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  • ...ect. They are therefore, for the most part, hypothetically deduced through the analysis, with more or less [[certainty]]. ..., and seems to have seized [[The Subject|the subject]], making him captive of his mourning for her.
    7 KB (1,101 words) - 21:35, 27 May 2019
  • ...ion of [[cultural]] phenomena ([[myths]], [[religions]], legends) or modes of [[thinking]] that remain [[unconscious]] in modern, [[civilized]] [[humans] ...nd phylogenesis and, on the [[other]], his hypotheses on the [[formation]] of [[social]] groups, as presented in [[particular]] in [[Totem]] and [[Taboo]
    4 KB (579 words) - 21:22, 20 May 2019
  • ...the [[work]] of Karl [[Abraham]] originally; during the 1950s, to the work of Helene Deutsch; and later to Phyllis Greenacre. ...The success of the imposture may depend on the complicity of [[others]] in the lie.
    2 KB (237 words) - 00:17, 25 May 2019
  • ...ics and made significant contributions to that field with his [[ideas]] of the skin-ego (1984, 1989) and [[psychic]] envelopes. ...t are instead a product of parthenogenesis, [[living]] within the [[body]] of a fertile and all-powerful [[mother]]" (1971).
    2 KB (364 words) - 23:28, 24 May 2019
  • ..." and can [[identity]] with "projected" characters. And we often [[speak]] of "[[dream]] screens." ...Killer</i> by J. McNaughton, 1985, released in 1990, <i>The [[Silence]] of the Lambs</i> by Jonathan Demme, 1991, <i>Seven</i> by D. Fincher, 1995, and [[
    17 KB (2,666 words) - 03:57, 24 May 2019
  • ...here is doubt, it is the misrepresentation that underscores the ability of the element in question to convey [[meaning]]. ...s" associated with a primal inability to differentiate between the ego and the outside world.
    4 KB (592 words) - 03:38, 24 May 2019
  • ...substrate of the [[psyche]]; and [[primal]] [[fantasies]] and/or fantasies of origins. ...ymbolic]] pact and the rules that result from it constitute the beginnings of society.
    10 KB (1,462 words) - 19:42, 20 May 2019
  • ...their outcome in an identification of this kind, and would thus reinforce the primary one (<i>primäre Identifizierung</i>)." ([[Freud]], Sigmund, 1923b, ...[[lack]] of a [[penis]], it does not distinguish in [[value]] between its father and its mother" (Freud, 1923b, p. 31n).
    6 KB (908 words) - 21:22, 20 May 2019
  • ...[[Totem]] and [[Taboo]]</i> (1912-13a) had been adopted by him as early as the 1890s, as his correspondence with [[Fliess]] shows. ...ary theories, one [[psychological]] and the [[other]] organo-phylogenetic. The [[instincts]] rooted in phylogenesis never stopped haunting his thought (La
    8 KB (1,131 words) - 20:30, 20 May 2019
  • ...of this group for the psychoanalytic movement and the institutionalization of [[psychoanalysis]]. ...n [[terms]] of [[theory]] and [[clinical]] [[practice]], but also in terms of their personal [[relationship]] (Schröter, Michael, 1995).
    5 KB (713 words) - 22:44, 20 May 2019
  • ...of a [[culture]] can be transmitted to descendents and [[form]] the basis of cultural development. ...uilt]] over the [[murder]] of the [[primal]] [[father]] had persisted over the centuries and still affected generations that could [[know]] [[nothing]] di
    6 KB (799 words) - 21:15, 27 May 2019
  • ...bidinal]] and [[sadistic]] [[oral]] [[drives]] of the infant in [[search]] of unlimited [[satisfaction]], a satisfaction that, inevitably, will never be ...beginning while simultaneously revealing its [[absence]]" (Assoun, 1982). The [[primal]] mother escapes our grasp yet holds us in thrall.
    5 KB (772 words) - 18:41, 27 May 2019
  • ...[work]] of [[rejection]] performed by the [[censorship]] or the ego by way of "repression proper" or "after-pressure" (1915d, p. 148). ...tion and repulsion as directed toward the [[psychical]] representatives of the [[instinct]].
    5 KB (720 words) - 21:21, 20 May 2019
  • ...for personal salvation, etc.—the simple and direct fact of a feeling of 'the eternal' (which may very well not be eternal, but simply without perceptibl ...] Gospel (1930/1947). He sent these works to Freud, providing him with a [[name]] for a [[concept]] hitherto [[latent]] in his [[thinking]].
    4 KB (610 words) - 20:16, 20 May 2019
  • ...[[value]] and finds comfort therein. In his early [[work]] [[Freud]] spoke of "unconscious memories," but he later replaced this term with "[[memory]] tr ...[[seduction]]; subsequently the memories of [[childhood]] were included in the [[category]].
    11 KB (1,542 words) - 19:23, 20 May 2019
  • ...s of Eastern religiosity summoned at these moments? How are they placed in the text? What meaning is, or can be, given to them? ...d a significant surreal moment for him, evoking an exotic Tibet still full of magical possibilities.
    23 KB (3,606 words) - 15:06, 10 June 2006
  • ...[[Lacan]], "''manque-à-être''", for which [[Lacan]] himself has proposed the [[English]] neologism "[[want]]-to-be". ...ure]] of what is [[lack]]ing varies over the course of [[Lacan]]'s [[Works of Jacques Lacan|work]].
    4 KB (567 words) - 00:04, 26 May 2019
  • ...La relation d'objet et les structures freudiennes]]''<BR><big>[[Seminar IV|The Object Relation]]</big> ...rom being the main source of anxiety, is what actually saves [[The Subject|the subject]] from it.
    12 KB (1,824 words) - 16:12, 30 June 2019
  • ...ive unit of articulated speech», from the Greek *ςοντμα, «sound of the voice», cf. ''morphème'' (1921) [[English]] ''lexeme'' (1940), ''monème' ...f [[wp:myth|myths]].<ref>(cf. in [[particular]] «The [[Structural]] Study of Myth» (1955); Tristes tropiques (1955); Anthropologie structurale (1958);
    12 KB (1,736 words) - 19:43, 20 May 2019
  • ...scious of the [[character]] or the [[author]] but upon the text itself and the relationship between text and reader. ...ed approaches to literature and the [[other]] [[arts]] take a wide variety of forms.
    5 KB (736 words) - 20:53, 23 May 2019

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