You believe a proposition to be true because you want it to be
true. When we are forced to admit that our wishes have not become reality,
we may then seek comfort in rationalizing. If, for example, a son does not win a contest that is fair,
a parent who was sure he would win because of some wishful idea might then feel the necessity of
inventing some argument that will excuse the son's failure without violating the original imaginary assumption.
Example of Wishful Thinking: 'My son will win because he ought to win after all his long
hard preparation.' '