PHILOSOPHER: I see. Incidentally, Adler is thought to be the first to use the term “feeling of inferiority”
in the kind of context in which it is spoken of today.
YOUTH: Huh, I didn’t know that. PHILOSOPHER: In Adler’s native German, the word is Minderwertigkeitsgefühl,
which means a feeling (Gefühl) of having less (minder) worth (Wert).
So “feeling of inferiority” has to do with one’s value judgment of oneself.
YOUTH: Value judgment? PHILOSOPHER: It’s the feeling that one has no worth, or that one is worth only so much.
YOUTH: Ah, that’s a feeling I know well. That’s me in a nutshell.
Not a day goes by without me tormenting myself that there’s no point in being alive.
PHILOSOPHER: Well, then, let’s have a look at my own feelings of inferiority.
When you first met me, what was your impression? In terms of physical characteristics.
YOUTH: Um, well... PHILOSOPHER: There’s no need to hold back. Be direct.
YOUTH: All right, I guess you were smaller than I’d imagined.
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