CONCEPT
The Eight Stages of Psychosocial Development
Erikson's architecture of human growth — eight sequential crises from <em>Trust vs. Mistrust</em> to <em>Integrity vs. Despair</em> — each a turning point whose resolution shapes every stage that follows.
Erikson's foundational contribution to developmental psychology, articulated in Childhood and Society (1950) and refined in Identity: Youth and Crisis (1968), proposes that personality develops across the entire lifespan through eight sequential psychosocial crises. Each stage presents a tension between two possibilities — trust or mistrust, autonomy or shame, initiative or guilt, industry or inferiority, identity or role confusion, intimacy or isolation, generativity or stagnation, integrity or despair. The framework replaced the Freudian fixation on early childhood with a lifespan model in which development continues until the final breath. For the AI age, the architecture reveals what technology discourse cannot see: that disruption at any single stage cascades through every stage that follows.
In The You On AI Field Guide
Erikson built the framework through clinical observation rather than theoretical derivation. He worked with children in play therapy, with veterans returning from World War II, with Native American communities navigating the collision of traditional and industrial cultures, and — in his psychobiographies of Martin Luther
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