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The application of Critical Theory to psychology—examining how psychological concepts, practices, and institutions are shaped by power, how they can serve social control rather than liberation, and how they might be transformed. Critical Theory of Psychology asks: How does psychology define "normal" and "pathological," and who benefits from those definitions? How has psychology been used to pathologize resistance, marginalize difference, and enforce conformity? Whose interests are served by focusing on individual adjustment rather than social change? Drawing on thinkers like Foucault, Rose, and critical psychologists, it insists that psychology is never neutral—it's a site of power, a tool of governance, and a potential resource for freedom.
"They diagnose your political anger as mental illness. Critical Theory of Psychology asks: what if the anger is rational? What if the problem isn't you, but the system? Psychology that pathologizes dissent serves power, not healing. Critical psychology insists on asking: who benefits from calling this sick? And what would psychology look like if it supported liberation instead of adjustment?"
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal March 4, 2026
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A meta-framework examining how psychology itself stretches across methods, populations, and paradigms. The Elasticity of Psychology studies how the field stretches from lab experiments to clinical practice, from WEIRD samples to global humanity, from behaviorism to cognitive to social justice orientations. It asks: how far can psychology stretch before it breaks? When does stretching from individual to culture become overreach? How does psychology recover from its own biases? It's psychology reflecting on its own history and possibilities. A framework proposing that the human psyche itself has elastic properties—that minds can stretch, adapt, and recover within limits. Psychology Elasticity suggests that psychological health isn't about rigidity but about appropriate elasticity: stretching to meet challenges, recovering to baseline, knowing one's limits. Trauma exceeds elasticity; growth stretches it; resilience is the capacity to stretch without breaking. The theory applies across development, across cultures, across the lifespan—understanding psyche as stretchy, not static.
Theory of the Elasticity of Psychology "Psychology was built on Western undergrads; now it claims to explain all human behavior. Theory of the Elasticity of Psychology asks: how far can it stretch before it breaks? Some stretches—cross-cultural psychology—strengthen the field. Others—universalizing from biased samples—stretch it until it tears." "Grief stretched her to the breaking point—but she didn't break. She stretched, held, slowly returned. Psychology Elasticity says that's resilience: the psyche's capacity to stretch under pressure and recover. The question isn't whether you'll be stretched; it's whether you'll snap or stretch and return."
by Nammugal March 4, 2026
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Psychological Sophism

The use of psychological concepts and authority to dismiss, pathologize, or silence dissent. Psychological Sophism turns diagnosis into weapon: "you're narcissistic" ends debate; "you're borderline" dismisses emotion; "you need help" pathologizes resistance. It's sophistry in therapist's clothing: using the language of healing to harm.
"She disagreed with him. 'You're clearly narcissistic,' he announced—no training, no diagnosis, just a label to win an argument. Psychological Sophism: using psychology's authority without psychology's responsibility. The label did the work that argument should have done."
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal March 7, 2026
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