer a hypothesis about the meaning, […]

Read More

OBJECT RELATIONSHIP

Object Relationship Object relationship, a fundamental concept within the field of psychoanalytic and psychodynamic psychology, designates the enduring patterns through which an individual perceives, interacts with, and relates to others and the self. This theoretical construct is anchored in the premise that an individual’s psychic structure and subsequent behavior are profoundly shaped by early experiences […]

Read More

PHANTASY

Defining the Kleinian Concept of Phantasy The term Phantasy, deliberately spelled with the prefix ‘ph’ instead of the more common ‘f,’ serves as a highly specialized technical concept within the framework of the Object Relations Theory pioneered by psychoanalyst Melanie Klein. This intentional orthographic distinction is crucial, as it immediately differentiates the Kleinian concept from […]

Read More

PRIVATE SELF

Introduction and Definition The concept of the Private Self in psychological literature refers specifically to the component of an individual’s self-awareness that remains exclusively internal, inaccessible, and often unknown to any external observer. This internal domain encompasses the subjective reality of the person, serving as the locus for genuine feelings, unexpressed thoughts, secret motivations, and […]

Read More

PREOCCUPATION

Introduction and Definition of Preoccupation The term preoccupation, derived from the Latin praeoccupare, signifying to seize or take possession beforehand, refers in psychology to a state of profound mental absorption wherein an individual’s attention is overwhelmingly focused on a specific thought, idea, object, or internal experience, often to the exclusion of external reality or competing […]

Read More

INTRAPSYCHIC

Ideas, conflicts, pertaining to impulses or other phenomena that is psychological and arises or occurs within the mind or psyche INTRAPSYCHIC: “Intrapsychic is a phenomena that occur and arise within the psyche or mind”

Read More