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Sci-Tech Dictionary:

idealization

(ī′dēl·ə′zā·shən)

(psychology) A conscious or unconscious defense mechanism in which a person overestimates an admired aspect or attribute of another person.


 
 

The representation of a general or particular phenomenon by, or in accordance with our desires or ideals.

 
Psychoanalysis: Idealization

Idealization is a concentrated libidinal investment in an object that is thus exalted and overvalued. The term first appeared in connection with Freud's definition of narcissism (1914), but the concept can already be found in Leonardo da Vinci and a Memory of His Childhood (1910), where Freud speaks of the biographer who sacrifices the truth to idealize the biographical subject, "reviving in him, perhaps, the child's idea of the father" (p. 130). From the time of the Three Essays on the Theory of Sexuality (1905), Freud used the notion of "sexual overvaluation" in relation to fetishism and sexual deviations. This overvaluation makes the subject dependent and submissive toward an object containing traces of the earliest oedipal attachments: "One always returns to one's first love" (1905d, p. 154). This attitude reappears in the subject's passionate dependence on an idealized object.

Idealization involves an object of a drive, but not the drive itself. Since the origin of this libidinal overinvestment is unconscious, the investment appears to be an effect of the superior value of the object itself. The subject denies, however, that he is overinvesting and allows the overvalued object to remain overvalued. The subject thus overcomes ambivalence toward the object. This defense mechanism promotes an illusion that has effects in reality, both for the subject and those around the subject. The latter are at times forced to conform with an alienating image, as members of an idealized nation or race.

Idealization must be distinguished from both sublimation and identification with the ego ideal, even if the notion of value is prominent in each. Idealization and sublimation are comparable in that both notions involve a modification of early object choices and sexual aims. These two notions also involve a psychical working through that detaches the drive from its primitive support and sets it off in another direction as a partial drive. Finally, both concepts involve valuations expressed in the social sphere. But whereas sublimation allows the drive to deviate from its goal, idealization blocks it from attaining its goal—thus creating an inhibition—because of a feeling of inequality between the great object to be attained and the small subject who feels libidinally impoverished in comparison with the idealized object. Thus, in place of libidinal fulfillment, the subject experiences an inhibiting fascination or, as the case may be, a destructive rage.

Similarly, idealization of the object is different from identification with the ego ideal, first of all because in the former case the ego has impoverished libido, while in the latter case the ego introjects both the object and its qualities. Furthermore, in idealization the object is external to the ego, while in identification the object becomes internal. Most important, in idealization the object is set up in place of the ego ideal, while in identification it is the ego that takes the place of the object.

Idealization results from a failure of the superego and the ego ideal to form at the outcome of the oedipal conflict. In idealization, the ego cannot serve as the ideal in a healthy process of identification that would insure that the first idealized objects belong to the ego. Instead, the ego is dispossessed of its narcissistic libido for the benefit of the independently existing, and thus alienating, object. It is thus forced to externalize its most important constitutive element, the ego ideal. This results in an infantile situation of helplessness, a "paralysis derived from the relation between someone with superior power and someone who is without power and helpless" (1921c, p. 115). The notion of idealization thus enables one to understand both individual psychological mechanisms (such as passion, perversion, and psychotic identification) and collective ones (such as a group's fascination with its leader).

Numerous authors have contributed to enriching the concept of idealization. Melanie Klein (1952) has developed the notions of the idealized good object and the persecutory bad object, Piera Aulagnier (1979) has written on idealization in passion and psychosis, and Janine Chasseguet-Smirgel (1975) has discussed the disease of ideality.

Bibliography

Aulagnier, Piera. (1979). Les destins du plaisir: aliénation, amour, passion. Paris: Presses Universitaires de France.

Chasseguet-Smirgel, Janine. (1985). The ego ideal: A psychoanalytic essay on the malady of the ideal (Paul Barrows, Trans.). London: Free Association Books. (Original work published 1975)

Freud, Sigmund. (1905). Three essays on the theory of sexuality. SE, 7: 123-245.

——. (1910). Leonardo da Vinci and a memory of his childhood. SE, 11: 57-137.

——. (1914). On narcissism: an introduction. SE, 14: 67-102.

——. (1921). Group psychology and the analysis of the ego. SE, 18: 65-143.

Klein, Melanie. (1946). Notes on some schizoid mechanisms. International Journal of Psychoanalysis, 27, 99-110.

Further Reading

Lachmann, Frank M., and Stolorow, Robert D. (1976). Idealization and grandiosity: developmental considerations and treatment implications. Psychoanalytic Quarterly, 45, 565-587.

—SOPHIEDE MIJOLLA-MELLOR

 
WordNet: idealization
Note: click on a word meaning below to see its connections and related words.

