Eugen Bleuler`s Dementia Praecox or the Group
... too much of an exaggeration to claim that Kraepelin preferred to spend time with his Zählkarte instead of with his patients; a colleague of his described him ‘‘fanatically’’ working and reworking through thousands of his cards as though they were ‘‘rare art objects.’’22 Eugen Bleuler’s attitude and ...
... too much of an exaggeration to claim that Kraepelin preferred to spend time with his Zählkarte instead of with his patients; a colleague of his described him ‘‘fanatically’’ working and reworking through thousands of his cards as though they were ‘‘rare art objects.’’22 Eugen Bleuler’s attitude and ...
Identification Within: Kenneth Burke`s View of the Unconscious
... for moralistic or incantatory purposes."3 In other words, Burke's idea of the unconscious views man as the actor dramatizing his rôle f unction to himself as a means of justifying whatever courses of action he chooses in his drama of human expérience. Burke's major postulation concerning the unconsc ...
... for moralistic or incantatory purposes."3 In other words, Burke's idea of the unconscious views man as the actor dramatizing his rôle f unction to himself as a means of justifying whatever courses of action he chooses in his drama of human expérience. Burke's major postulation concerning the unconsc ...
Language and Memory in Borges` "Funes, The Memorious"
... Analysis of this epithet yields an additional, yet somewhat contradictory interpretation of the nature of Funes. “U ntam ed” well defines Funes’ transform ed state. He can not completely control his power; it eventually destroys him. “Vernacular” seems to be a general reference to the “certain incur ...
... Analysis of this epithet yields an additional, yet somewhat contradictory interpretation of the nature of Funes. “U ntam ed” well defines Funes’ transform ed state. He can not completely control his power; it eventually destroys him. “Vernacular” seems to be a general reference to the “certain incur ...
freud and hysteria : the case of dora
... Freud thought that the symptoms were the result of this hidden 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 drea ...
... Freud thought that the symptoms were the result of this hidden 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 drea ...
Final Paper - The Oxbow School
... have been scarring? I think that the importance of place in dreams differs from dreamer to dreamer but ultimately is one of the more important things about dreams for myself, because of the connection I have between place and a feeling of comfort. Perhaps the idea that sleep, in itself, is a place ...
... have been scarring? I think that the importance of place in dreams differs from dreamer to dreamer but ultimately is one of the more important things about dreams for myself, because of the connection I have between place and a feeling of comfort. Perhaps the idea that sleep, in itself, is a place ...
Unit One - Northern Highlands
... The Neo-Freudians were a group of psychologists who followed Freud’s teachings and were often his best and brightest students. They eventually had some minor disagreements with Freud about his theory, and developed theories of their own. Freud had little patience for these dissenters, and quickly ki ...
... The Neo-Freudians were a group of psychologists who followed Freud’s teachings and were often his best and brightest students. They eventually had some minor disagreements with Freud about his theory, and developed theories of their own. Freud had little patience for these dissenters, and quickly ki ...
4 Psychology of consciousness
... He used this levels to better explain a person’s psyche or that which influences the way a person thinks, behaves and personality. ...
... He used this levels to better explain a person’s psyche or that which influences the way a person thinks, behaves and personality. ...
1 CHAPTER II THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK This chapter defines
... they are interested in something, why they feel something is pleasant or unpleasant, and other unexplainable reasons. For example, a woman cannot explain why she likes rock music. She does not realize that it is related to her repressed feeling of always being told what to do all the time, and she w ...
... they are interested in something, why they feel something is pleasant or unpleasant, and other unexplainable reasons. For example, a woman cannot explain why she likes rock music. She does not realize that it is related to her repressed feeling of always being told what to do all the time, and she w ...
Document
... psychological interpretations of myth and literature. The psychoanalyst Carl Jung identified the mythic realm with the collective unconscious, a level of the psyche in which he thought all humans share and participate. Jung spoke often of archetypes, primordial images that appear in all world mythol ...
... psychological interpretations of myth and literature. The psychoanalyst Carl Jung identified the mythic realm with the collective unconscious, a level of the psyche in which he thought all humans share and participate. Jung spoke often of archetypes, primordial images that appear in all world mythol ...
SIGMUND FREUD Dr. Wilfried Daim* On the 6th May 1856 Sigmund
... t a l part of the same sex oftenly arouse such covered psychical conflicts as «repressed truths*. The «Oedipus complex» is one of the best known and most importent discoveries of Sigmund FREUD. FREUD not only roused interest in the pathological process i n the strict sense of the word, but also for ...
... t a l part of the same sex oftenly arouse such covered psychical conflicts as «repressed truths*. The «Oedipus complex» is one of the best known and most importent discoveries of Sigmund FREUD. FREUD not only roused interest in the pathological process i n the strict sense of the word, but also for ...
Ch13zz
... Sigmund Freud (1856-1939) • Most of life in Vienna • Became a medical doctor – Wished for academic research – Brücke, his professor and director of the physiological lab where Freud trained, dissuaded him – Freud too poor to provide for himself in interim • Taking Brücke’s advice, Freud took medica ...
... Sigmund Freud (1856-1939) • Most of life in Vienna • Became a medical doctor – Wished for academic research – Brücke, his professor and director of the physiological lab where Freud trained, dissuaded him – Freud too poor to provide for himself in interim • Taking Brücke’s advice, Freud took medica ...
12 Chapter 12,14 - Seabreeze High School
... Need for self-actualization- which is the need to fullfill one’s potential; it is the highest need in Maslow’s motivational hierarchy. Maslow summarized this with the statement: “what a man can be, he must be.” ...
... Need for self-actualization- which is the need to fullfill one’s potential; it is the highest need in Maslow’s motivational hierarchy. Maslow summarized this with the statement: “what a man can be, he must be.” ...
