Difference between revisions of "Neurosis"

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Neurosis is a pathological mental condition in which the patient is awre of the morbidity of his or her condition and it can, unlike psychosis, bne treated with the patient's consent.
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Neurosis is a condition in which somatic symptoms are an expression of a psychical conflict originating in childhood.
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Patients presenting obsessional, phobic or hysterical symptoms are neurotic.
  
  
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[[Category:Concepts]]
 
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[[Category:Freudian psychology]]
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[[Category:Pathology]]

Revision as of 01:41, 5 June 2006


Neurosis is a pathological mental condition in which the patient is awre of the morbidity of his or her condition and it can, unlike psychosis, bne treated with the patient's consent. Neurosis is a condition in which somatic symptoms are an expression of a psychical conflict originating in childhood. Patients presenting obsessional, phobic or hysterical symptoms are neurotic.


The formation of behavioral or psychosomatic symptoms as a result of the return of the repressed. A neurosis represents an instance where the ego's efforts to deal with its desires through repression, displacement, etc. fail: "A person only falls ill of a neurosis if his ego has lost the capacity to allocate his libido in some way" (Introductory Lectures 16.387). The failure of the ego and the increased insistence of the libido lead to symptoms that are as bad or worse than the conflict they are designed to replace. This term should be carefully distinguished from psychosis.


References