Chapter 5: Problem 13
How might a person who compulsively strives for fame and glory, but is never satisfied even with significant achievements, use Horney's constructs to make better decisions and live a more fulfilling life?
Chapter 5: Problem 13
How might a person who compulsively strives for fame and glory, but is never satisfied even with significant achievements, use Horney's constructs to make better decisions and live a more fulfilling life?
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Get started for freeGive an example from your own life, or from the life of someone you know well, to support Horney's view that "it is a long and hard lesson for anybody to learn that others can neither hurt nor establish self-esteem."
A terrorist blows up a building in a hated foreign country. How might Horney explain the terrorist's behavior?
Give an example from your own life, or from the life of someone you know well, to illustrate: (a) the "tyranny of the should," (b) the neurotic symptoms of inconsistent and indecisive behavior.
A professional athlete wins his first world championship. His satisfaction lasts for only a short time, however, and he feels that he "has to" win a second championship in order to be respected. How might Horney explain the athlete's behavior?
Give a real-life example of a person who becomes angry toward someone who is weak because this weakness is a threatening reminder of what the person most dislikes about himself or herself.
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