The noun has 3 meanings:

Meaning #1: a portrayal of something as ideal
  Synonyms: idealisation, glorification

Meaning #2: (psychiatry) a defense mechanism that splits something you are ambivalent about into two representations--one good and one bad
  Synonym: idealisation

Meaning #3: something that exists only as an idea
  Synonym: idealisation


 
Wikipedia: idealization

Idealization (British English: idealisation) is the process by which scientific models assume facts about the phenomenon being modeled that are certainly false. Often these assumptions are used to make models easier to understand or solve. Many times idealizations do not harm the predictive accuracy of the model for one reason or another. Most debates surrounding the usefulness of a particular model often are about the appropriateness of different idealizations.

Early Use

Galileo utilized the concept of idealization in order to formulate the law of free fall. Galileo, in his study of bodies in motion, set up experiments that assumed frictionless surfaces and spheres of perfect roundness, see UC Davis Philosphy Lecture Notes, Prof. Rob Cummin. The crudity of ordinary objects has the potential to obscure their mathematical essence, and idealization is used to combat this tendency.

The most well known example of idealization in Galileo’s experiments is in his analysis of why motion exists. Galileo predicted that if a perfectly round and smooth ball were rolled along a perfectly smooth horizontal plane, there would be nothing to stop the ball. This hypothesis is predicated on the assumption that there is no air resistance.

Other Examples of Idealization

Another example of the use of idealization in physics is in Boyle’s Gas Law: Given any x and any y, if all the molecules in , if all the molecules in y are perfectly elastic and spherical, possess equal masses and volumes, have negligible size, and exert no forces on one another except during collisions, then if x is a gas and y is a given mass of x which is trapped in a vessel of variable size and the temperature of y is kept constant, then any decrease of the volume of y increases the pressure of y proportionally, and vice versa.

In physics, people will often solve for Newtonian systems without friction. While, we know that friction is present in actual systems, solving the model without friction can provide insights to the behavior of actual systems where the force of friction is negligible. Another discipline, geometry, arises by the process of idealization because it, at its core, is a universe of ideal entities, forms and figures. Perfect circles, spheres, straight lines and angles are the essential elements of this discipline, all which would be near impossible without idealization.

Just as the method of idealization has been utilized in the study of physics and mathematics, Charles Darwin introduced the method of idealization to biology. This assisted, in no small part, Darwin’s theory of evolution achieving scientific maturity. It has also been argued that Karl Marx utilized idealization in the social sciences (Id). Similarly, in economic models individuals are assumed to be maximally rational choice rational. This assumption, although known to be violated by actual humans, can often lead to insights about the behavior of human populations.

In psychology, idealization refers to a person who perceives another to be better (or have more desirable attributes) than would actually be supported by the evidence. This sometimes occurs in child custody conflicts. The child of a single parent frequently may imagine ("idealize") the (ideal) absent parent to have those characteristics of a perfect parent. But imagination is better than reality. Upon meeting that parent, the child may be happy for awhile, but disappointed later when learning that the parent does not actually nurture, support and protect as the former caretaker parent had.

Notwithstanding the success achieved by the aforementioned scientific discliplines, the introduction of the method of idealization is in no way an indicator of whether another science will reach maturity. Furthermore, no algorithm exists that can show how the introduction of idealization with effect a discipline in which it has not before been applied.

Limits on Use

While idealization fits nicely into the analysis utilized by certain scientific disciplines, it has been traditionally rejected by others. For instance, the extension of the use of idealization into the study of mental phenomena has been firmly rejected. Husserl, who was aware of, and recognized, the importance of idealization, refused to extend its use into his studies of consciousness. Husserl opposed the application of idealization to the study of objects belonging to the domain of the mind, because according to he believed that mental phenomena do not lend themselves to idealization. That is, idealization does not reveal the essential essence of mental phenomena.

Although Galileo’s idealization method is considered one of the essential elements of modern non-Aristotelian science, it is nonetheless the source of continued controversy in the literature of the philosophy of science. Nancy Cartwright suggested that Galilean idealization presupposes tendencies or capacities in nature and that this allows for extrapolation beyond what is the ideal case.

It follows that Galileo’s idealization method does not assist in the description of the behavior of individuals or objects in the real world. The laws created by using idealization – gas laws, Newton’s laws, etc. – describe only the behavior of ideal bodies. Their behavior is only predicable when a considerable number of factors have been eliminated or assumed.

References

  • Mansoor Niaz, The Role of Idealization in Science and Its Implications for Science Education, Journal of Science Education and Technology, Vol. 8, No. 2, pg 146, 1999.
  • Andrzej Klawiter, Why Did Husserl Not Become the Galileo of the Science of Consciousness?, Posnari Studies in the Philosophy of the Sciences and the Humanities, Vol. 82, pg. 254, 2004.
  • William F, Barr, A Pragmatic Analysis of Idealization in Physics, Philosphy of Science, Vol. 41, No. 1, pg 48, Mar. 1974.

 
 

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Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Idealization" Read more

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