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  • [[Psychosis]] is a nosological [[category]] distinct from [[neurosis]] and [[perversion]]. It is brought [[about]] by the [[foreclosure]] of a ...ons indicates major [[structural]] differences between [[psychosis]] and [[neurosis]].
    13 KB (1,887 words) - 23:12, 23 May 2019
  • ...Abraham, the [[structure]] of melancholia is closer to that of obsessive [[neurosis]] on account of the intense hostility toward the outside world. In both ill In "Melancholia and [[Obsessional]] Neurosis" (1927a) Abraham investigated the relation between manic-depressive states
    7 KB (983 words) - 19:22, 20 May 2019
  • ...]] serve to give subjects a means of envisioning the world in which such a failure emerges as evidence as to how transcendent is their particular [[ideology]] ...ces us to continue the [[search]] for the impossible owing to the inherent failure each object represents. Because the subject does not lack an experiential o
    16 KB (2,454 words) - 07:09, 24 May 2019
  • ...as [[repression]] and [[foreclosure]] are the fundamental operations in [[neurosis]] and [[psychosis]]. It is this realization that [[disavowal]] concerns; [[disavowal]] is the failure to accept that [[lack]] causes [[desire]], the [[belief]] that [[desire]] i
    4 KB (575 words) - 01:26, 23 November 2022
  • ...ot [[separation]] from the [[mother]] which gives rise to [[anxiety]], but failure to [[separation|separate]] from her.<ref>{{S4}} p. 319</ref> * [[Neurosis]]
    10 KB (1,503 words) - 02:00, 24 May 2019
  • ...and reality. In this perspective, far from [[being]] the consequence of a failure of mentalization, the passage to the act results from an overflowing of the * Freud, Sigmund. (1909d). Notes upon a case of obsessional neurosis. SE, 10: 151-318.
    8 KB (1,139 words) - 20:47, 20 May 2019
  • ...idan]], has decided to retain the French [[word]]. The [[sense]] is of a "failure to recognize", or "misconstruction". The [[concept]] is central to [[Lacan ...[[Lacan]] to describe all [[knowledge]] (''[[connaissance]]''), in both [[neurosis]] and [[psychosis]], as "[[knowledge|paranoiac knowledge]]."
    4 KB (477 words) - 19:45, 20 May 2019
  • ...th [[Verneinung]] (dé[[négation]]): "...everyday [[speech]] runs against failure of [[recognition]], [[méconnaissance]], which is the source of Verneinung. ...lly by "[[foreclosure]]" ([[forclusion]]), the former [[being]] related to neurosis, the latter to psychosis.
    4 KB (529 words) - 08:00, 24 May 2019
  • ...] it is possible to [[understand]] [[psychosis]] and distinguish it from [[neurosis]]. ...]). He argues that [[Schreber]]'s [[psychosis]] was activated by both his failure to produce a [[child]] and his election to an important [[position]] in the
    15 KB (2,211 words) - 16:10, 30 June 2019
  • ...on|Verneinung]]'' (''dénégation''): "...everyday [[speech]] runs against failure of [[recognition]], ''[[méconnaissance]]'', which is the source of ''[[Ver ...lly with "[[foreclosure]]" (''forclusion''), the former being related to [[neurosis]], the latter to [[psychosis]].</span>
    13 KB (1,956 words) - 12:33, 2 March 2021
  • ...alence]] in [[affective]] life, nightmares associated with [[traumatic]] [[neurosis]], masochism, and [[negative]] therapeutic reactions. ...the sense of 'Eros"' (1900a, note 1925, p. 161). Freud even justified his failure to use the word earlier: "Anyone who considers sex as something mortifying
    13 KB (1,919 words) - 06:44, 24 May 2019
  • ...Fliess]], who recommended cocaine for the treatment of the "nasal reflex [[neurosis]]." [[Fliess]] operated on Freud and a [[number]] of Freud's patients whom In 1896 Freud posited that the symptoms of '[[hysteria]]' and [[obsessional]] neurosis derived from ''unconscious'' memories of sexual abuse in infancy, and claim
    78 KB (11,491 words) - 23:08, 20 May 2019
  • ...law – the [[public]] or social law – fails and, at this very point of failure, the law is compelled, as [[Zizek]] puts it, “to search for support in an ...here the law - the public or social law - fails and, at this very point of failure, the law is compelled, as Žižek puts it, 'to search for support in an ill
