Does anyone consider the recently deceased Nathaniel Branden an important intellectual? He based his career on making grandiose claims about “self-esteem,” yet mainstream psychological research doesn’t support his views:
This relates to the phenomenon of getting on in years and realizing that the books which mattered to you earlier in life don’t seem to have aged well when you revisit them.
I had no idea Nathaniel Branden was a psychotherapist, or that he’s partially to blame for the self-esteem movement! I always vaguely assumed he was just an Objectivist.
Does anyone consider the recently deceased Nathaniel Branden an important intellectual? He based his career on making grandiose claims about “self-esteem,” yet mainstream psychological research doesn’t support his views:
Being wrong doesn’t mean you weren’t important. The self-esteem movement affected a lot of schools and was pretty popular; to the extent he’s to blame for it, then he was indeed important.
Does anyone consider the recently deceased Nathaniel Branden an important intellectual? He based his career on making grandiose claims about “self-esteem,” yet mainstream psychological research doesn’t support his views:
https://medium.com/matter-archive/the-man-who-destroyed-americas-ego-94d214257b5
This relates to the phenomenon of getting on in years and realizing that the books which mattered to you earlier in life don’t seem to have aged well when you revisit them.
I had no idea Nathaniel Branden was a psychotherapist, or that he’s partially to blame for the self-esteem movement! I always vaguely assumed he was just an Objectivist.
Being wrong doesn’t mean you weren’t important. The self-esteem movement affected a lot of schools and was pretty popular; to the extent he’s to blame for it, then he was indeed important.