PERSON
Robert Jay Lifton
The psychiatrist who followed identity into catastrophe—from Hiroshima to Vietnam to the AI transition—and documented the protean self that emerges when history shatters the container it was living in.
Robert Jay Lifton arrived in Japan in 1947 to interview survivors of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima, and what he found there would shape seven decades of clinical work: not merely trauma but a rupture in the basic framework through which selves are organized. The survivors were
unmoored—their symbolic world annihilated in a single morning—and no existing psychiatric category could name what had happened to them. From that encounter, Lifton built the most comprehensive clinical account of identity under extreme pressure that the twentieth century produced, ranging from
historical dislocation and
psychic numbing to
the protean self and
symbolic immortality. His central discovery is that fluidity is not pathology but survival strategy: the self that can shed one configuration and inhabit another—without losing its ethical core—is the self that history cannot break. In the AI transition of 2025–2026, when an entire professional class found itself falling and flying simultaneously, Lifton’s clinical vocabulary became the most precise instrument available for naming what was happening inside