![]() The third type of specialized work group, involved in the basic assumption of pairing ( baP ), Bion associated with the aristocracy and its preoccupation with reproduction and good genes. Sigmund Freud considered the Catholic Church and the army to be groups faced with the basic assumptions of, respectively, dependency ( baD ) and fight-flight ( baF ) -in effect, "specialized work groups." One of the goals of these groups is to prevent the basic assumption from being translated into action, which would require work-group methods to remain in contact with reality. Because he considered this theoretical model of basic assumption to be inadequate, Bion elaborated it by describing its modes of dependency, fight-flight, and pairing. Inevitably, the basic-assumption group develops an intolerable frustration that can only be addressed by an awareness of the passage of time, and to counter this frustration, the group immediately and automatically puts into play behaviors and beliefs that define itself. In fact, the basic-assumption group only exists outside of time it neither disperses nor comes together. The hostile reaction against any process of development in the basic-assumption mentality indicates that time has no place in it, and interpretations of disturbed temporal relations elicit feelings of persecution. Activity that depends on a basic assumption does not require any ability to cooperate on the part of the individual, but it supposes that the individual -unless he or she is schizophrenic -posseses a "valency," defined as "the individual's readiness to enter into combination with another in making and acting on the basic assumption" (p. The members seemingly wish to replace any process of elaboration with the ability to know magically, by instinct, without any development or learning, how to live and act in the group. The inability to form and use symbols, observed by Melanie Klein (1930) in an autistic child, extends to all individuals functioning as members of a basic-assumption group. ![]() The basic-assumption group does not make rational use of verbal communication it does not develop language as a method of thought and instead uses words as a mode of action. In contrast with the requirements of the work group, participation in an activity that depends on a basic assumption does not call for any training, experience, or individual mental development it is instantaneous, inevitable, and instinctive, and it actually manifests an aggressive refusal to work or develop. These emotional forces are given coherence by the supposition that the group is acting as if its goal were motivated by a basicĪssumption. ![]() However, the work group's rational intentions are, as a rule, impeded by obscure and chaotic emotional forces, which produce anomalies in the group's mental activity. ![]() The work group has come together to undertake a creative task, such as, to resolve the psychological problems of its members. The members must undergo development rather than rely on magical efficacy. 143), and they depend upon cooperation among the group's members, training, and the type of mental development defined by the aptitude for learning through experience. The work group's methods are "rational, and therefore, in however embryonic a form, scientific" (p. The work group must take reality into account ("reality testing") its characteristics "are similar to those attributed by Freud to the ego" (p. ![]() The group responds to this threat by means of a compromise formation, the "group culture."īion emphasizes the importance of the work ( W ) group: the mental functioning (and not the individual participants) necessary to perform the joint task that the group has implicitly taken on. The individual contributes to the group mentality but is nevertheless situated in opposition to it, since it threatens the satisfactions of the individual's needs as a group animal. This regression is expressed through formation of a "group mentality" -a unanimous expression of the group's will, a defensive system of avoidance and denial, and a common repository for anonymous contributions that the individual members split off or disavow (such as their hostility toward the therapist). In a group, individuals undergo a regression to defend themselves against the conflicts provoked or revealed by their participation in the group. Bion's work on group dynamics, developed in particular in his 1961 book Experiences in Groups, established a fundamental difference between individual and group mentalities individual and group psychoanalysis must be treated differently, even though "the two methods provide the practitioner with a rudimentary binocular vision" and are "dealing with different facets of the same phenomena" (p. ![]()
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