Defense Peer Review Journals

 In psychoanalytic concept, a defence mechanism is an subconscious mental mechanism that reduces tension arising from unacceptable or probably harmful stimuli.   Defence mechanisms may also result in healthy or unhealthy results depending at the circumstances and frequency with which the mechanism is used. Defence mechanisms (German: Abwehrmechanismen) are psychological strategies delivered into play by way of the unconscious thoughts to govern, deny, or distort truth if you want to defend against feelings of anxiety and unacceptable impulses and to hold one's self-schema or other schemas. these tactics that control, deny, or distort truth may encompass the subsequent: repression, or the burying of a painful feeling or idea from one's focus even though it is able to resurface in a symbolic shape identity, incorporating an object or thought into oneself; and rationalization, the justification of one's behaviour and motivations by using substituting "exact" desirable motives for the actual motivations. In psychoanalytic theory, repression is taken into consideration the idea for other defence mechanisms.   Wholesome humans usually use special defence mechanisms all through lifestyles. A defence mechanism will become pathological only whilst its continual use results in maladaptive behaviour such that the physical or intellectual fitness of the individual is adversely affected. many of the purposes of ego defence mechanisms is to protect the mind/self/ego from anxiety or social sanctions or to offer a shelter from a state of affairs with which one cannot presently cope.

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