Social Interest: A Challenge to Mankind
English


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About The Book

2011 Reprint of 1938 Edition. Full facsimile of the original edition not reproduced with Optical Recognition Software. Alfred Adler (1870-1937) was an Austrian medical doctor psychotherapist and founder of the Adlerian school of individual psychology. In collaboration with Sigmund Freud and a small group of Freuds colleagues Adler was among the co-founders of the psychoanalytic movement and a core member of the Vienna Psychoanalytic Society. He was the first major figure to break away from psychoanalysis to form an independent school of psychotherapy and personality theory. In this late work Social Interest: A Challenge to Mankind Adler turns to the subject of metaphysics. He argues his vision of society: Social feeling means above all a struggle for a communal form that must be thought of as eternally applicable... when humanity has attained its goal of perfection... an ideal society amongst all mankind the ultimate fulfillment of evolution. This social feeling for Adler is a community feeling whereby one feels he or she belongs with others and has also developed an ecological connection with nature (plants animals the crust of this earth) and the cosmos as a whole.
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