The Resonance-Inference Model

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Abstract

This article introduces the Resonance-Inference Model (RIM), an integrative meta-theory for psychotherapy. The RIM synthesizes six key theoretical frameworks: Karl Friston's free energy principle, Shaun Gallagher's theory of the embodied self, Hermann Haken's synergetics, Luc Ciompi's affect logic, Georg Northoff's spatiotemporal neuroscience, and Klaus Grawe's consistency theory. The model posits that psychopathology, termed "dissonance," is a state of chronically elevated variational free energy. This state results from a maladaptive generative self-model that fails to satisfy basic human needs (conceptualized as ultimate priors). Therapeutic change, or "resonance," is a synergetic phase transition toward a more flexible, adaptive, and energetically favorable state. The article deconstructs the model's six-layered architecture, presents its process-based reconceptualization of mental disorders, and describes its clinical implications, including a three-phase therapeutic process. The RIM offers a common, mechanistic language for psychotherapy that unifies disparate therapeutic approaches and charts a path toward an empirically grounded, neuroscience-informed clinical practice.

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