Guilt and Its Role in the Development and Growth of the Personality
Guilt is a complex socio-affective phenomenon that plays a paradoxical role in the development of the personality. On one hand, it is the cornerstone of moral consciousness and social adaptation, while on the other hand, it can become a source of deep neuroses and destructive behavior. Its influence on the formation of the personality is determined not by the fact of experiencing it, but by its origin, intensity, and the personality's ability to process it constructively.
1. Psychological Nature: Difference from Shame and Mechanism of Formation
From the perspective of developmental psychology, guilt arises later than shame and is based on more mature psychological structures.
Guilt vs. Shame: The key distinction introduced by psychologist Helen Lewis and further developed is the focus of evaluation. Shame is directed at the entire person ("I am bad"), it is global and leads to the desire to hide, disappear. Guilt, however, focuses on the act ("I acted badly"). It is specific and causes the desire to atone for the guilt, correct the mistake, apologize. Thus, guilt, unlike toxic shame, has a potentially constructive and prosocial vector.
Origin of the feeling of guilt: Its emergence is associated with the formation of the internal censor — Super-Ego (in terms of Freudianism) or moral schemas (in cognitive psychology). This happens at the age of 3-6 years, when the child absorbs social norms and parental prohibitions, internalizing them. Guilt arises when these internalized rules are violated, even in the absence of an external observer. This is a sign that morality has become an internal possession of the personality.
2. Constructive Role: Motivator of Development and Social Glue
Healthy, adaptive guilt performs a number of critically important functions:
Moral compass: It serves as a signaling system indicating a discrepancy between the actual act and the internal ideal of "I". This stimulate ...
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