Individual • Rationalization can be used to avoid admitting disappointment: ''"I didn't get the job that I applied for, but
I really didn't want it in the first place."'' Egregious rationalizations intended to deflect blame can also take the form of
ad hominem attacks or
DARVO. Some rationalizations take the form of a comparison. Commonly, this is done to lessen the perception of an action's negative effects, to justify an action, or to excuse culpability: •
"At least [what occurred] is not as bad as [a worse outcome]." • In response to an accusation: ''"At least I didn't [worse action than accused action]."'' • As a form of
false choice:
"Doing [undesirable action] is a lot better than [a worse action]." • In response to unfair or abusive behavior from a separate individual or group to the person:
"I must have done something wrong if they treat me like this." Based on anecdotal and survey evidence, John Banja states that the medical field features a disproportionate amount of rationalization invoked in the "covering up" of mistakes. Common excuses made are: • "Why disclose the error? The patient was going to die anyway." • "Telling the family about the error will only make them feel worse." • "It was the patient's fault. If he wasn't so (sick, etc.), this error wouldn't have caused so much harm." • "Well, we did our best. These things happen." • "If we're not totally and absolutely certain the error caused the harm, we don't have to tell." • "They're dead anyway, so there's no point in blaming anyone." In 2018, Muel Kaptein and Martien van Helvoort developed a model, called the Amoralizations Alarm Clock, that covers all existing amoralizations in a logical way. Amoralizations, also called neutralizations, or rationalizations, are defined as justifications and excuses for deviant behavior. Amoralizations are important explanations for the rise and persistence of deviant behavior. There exist many different and overlapping techniques of amoralizations.
Collective • Collective rationalizations are regularly constructed for acts of aggression, based on exaltation of the in-group and demonization of the opposite side: as
Fritz Perls put it, "Our own soldiers take care of the poor families; the enemy rapes them". •
Celebrity culture can be seen as rationalizing the gap between rich and poor, powerful and powerless, by offering participation to both dominant and
subaltern views of reality. ==Psychoanalysis==