Difference between revisions of "Drive"

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(''Instinkt'' and ''Trieb'')
(''Instinkt'' and ''Trieb'')
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=====''Instinkt'' and ''Trieb''=====
 
=====''Instinkt'' and ''Trieb''=====
[[Freud]] normally uses the word '''''[[Instinkt]]''''' ("'''[[instinct]]'''") to refer to a relatively ''[[nature|fixed]]'' and ''[[nature|unchangeable]]'' set of [[instinct|behavioral patterns]] "peculiar to an animal species, varying little from one member of this species to another and unfolding in accordance with a temporal scheme which is generally resistant to change and apparently geared to a purpose."
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[[Freud]] normally uses the word '''''[[Instinkt]]''''' ("'''[[instinct]]'''") to refer to a relatively ''[[nature|fixed]]'' and ''[[nature|unchangeable]]'' set of [[instinct|behavioral patterns]] "peculiar to an animal species, varying little from one member of this species to another and unfolding in accordance with a temporal scheme which is generally resistant to change and apparently geared to a purpose."<ref>Laplanche, Jean and Pontalis, Jean-Bertrand. ''The Language of Psychoanalysis''. Karnac Books, 1996</ref>
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=====References=====
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<references/>
  
 
==See Also==
 
==See Also==

Revision as of 03:11, 8 September 2006

French: pulsion; German: Trieb


Translation

Instinkt and Trieb


Instinkt and Trieb

Freud normally uses the word Instinkt ("instinct") to refer to a relatively fixed and unchangeable set of behavioral patterns "peculiar to an animal species, varying little from one member of this species to another and unfolding in accordance with a temporal scheme which is generally resistant to change and apparently geared to a purpose."[1]


References
  1. Laplanche, Jean and Pontalis, Jean-Bertrand. The Language of Psychoanalysis. Karnac Books, 1996

See Also

References