Fairbairnвђ™s Object Relations Theory In The Clin... <RELIABLE ◎>
At the heart of Ronald Fairbairn’s revolutionary contribution to psychoanalysis is a single, profound shift: human beings are not driven by biological urges for pleasure, but by an innate, fundamental need for . While Freud saw the mind as a cauldron of drives, Fairbairn viewed it as a structure built entirely from the history of our connections with others.
For clinicians, this theory offers a "penetrating and useful" model for understanding why patients—particularly those with Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) or trauma histories—cling so fiercely to toxic relationships. The Core: Libido is Object-Seeking Fairbairn’s Object Relations Theory in the Clin...
Conference: Ronald Fairbairn and the Object Relations Tradition The Endopsychic Structure: Why We Split
The Internal World Unlocked: Ronald Fairbairn’s Object Relations in the Clinic but by an innate
Fairbairn proposed that the "libido" is not looking for a discharge of energy (pleasure), but for a person (an "object"). From birth, an infant's survival depends on being recognized as a unique person by their primary caregiver. When this "real relationship" fails due to neglect or abuse, the infant's mind must adapt to survive the psychological threat of being unloved. The Endopsychic Structure: Why We Split