Complexes

/ˈkɒmplɛksɪz/ noun

Definition

Plural of complex; can refer to groups of buildings, psychological conditions involving repressed emotions, or complicated systems.

Etymology

From Latin complexus, past participle of complecti meaning 'to embrace, encircle'. Originally meant 'woven together'. The psychological sense was introduced by Carl Jung and Sigmund Freud in the early 20th century to describe interconnected ideas and emotions.

Kelly Says

The word 'complex' beautifully captures the idea of things woven together - from apartment complexes (buildings connected together) to psychological complexes (emotions and memories intertwined). Jung's 'inferiority complex' and 'superiority complex' show how our minds can weave together experiences into powerful, often unconscious patterns.

Ethical Language Guidance

Gender History

Psychological discourse on 'inferiority complex,' 'Oedipus complex,' and 'Electra complex' embedded gendered pathology narratives. The Electra complex, posited as female equivalent to Oedipus, was based on flawed assumptions about girls' development and has been widely rejected.

Inclusive Usage

Use 'complex' as neutral psychological term. Avoid framing gendered psychological states as universal or inherent. Question outdated Freudian gendered models.

Inclusive Alternatives

["psychological patterns","internalized patterns"]

Empowerment Note

Feminist psychologists (Horney, Mitchell, others) deconstructed Freud's gendered theory errors and built frameworks honoring women's autonomous development.

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