Eugen Bleuler`s Dementia Praecox or the Group
... as though they were ‘‘rare art objects.’’22 Eugen Bleuler’s attitude and working methods could not have been more different. In all likelihood, Bleuler was motivated to become a psychiatrist because of the frustration the local people of his Canton in Switzerland felt toward the foreign (primarily G ...
... as though they were ‘‘rare art objects.’’22 Eugen Bleuler’s attitude and working methods could not have been more different. In all likelihood, Bleuler was motivated to become a psychiatrist because of the frustration the local people of his Canton in Switzerland felt toward the foreign (primarily G ...
influenced his thinking about personality?
... Assesses 20 symptoms associated with psychopathy. Each symptom is scored from 0 – 2 (0 = definitely does not apply to the person, 2 = definitely does apply to the person). Consists of 2 factors: Affective/interpersonal features and behavioural features. Maximum score: 40. A score of 30 is indicative ...
... Assesses 20 symptoms associated with psychopathy. Each symptom is scored from 0 – 2 (0 = definitely does not apply to the person, 2 = definitely does apply to the person). Consists of 2 factors: Affective/interpersonal features and behavioural features. Maximum score: 40. A score of 30 is indicative ...
Literature and Psychoanalysis 2011-12
... 3. Freud, “Remembering, Repeating and Working-Through” (1914), “Observations on Transference-Love” (1915), SE 12. WEEK 2 Childhood Memories and the Sublimations of Art 1. Freud, “A Childhood Recollection from Goethe’s Dichtung und Warheit”, SE 17 (PFL 14). 2. Freud, Leonardo Da Vinci and a Memory of ...
... 3. Freud, “Remembering, Repeating and Working-Through” (1914), “Observations on Transference-Love” (1915), SE 12. WEEK 2 Childhood Memories and the Sublimations of Art 1. Freud, “A Childhood Recollection from Goethe’s Dichtung und Warheit”, SE 17 (PFL 14). 2. Freud, Leonardo Da Vinci and a Memory of ...
Psychoanalysis and Literature
... the following three categories: an analysis of a particular work by Freud; a reading of a literary work in relation to Freud’s thought; or a commentary on a suggested secondary reading. (One of these papers may be an expansion of an oral presentation). The first paper should be submitted no later th ...
... the following three categories: an analysis of a particular work by Freud; a reading of a literary work in relation to Freud’s thought; or a commentary on a suggested secondary reading. (One of these papers may be an expansion of an oral presentation). The first paper should be submitted no later th ...
freud and hysteria : the case of dora
... affair because her cough was explained by the fantasy of an oral-genital sex act which Dora had imagined as having with Mr " K" (this shows an Oedipius love for her father). The most important part of her cure was the telling of two dreams by Dora. On the first one ; during a fire, her father stood ...
... affair because her cough was explained by the fantasy of an oral-genital sex act which Dora had imagined as having with Mr " K" (this shows an Oedipius love for her father). The most important part of her cure was the telling of two dreams by Dora. On the first one ; during a fire, her father stood ...
Ch13zz
... – Humans are driven by biological forces of love and hunger – Sex drive as a necessity for survival – Unconscious mental processes and ...
... – Humans are driven by biological forces of love and hunger – Sex drive as a necessity for survival – Unconscious mental processes and ...
SIGMUND FREUD Dr. Wilfried Daim* On the 6th May 1856 Sigmund
... existence of the psyche into independent prominence. I t is this which in the long run w i l l probably be proved to be the greatest achieve ment of his life. W i t h Charcot in Paris and Bernheim in Nancy he studied neuro tic cases where the soul had lost its balance although there is no recognis ...
... existence of the psyche into independent prominence. I t is this which in the long run w i l l probably be proved to be the greatest achieve ment of his life. W i t h Charcot in Paris and Bernheim in Nancy he studied neuro tic cases where the soul had lost its balance although there is no recognis ...
Sigmund Freud
... Born in 1856 in Freiburg, Austria Moved to Vienna around 1860 First of eight children by his mother. Favored child Mother and he idolized one another Entered University of Vienna at age 17 to become a professor of neurology ...
