@article{oai:nagoya.repo.nii.ac.jp:00002019, author = {池田, 博和 and IKEDA, Hirokazu and 村上, 英治 and MURAKAMI, Eiji and 藤岡, 新治 and FUJIOKA, Shinji}, journal = {名古屋大學教育學部紀要. 教育心理学科}, month = {Sep}, note = {We consider that the nature, or the basic process, of the schizophrenia is the disorganization of self-process which consists of "I" and "me". And, we also think that these "I" and "me" should be usually in a reciprocally depending and yet negating dialectic relation with each other. Through some clinical cases, and focussing their families, we discussed an etiological question of how this process is to come into existence. Such a schizophrenic basic process appears prominantly when one is getting over-near or over-distant in his interpersonal psychological distance in this manifestation. It is not, however, only in schizophrenics, but also in their family members that their equilibriums of interpersonal distance are disproportive. Their interpersonal distances are also over-distant or over-closed extremely and inappropriately. These over-distant or over-closed conditions in family's side are not alternative, but always co-existing. Although they appeared to be opposing in manifestation, both will essentially constitute only one situation of overwhelming oppression or a constellation of despotism in which the child is nurtured. In conclusion, we formulated that this situation would deprive the child who should become schizophrenic later of his permissibility for being, and would destroy natural dialectic self-process of "I" and "me"., 国立情報学研究所で電子化したコンテンツを使用している。}, pages = {51--81}, title = {<原著>精神分裂病者における「人間学的均衡」としての距離}, volume = {22}, year = {1975} }