John Bowlby's Path to Developing the Attachment Theory

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What makes a human feel lost when away from their caretaker when they’re child? There are many different theories on this subject, but a well-known theory is the Attachment Theory written by John Bowlby in the mid-twentieth century. John Bowlby born on February 26, 1907, was a twentieth century psychologist who contributed too many modern day psychoanalytic theories. At a young age he hardly saw his mother due to the fact that she believed, like many other mothers at that time, affection and attention would lead to spoiling of the child. So he developed a deep attachment to his nanny since he never saw his mom. He suffered a loss when she left when he was four. Born in London, he grew raised in an upper-class family who sent him off to boarding school at age seven, which was common for wealthier families in Britain at that time to send kids off around that age. He found boarding school terrible writing, “I wouldn't send a dog away to boarding school at age seven” (Bowlby, 1999), but he does say that he finds boarding schools appropriate for children by saying In Volume two of his tr...

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