... Born in 1856 in Freiburg, Austria Moved to Vienna around 1860 First of eight children by his mother. Favored child Mother and he idolized one another Entered University of Vienna at age 17 to become a professor of neurology ...
Psychoanalysis - Shepherd Webpages
... is important to communication because the underlying psyche of the environment is as important, if not more so, than the spoken word. It helps scholars understand people as a creation of their cultures, and of their internal desires and instincts. Although there have been many theorists in the field ...
... is important to communication because the underlying psyche of the environment is as important, if not more so, than the spoken word. It helps scholars understand people as a creation of their cultures, and of their internal desires and instincts. Although there have been many theorists in the field ...
Archetypal Criticism
... Structures of the unconscious mind are shared among beings of the same species, almost a shared psychological DNA. According to Jung, the human collective unconscious is populated by archetypes: broad universal symbols such as the Great Mother, the Wise Old Man, the Shadow, the Tower, Water, the Tre ...
... Structures of the unconscious mind are shared among beings of the same species, almost a shared psychological DNA. According to Jung, the human collective unconscious is populated by archetypes: broad universal symbols such as the Great Mother, the Wise Old Man, the Shadow, the Tower, Water, the Tre ...
A blast from the not so distant past*
... A blast from the not so distant past… • Psychologists who have studied personality have developed a number of theories to explain its nature • One of these psychologists who conducted such studies was Sigmund Freud, specifically through his use of psychoanalysis… ...
... A blast from the not so distant past… • Psychologists who have studied personality have developed a number of theories to explain its nature • One of these psychologists who conducted such studies was Sigmund Freud, specifically through his use of psychoanalysis… ...
Teaching Psychoanalysis to High School Students
... was listening, although I was not sure what was being absorbed. I then opened things up for questions. Leon Hoffman After less than a minute of silence, one student asked the first question. Many more questions followed. The rest of the period was Q&A, with the teacher eventually saying we had to sto ...
... was listening, although I was not sure what was being absorbed. I then opened things up for questions. Leon Hoffman After less than a minute of silence, one student asked the first question. Many more questions followed. The rest of the period was Q&A, with the teacher eventually saying we had to sto ...
Personality II
... They did veer away from Freud in 2 important ways: the role of the conscious mind nd they doubted that sex and aggression were all-consuming motivations. ...
... They did veer away from Freud in 2 important ways: the role of the conscious mind nd they doubted that sex and aggression were all-consuming motivations. ...
The Spiritual Problem of Modern Man
... Science has destroyed our faith, even in ourselves, and made even our own unconscious minds disgusting---but unavoidable---to us (a jab at Freud) We seek comfort, and we can look to the artist, who often intuitively represents oncoming changes in the collective psyche ...
... Science has destroyed our faith, even in ourselves, and made even our own unconscious minds disgusting---but unavoidable---to us (a jab at Freud) We seek comfort, and we can look to the artist, who often intuitively represents oncoming changes in the collective psyche ...
Sabina Spielrein
Sabina Nikolayevna Spielrein (Russian: Сабина Николаевна Шпильрейн, also transliterated ""Shpilrein"",""Shpilrain"" or ""Shpilreyn""; 25 October 1885 OS – 11 August 1942) was a Russian physician and one of the first female psychoanalysts. She was in succession the patient, then student, then colleague of Carl Gustav Jung, with whom she had an erotic relationship during 1908-1910, closely documented in their correspondence from the time and her diaries. She also met, corresponded, and had a collegial relationship with Sigmund Freud. One of her more famous analysands was the Swiss developmental psychologist, Jean Piaget. She worked as a psychiatrist, psychoanalyst, teacher and paediatrician in Switzerland and Russia. In a thirty-year professional career, she published over 35 papers in three languages (German, French and Russian), covering psychoanalysis, developmental psychology, psycholinguistics and educational psychology. Her best known and perhaps most influential published work in the field of psychoanalysis is the essay titled ""Destruction as the Cause of Coming Into Being"", written in German in 1912. Although Spielrein has been mainly remembered on account of her relationship with Jung, she is now increasingly recognized as an important and innovative thinker who was marginalized in history because of her unusual eclecticism, refusal to join factions, feminist approach to psychology, and her death in the Holocaust.