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'''Rationalization''' is an unconscious [[defense mechanism]] in which perceived controversial behaviors or feelings are logically justified and explained in a rational or logical manner in order to avoid any true explanation, and are made consciously tolerable – or even admirable and superior – by plausible means.<ref>{{cite web|title=Definition of rationalization|url=http://depression.about.com/od/glossary/g/rationalization.htm|accessdate=25 September 2011}}</ref> Rationalization encourages irrational or unacceptable behavior, motives, or feelings and often involves [[ad hoc hypothesizing]]. This process ranges from fully [[conscious]] (e.g. to present an external defense against ridicule from others) to mostly [[subconscious]] (e.g. to create a block against internal feelings of [[guilt]]).
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'''Rationalization''' is an unconscious [[defense mechanism]] in which perceived controversial behaviors or feelings are logically justified and explained in a rational or logical manner in order to avoid any true explanation, and are made consciously tolerable – or even admirable and superior – by plausible means.<ref>{{cite web|title=Definition of rationalization|url=http://depression.about.com/od/glossary/g/rationalization.htm|accessdate=25 September 2011}}</ref> Rationalization encourages irrational or unacceptable behavior, motives, or feelings and often involves [[ad hoc hypothesizing]]. This process ranges from fully [[conscious]] (e.g. to present an external defense against ridicule from others) to mostly [[subconscious]] (e.g. to create a block against internal [[feelings]], for example [[guilt]] or [[shame]]).
   
 
==DSM definition==
 
==DSM definition==

Latest revision as of 12:49, 14 September 2012

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This article is about the defence mechanism . For details of the rational thinking process see: Rationalization


Rationalization is an unconscious defense mechanism in which perceived controversial behaviors or feelings are logically justified and explained in a rational or logical manner in order to avoid any true explanation, and are made consciously tolerable – or even admirable and superior – by plausible means.[1] Rationalization encourages irrational or unacceptable behavior, motives, or feelings and often involves ad hoc hypothesizing. This process ranges from fully conscious (e.g. to present an external defense against ridicule from others) to mostly subconscious (e.g. to create a block against internal feelings, for example guilt or shame).

DSM definition

According to the DSM-IV, rationalization occurs "when the individual deals with emotional conflict or internal or external stressors by concealing the true motivations for his or her own thoughts, actions, or feelings through the elaboration of reassuring or self serving but incorrect explanations."

Examples

Based on anecdotal and survey evidence, John Banja states that the medical field features a disproportionate amount of rationalization invoked in the "covering up" of mistakes (here, medical errors).[2] Common excuses made are:

  • "Why disclose the error? The patient was going to die anyway."
  • "Telling the family about the error will only make them feel worse."
  • "It was the patient's fault. If he wasn't so (obese, sick etc), this error wouldn't have caused so much harm."
  • "Well, we did our best. These things happen."
  • "If we're not totally and absolutely certain the error caused the harm, we don't have to tell."
  • "They're dead anyway, no point in blaming."

Psychoanalysis

Main article: Psychoanalysis

Ernest Jones contributed the term "rationalization" to psychoanalysis in 1908, defining it as "the inventing of a reason for an attitude or action the motive of which is not recognized"'.[3] Although Jones had not coined the term - the Oxford English Dictionary records the year of its first use as 1846' - he was the first to employ it in the context of psychoanalysis: 'No one will admit that he ever deliberately performed an irrational act, and any act that might appear so is immediately justified by...providing a false explanation that has a plausible ring of rationality'.[4]

The term was taken up almost immediately by Sigmund Freud to account for the explanations offered for neurotic symptoms - 'a process which (borrowing a useful term from Ernest Jones [1908] we may describe as "rationalization"'[5] - and was later developed further by his daughter Anna Freud[citation needed].

However the concept itself (as opposed to the term) can be traced back millennia earlier, to Quintilian and classical rhetoric: 'The "pat excuse" is the color, a frequent technical term among the rhetoricians for any approach that would present an action in the most favourable possible light'.[6] By the eighteenth century, it was almost a commonplace that, were a man to consider his actions, 'he will soon find, that such of them, as strong inclination and custom have prompted him to commit, are generally dressed out and painted with all the false beauties [color] which, a soft and flattering hand can give them'.[7]

What psychoanalysis added was the specific idea of the motives that were glossed or colored being unconscious, a point developed further by Lundhold, "Repression and Rationalization", in 1933, and by Hollitscher, "The Concept of Rationalization" in 1939.[8] By the 1940s Fenichel could distinguish 'various types of rationalization...Emotional attitudes become permissible on condition that they are justified as "reasonable"', but equally 'Defensive attitudes and resistances, which seem irrational because their real purpose is unconscious, frequently are "rationalized" by the ego's foisting other secondary purposes upon them'.[9]

For a near-determinist like Eric Berne, one's 'important decisions are already made...in early childhood': thereafter 'other decisions...are "directed" decisions rationalized on spurious grounds'.[10] Once a decision has been made on unconscious grounds, 'without the individual's being aware of the real forces behind it. he takes upon himself the task of finding justifications for it..."rationalization"'.[11]

Lacan in his concept of meconnaissance came very close to the same idea: 'everything that the ego neglects, scotomizes, misconstrues...everything that it ignores, exhausts, and binds in the significations that it receives from language'.[12]

Some later psychoanalysts might take a more positive view of the process, suggesting that 'Intellectualisation and rationalisation...bridge the gap between immature mechanisms and those of maturity';[13] but to object relations theory it could be part of a more sinister process whereby the mind 'detaches feelings from their true locus and attaches them to the exact reverse; it falsifies judgement; it splits intellect from feeling and enslaves reason...a process called rationalization'.[14]


See also

References

  1. Definition of rationalization. URL accessed on 25 September 2011.
  2. Banja, John (2004). Medical Errors and Medical Narcissism, Sudbury: Jones and Bartlett.
  3. Adam Phillips, On Flirtation (London 1994) p. 109
  4. brenda maddox, Freud's Wizard (London 2006) p. 61
  5. Sigmund Freud, Case Histories II (London 1991) p. 184
  6. Peter Green trans., Juvenal: The Sixteen Satires "Middlesex 1982) p. 156
  7. Lawrence Sterne, Tristram Shandy (Middlesex 1976) p. 147
  8. Otto Fenichel, The Psychoanalytic Theory of Neurosis (London 1946) p. 625 and p. 637
  9. Fenichel, Psychoanalytic p. 485-6
  10. Eric Berne, What Do You say after You Say Hello? (London 1975) p. 31 and p. 398
  11. Eric Berne, A Layman's Guide to Psychiatry and Psychoanalysis (Middlesex 1976) p. 96-7
  12. Jacques Lacan, Ecrits: A Selection (London 1996) p. 22
  13. A. Bateman and J. Holmes, Introduction to Psychoanalysis (London 1999) p. 92
  14. Neville Symington, On Narcissism (London 2003) p. 118




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