Dream Interpretation Worksheet
... object or scene or event or name or color, and tell what you associate with it – e.g. If you dreamed about a whale – say the first thing that comes to your mind when you think of a whale – perhaps it is the ocean. Then what is the first thing that comes to your mind when you think of the ocean? And ...
... object or scene or event or name or color, and tell what you associate with it – e.g. If you dreamed about a whale – say the first thing that comes to your mind when you think of a whale – perhaps it is the ocean. Then what is the first thing that comes to your mind when you think of the ocean? And ...
7. Forensic Mental Health: Psychotherpeutic
... Margaret Mahler(1974): 3 phases, 3 sub-phases of individuation Melanie Klein: 2 positions, Infantile Psychic Development, Lawrence Kohlberg (1970): 6 Stages of Moral Development John Bowlby: Social, Attachment theory ...
... Margaret Mahler(1974): 3 phases, 3 sub-phases of individuation Melanie Klein: 2 positions, Infantile Psychic Development, Lawrence Kohlberg (1970): 6 Stages of Moral Development John Bowlby: Social, Attachment theory ...
What Is Personality?
... accomplishments and are able to develop integrity if we see ourselves as leading a successful life. If we see our life as unproductive, feel about past, or feel that we did not accomplish our life goals, we become dissatisfied with life and develop despair, often leading to depression and hopelessne ...
... accomplishments and are able to develop integrity if we see ourselves as leading a successful life. If we see our life as unproductive, feel about past, or feel that we did not accomplish our life goals, we become dissatisfied with life and develop despair, often leading to depression and hopelessne ...
PSYCHE AND COSMOS:
... The archetypes of the planets that form important aspects with the Moon tend to be especially significant in the person's life; they will manifest in the parts of one's life that are governed by the Moon. ...
... The archetypes of the planets that form important aspects with the Moon tend to be especially significant in the person's life; they will manifest in the parts of one's life that are governed by the Moon. ...
Free Will - Uprighting
... [O]ur patients’…associations during the work of analysis give us an opportunity…[The patient may say] ‘now you’ll think I mean to say something insulting, but really I’ve no such intention.’ We see at once that this is a repudiation, by means of projection, of an association that has just emerged. O ...
... [O]ur patients’…associations during the work of analysis give us an opportunity…[The patient may say] ‘now you’ll think I mean to say something insulting, but really I’ve no such intention.’ We see at once that this is a repudiation, by means of projection, of an association that has just emerged. O ...
The following sentences test correctness and effectiveness of
... underlined; beneath each sentence are five ways of phrasing the underlined material. Choice (A) repeats the original phrasing; the other four choices are different. If you think the original phrasing produces a better sentence than any of the alternatives, select choice (A); if not, select one of th ...
... underlined; beneath each sentence are five ways of phrasing the underlined material. Choice (A) repeats the original phrasing; the other four choices are different. If you think the original phrasing produces a better sentence than any of the alternatives, select choice (A); if not, select one of th ...
Sigmund Freud`s personality theory
... As I said earlier, for Freud, the sex drive is the most important motivating force. Freud noted that, at different times in our lives, different parts of our skin give us greatest pleasure : The oral stage lasts from birth to about 18 months. The focus of pleasure is, of course, the mouth. Sucking ...
... As I said earlier, for Freud, the sex drive is the most important motivating force. Freud noted that, at different times in our lives, different parts of our skin give us greatest pleasure : The oral stage lasts from birth to about 18 months. The focus of pleasure is, of course, the mouth. Sucking ...
A. The conscious level - O6U E
... and accomplish other goals. 2. Cunseioasniess Helps us lifter out extraneous stimuli that are Mr useful to us. Such as noises in the background when we are working. 3. Consciousness allows us to plan what to do, keep track of what we are doing and remember what we’ve done. 4. Consciousness gives us ...
... and accomplish other goals. 2. Cunseioasniess Helps us lifter out extraneous stimuli that are Mr useful to us. Such as noises in the background when we are working. 3. Consciousness allows us to plan what to do, keep track of what we are doing and remember what we’ve done. 4. Consciousness gives us ...
Personality Theories - Mr. Hunsaker`s Classes
... • Unconscious mind - level of the mind in which thoughts, feelings, memories, and other information are kept that are not easily or voluntarily brought into consciousness. – Can be revealed in dreams and Freudian slips of the tongue. ...
... • Unconscious mind - level of the mind in which thoughts, feelings, memories, and other information are kept that are not easily or voluntarily brought into consciousness. – Can be revealed in dreams and Freudian slips of the tongue. ...
Collective unconscious
Collective unconscious, a term coined by Carl Jung, refers to structures of the unconscious mind which are shared among beings of the same species. According to Jung, the human collective unconscious is populated by instincts and by archetypes: universal symbols such as the Great Mother, the Wise Old Man, the Shadow, the Tower, Water, the Tree of Life, and many more.Jung considered the collective unconscious to underpin and surround the unconscious mind, distinguishing it from the personal unconscious of Freudian psychoanalysis. He argued that the collective unconscious had profound influence on the lives of individuals, who lived out its symbols and clothed them in meaning through their experiences. The psychotherapeutic practice of analytical psychology revolves around examining the patient's relationship to the collective unconscious.Psychiatrist and Jungian analyst Lionel Corbett argues that the contemporary terms ""autonomous psyche"" or ""objective psyche"" are more commonly used today in the practice of depth psychology rather than the traditional term of the ""collective unconscious.""Critics of the collective unconscious concept have called it unscientific and fatalistic, or otherwise very difficult to test scientifically (due to the mythical aspect of the collective unconscious) for those faith-based scientists. Proponents suggest that it is borne out by findings of psychology, neuroscience, and anthropology.