Ambivalent

We explain what something ambivalent is, the origin of the term and how psychoanalysis understands it. Also, examples in sentences.

ambivalent
Ambivalent can be synonymous with ambiguity, doubt, indeterminacy or confusion.

What is something ambivalent?

When we say that something is ambivalent, or that there is ambivalence, we are referring to a situation, an element or an idea regarding which two interpretations are presented two values ​​or two trends, usually opposite to each other, at the same time.

For example, we can have ambivalent feelings about a person if we feel that we love and hate them at the same time, without either feeling predominating in the long run over the other.

The word ambivalence comes from Latin both (“both”) and courage (“courage” or “strength”). It was coined at the beginning of the 20th century by the Swiss psychiatrist Eugen Bleuer (1857-1939), who proposed it to describe the complex relationships in which two opposing and irreconcilable emotional tendencies occur at the same time with respect to the same object.

This term was embraced by psychoanalysis, and praised by Sigmund Freud himself. In the field of psychoanalysis, however, it is understood that in these situations of affective ambivalence (also called ambithymia), the two emotions do not usually present in the same way, but rather one of the two is more manifest while the other is repressed.

However, We can use the term ambivalent in many other fields of life other than psychological. Always, of course, with the sense of the simultaneous presence of two different values ​​at the same time, that is, as more or less synonymous with ambiguity, doubt, indeterminacy or confusion. Its antonyms are univalent, univocal, explicit, unidirectional.

You may be interested:  Existence

Examples of sentences with “ambivalent”

Below, we present some examples of use of this word, to be able to appreciate it in its possible contexts:

  • “The results of the consumer survey are ambivalent ”.
  • “Candidate, so much ambivalence politics will make him look suspicious.”
  • “That dismissal letter left him in a situation ambivalent “He felt a great relief and at the same time a deep fear.”
  • “I don't know if Lorena likes me, because she always sends me signals ambivalent ”.

Continue with: Reciprocal

References

  • “Ambivalence” on Wikipedia.
  • “Ambivalent” in the Dictionary of the language of the Royal Spanish Academy.
  • “What is ambivalent?” (video) in Saber Noticias (Colombia).
  • “Etymology of Ambivalence” in Etymologies of Chile.net.
  • “Affective ambivalence” in Psiquiatria.com.