When the patient is utterly unable to produce a rational justification for their behavior, and the therapist has asked reasonable questions based on logically-derived premises, the assertion becomes extremely unreasonable.
When the issue isn’t rationality per se, but other concerns—and people begin to insist that others around them have the motivations that their own actions strongly indicate they themselves have—projection seems to be quite obvious.
When the patient is utterly unable to produce a rational justification for their behavior, and the therapist has asked reasonable questions based on logically-derived premises, the assertion becomes extremely unreasonable.
When the issue isn’t rationality per se, but other concerns—and people begin to insist that others around them have the motivations that their own actions strongly indicate they themselves have—projection seems to be quite obvious.