Alder was initially a colleague of Sigmund Freud, helped establish psychoanalysis, and was a founding member of the Vienna Psychoanalytic Society. Adler’s theory focused on looking at the individual as a whole, which is why he referred to his approach as individual psychology.
Best Known For
Individual psychologyThe concept of the inferiority complexPresident of the Vienna Psychoanalytic Society, 1910
Birth and Death
Alfred Adler was born February 7, 1870. He died May 28, 1937.
Early Life
Alfred Adler was born in Vienna, Austria. He suffered rickets as a young child, which prevented him from walking until after the age of 2, and he got pneumonia at the age of four. Due to his health problems as a child, Adler decided he would become a physician. After graduating from the University of Vienna in 1895 with a medical degree, began his career as an ophthalmologist and later switched to general practice.
Career and Later Life
Alder soon turned his interests toward the field of psychiatry. In 1902, Sigmund Freud invited him to join a psychoanalytic discussion group. This group met each Wednesday in Freud’s home and would eventually grow to become the Vienna Psychoanalytic Society. After serving as President of the group for a time, Adler left in part because of his disagreements with some of Freud’s theories. While Adler had played a key role in the development of psychoanalysis, he was also one of the first major figures to break away to form his own school of thought. He was quick to point out that while he had been a colleague of Freud’s, he was in no way a disciple of the famous Austrian psychoanalyst. In 1912, Alfred Adler founded the Society of Individual Psychology. Adler believed that this drive was the motivating force behind human behaviors, emotions, and thoughts. He explained that some individuals will focus on collaboration and contributions to society while others will try to exert power over others. While Adler had converted to Christianity, his Jewish heritage led to the Nazis closing down his clinics during the 1930s. As a result, Adler emigrated to the United States to take a professor position at the Long Island College of Medicine. In 1937, Adler went on a lecture tour and suffered a fatal heart attack in Aberdeen, Scotland. His family lost track of his cremated remains shortly after his death and the ashes were presumed lost before being discovered in 2007 at a crematorium in Edinburgh, Scotland. In 2011, 74 years after his death, Adler’s ashes were returned to Vienna, Austria. In an interview with The Guardian, his granddaughter explained, “Vienna was essentially Adler’s home, his birth home and there was the triangle, you know, Adler, Jung and Freud, and all had that sense of coming out of that place, so there’s something rather fitting about him going back there.“
Contributions to Psychology
Alfred Adler’s theories have played an essential role in a number of areas including therapy and child development. Alder’s ideas also influenced other important psychologists and psychoanalysts including:
Abraham Maslow Carl Rogers Karen Horney Rollo May Erich Fromm Albert Ellis
Today, his ideas and concepts are often referred to as Adlerian psychology. Adler, A. (1956). The Individual Psychology of Alfred Adler. H. L. Ansbacher and R. R. Ansbacher (Eds.). New York: Harper Torchbooks.