Activation of Transgenerational Resources: A Field-Based Psychological Framework This paper introduces a field-based psychological framework for the activation of transgenerational resources, building upon earlier conceptual foundations developed within the Ratio Hungarica Strategic Psychology (RH-SP) approach (see https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.17615467, https://zenodo.org/records/19177634). The model integrates perspectives from transpersonal psychology, systems theory, and contemporary resilience research to propose a shift from individual-centered to field-oriented understandings of psychological functioning. Within this framework, psychological processes are understood as emerging from relational and transgenerational fields that carry both adaptive patterns and latent resource potentials. Extending prior RH-SP formulations, the present paper emphasizes a resource-oriented reinterpretation of transgenerational dynamics, moving beyond pathology-based models toward the activation of inherited adaptive capacities. These resources are conceptualized as implicit and often non-conscious potentials embedded within relational systems, accessible through resonance-based processes rather than solely through cognitive or behavioral interventions. The framework outlines how psychological transformation may occur through shifts in relational attunement, coherence, and embodied awareness, aligning with emerging interdisciplinary perspectives on embodied cognition and systemic interconnectedness. By connecting and further elaborating previous RH-SP publications, this paper contributes to the development of an integrative theoretical model that bridges clinical psychology, transgenerational theory, and field-based approaches. It offers a coherent conceptual foundation for future empirical research and applied psychological practice.
Zsuzsanna Stumpf (Mon,) studied this question.