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  • ...and in Pierre Janet's [[work]], in which the concept of a deficiency of [[psychological]] [[synthesis]] plays an important [[role]]. Freud and [[Breuer]] [[return] However, the splitting mentioned here goes back to [[neurotic]] [[repression]]. Now, Freud, writes, "There is, however, a much more energetic and succes
    6 KB (852 words) - 23:48, 20 May 2019
  • ...sciousness]] (René [[Descartes]], Franz Brentano), with the result that [[psychological]] investigation overlooked the unconscious. These philosophers misunderstoo ...and the [[Oedipal]] [[structure]], [[transference]], [[resistance]], and [[repression]]. This same content can be grasped a posteriori in fundamental [[concepts]
    14 KB (1,873 words) - 21:02, 20 May 2019
  • ...butions that psychoanalysis could make to all the previously constituted [[psychological]] and social [[sciences]], the [[unconscious]] often playing a [[role]] of ...oups, as well as on the organizational imaginary and on the processes of [[repression]], suppression, and [[idealization]] at work in organizations. In South Ame
    8 KB (1,056 words) - 23:25, 23 May 2019
  • ...idea of obsessive actions, which are among the defenses and result from [[repression]]. Freud cited ceremonials associated with the [[anal]] zone and with [[inf ...written in 1923, Freud presented this study in a broad context: "If the [[psychological]] discoveries gained from the study of [[dreams]] were firmly kept in view,
    9 KB (1,303 words) - 22:20, 20 May 2019
  • ...sychological]] investigations [[Freud]] explored the interface between the psychological and the [[physical]], a context in which a "sum of excitation" had the foll ...or "amount of affect"; the fate of the sum of excitation in the event of [[repression]] was somatic innervation in the shape of hysterical conversion, and in the
    4 KB (538 words) - 00:06, 21 May 2019
  • ...several [[linguistic]] [[categories]]. The test was used to [[diagnose]] [[psychological]] typology and [[psychopathology]]. ...e called these clusters [[complexes]]. Jung used [[Freud]]'s theories of [[repression]] to account for the [[autonomous]] [[nature]] of complexes. Freud praised
    4 KB (504 words) - 03:34, 21 May 2019
  • ...c]] organization, notably those of the choice of neurosis and pathological repression (Sulloway, 1979). The same Lamarckian and biogenetic model of [[human]] [[d ...shed, in the course of which Freud perfected complementary theories, one [[psychological]] and the [[other]] organo-phylogenetic. The [[instincts]] rooted in phylog
    8 KB (1,131 words) - 20:30, 20 May 2019
  • ...ot feel ourselves to be there when we're face to face with a person with [[psychological]] difficulties, a timid person, for example, or an [[obsessional]]. Their c REPRESSION OF TRUTH
    32 KB (5,422 words) - 00:50, 25 May 2019
  • ** ''[[Complete]] [[Psychological]] Works'', [[Dora]] (1905) ** ''Complete Psychological Works'', [[Totem]] and [[Taboo]] (1905)
    16 KB (2,279 words) - 23:10, 20 May 2019
  • ...here one is unaware that one has forgotten), forgetting is the result of [[repression]]. The forgotten name inhabits the [[preconscious]] and quickly returns to ...uses the example of forgetting because it was one way of talking [[about]] repression before 1900. Forgetting appears in his first theory of neuroses, which expl
    7 KB (1,031 words) - 07:38, 24 May 2019
  • [[Diavowal]] is a more radical [[defense]] against [[castration]] than [[repression]]. ...ed on a holistic concept of [[mind]] and [[body]] and which stressed the [[psychological]] importance of [[body]] presentation.
    41 KB (6,137 words) - 03:36, 21 May 2019
  • ...the [[scientific]] study of the brain) and neuropsychology (the study of [[psychological]] disorders and impairments caused by brain dysfunction). ...liefs and desires that results, according to Freud, from the [[childhood]] repression of the desire to sleep with one's mother and kill one's father.
    8 KB (1,065 words) - 00:25, 21 May 2019
  • ...es of the old along three lines. First, they try to expose the nature of [[repression]] and [[castration]] as fundamental to psychoanalytic machinery. Second, th ...ideologically motivated [[construct]] not attributable to the operation of repression (295). Deleuze and Guattari seek to explode the [[concept]] of castration a
    26 KB (3,786 words) - 21:14, 20 May 2019
  • ...developed a reader-response criticism that drew upon psychoanalytic and [[psychological]] traditions of ego development (see reader-response theory and criticism). ...c or [[clinical]] [[interpretations]] of Freud colluded with the forces of repression by emphasizing the [[necessity]] to [[adapt]] to societal norms that were b
    19 KB (2,756 words) - 21:59, 20 May 2019
  • ...atopsychic [[communication]], Freud gives [[three]] possible mechanisms: [[repression]], the [[difference]] between somatic [[sexuality]] and psychic sexuality,
    4 KB (541 words) - 05:50, 24 May 2019
  • ...f representation." Freud was in effect seeking "permission to move on to [[psychological]] ground" (1893c, p. 170), and he crossed that border on the basis of the [ ...ld later be known as associative [[links]] and breaks, [[isolation]] and [[repression]].
    4 KB (535 words) - 23:51, 24 May 2019
  • Character is a [[psychological]], [[philosophical]], and a [[literary]] [[concept]]. A [[distinction]] [[n ...of neurosis—are [[absent]] in the formation of character. In the latter, repression either does not come into [[action]] or smoothly achieves its aim of replac
    9 KB (1,227 words) - 20:06, 27 May 2019
  • ...d a neurosis ([[hysteria]]) within a single framework occurred after the [[psychological]] [[nature]] of hysteria ("the great neurosis") was established at the end ...e of development (that is to say, its chronological placing) which enables repression to occur—i.e. which transforms a source of [[internal]] [[pleasure]] into
    11 KB (1,607 words) - 20:14, 27 May 2019
  • ...volume XIV dated September 1, 1913. The second, Its Interest for the Non-[[Psychological]] [[Sciences]], was published in the supplement to the next issue, dated No ...cial and [[perverse]] instincts in the child, if they are not subjected to repression but are diverted from their original aims to more valuable ones by the [[pr
    8 KB (1,140 words) - 20:23, 27 May 2019
  • ...he [[superego]]. The traditional paradigm in a (male) child's [[psychology|psychological]] coming-into-being is to first select the mother as the object of [[libido ...ion]], and other issues. Freud saw this anxiety as rooted in an incomplete repression of sexual feelings and other [[defense mechanism]]s the boy was using to co
    51 KB (8,274 words) - 15:59, 25 July 2006

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