Horney believed that, in some respects, we can understand our inner worlds better than anyone else. That puts us in the position of making needed changes if we take the job seriously. Freud had a very different position, regarding self-analysis as probably futile (because of defenses built into the psyche) and possibly dangerous (because of the forces that might be uncovered). Freud was prone to exaggerate and mystify the powers of psychoanalysis. He presented his therapy as powerful and dangerous, not to be attempted by amateurs. Horney disagreed. She thought there were some built-in protections that made self-analysis safe. If a patient had something in the past so terribly painful, so traumatic, that it could traumatize the patient if introduced to consciousness, the patient was unlikely to come upon it in self-analysis anyway. https://www.psywww.com/intropsych/ch13-therapies/...elf-analysis.html
Der Harvard-Professor Avi Loeb erklärt in seinem Buch, warum er das rätselhafte Objekt, das 2017 in unserem Sonnensystem gesichtet wurde, für außerirdischen Schrot ...