Neo-Freudian
Karen Horney
Rethought anxiety and the self.
A pioneering neo-Freudian who centered culture and relationships, and challenged Freud on the psychology of women.
3 terms 2 techniques 3 books
The perfect normal person is rare in our civilization.
Who they were
Karen Horney reshaped psychoanalysis from within. She argued that neurosis grows from basic anxiety — feeling small and alone in a potentially hostile world — and from the gap between our real self and an idealized self we feel we must be. A bold critic of Freud’s views on women, she put culture and relationship at the heart of how we form.
Famous books
What they left on the shelf
Terms they cared about
Ideas worth knowing
Basic AnxietyHorney’s sense of feeling small and alone in a world that feels potentially hostile. Real vs. Idealized SelfThe tension between who you authentically are and the perfect self you feel you should be. Defense MechanismsThe mind’s quiet strategies — denial, projection, repression — for keeping anxiety at a distance.
Questions in their spirit
What they’d ask you
Sit with one. Answer online, or in the app.
Carry the idea forward
Horney — What they’d ask you
Psipas asks you one small, honest question at a time — and builds the picture from your answers.