    49 KB (7,855 words) - 20:47, 25 May 2019
  • ...ty, and similar zombie-[[concepts]]? Doesn't Lenin stand precisely for the FAILURE to put [[Marxism]] into [[practice]], for the big catastrophe which [[left] ...tive entities and to speak, say, of religion as a "collective compulsive [[neurosis]]"? The focus of psychoanalysis is entirely different: the Social, the fiel
    164 KB (26,048 words) - 22:09, 20 May 2019
  • ...hich is found throughout all (at least Western) [[history]], obsessional [[neurosis]] is a distinctly modern phenomenon.<br><br> ...n link... The tragic aspect of the story, of course, is that the mission's failure is taken into account: the CIA wants the mission to fail, i.e. the poor dis
    63 KB (10,767 words) - 21:37, 27 May 2019
  • ...ing the Oedipus complex; anyone who fails to do so falls a [[victim]] to [[neurosis]].<ref>Freud 1991d [1905]: 149</ref></blockquote> --> ...three times of the [[Oedipus complex]], and there is no such thing as a [[neurosis without [[Oedipus]]. On the other hand, [[psychosis]], [[perversion]] and [
    28 KB (4,345 words) - 20:18, 20 May 2019
  • ...omething can be erased: you worked all afternoon and then have a [[power]] failure and it's gone. Okay, these things can happen. But you know that it's someti ...tivity is hysterical: I don't know what I am for the other. Hysteria, or [[neurosis]] in general is always a position of questioning.
    15 KB (2,505 words) - 23:50, 24 May 2019
  • ...versely, for its success. "The conventional wisdom is that socialism was a failure because, instead of creating a 'New Man,' it produced a country of cynics w ...te all [[dreams]]," he reports of his treatment. "It was [[obsessional]] [[neurosis]] in its absolute purest [[form]]. Because you never knew how long it would
    35 KB (5,651 words) - 23:13, 27 May 2019
  • ...'the identity of the subject consists in nothing other than the continual failure of self-reflection'.<a name="27x"></a><a href="#27"><sup>27</sup></a> One a ...agnosis he often provides of himself, that this is the work of obsessional neurosis. And we should also take care not to fall into the trap of imagining that t
    95 KB (15,989 words) - 07:54, 12 September 2015
  • ...id]]-schizoid [[position]], or in the wake of some [[frustration]] or of a failure of depressive guilt. Despite its early [[appearance]], persecutory guilt ha ...cific ways that [[children]] respond to guilt may predispose [[them]] to [[neurosis]] and [[mental]] instability, but may also prove to be a source of success
    11 KB (1,649 words) - 23:06, 24 May 2019
  • ...his publications were [[Book burning|burned]] by the FDA. He died of heart failure in jail just over a year later, one day before he was due to apply for [[pa ...in Vienna in 1924, and conducted research into the [[social]] causes of [[neurosis]]. It was at the Vienna Psychoanalytic Association that Reich met Annie Pin
    39 KB (5,735 words) - 03:29, 21 May 2019
  • ...[thought]] by some [[analyst]]s to be a major factor in the aetiology of [[neurosis]]. Thus, far from [[frustration]] involving the failure to [[satisfy]] a [[biological]] [[need]], it often involves precisely the o
    8 KB (1,209 words) - 08:13, 24 May 2019
  • ...er]], should wonder whether a given [[patient]]'s [[resistance]] indicated failure stemming from the inadequacy of the [[analyst]] or of the [[analytic]] meth * ——. (1918b). From the history of an infantile neurosis. SE, 17: 1-122.
    2 KB (355 words) - 06:02, 24 May 2019
  • Actual [[neurosis]]/defense neurosis Character neurosis
    48 KB (5,452 words) - 20:34, 20 May 2019
  • ==HYSTERIA, OBSESSIONAL NEUROSIS AND PERVERSION== ...es that what the Other wants from him or her is love. In [[obsessional]] [[neurosis]], which is a sub-set of hysteria, the subject believes that what the Other
    73 KB (12,478 words) - 23:06, 24 May 2019
  • ...its artifice, so that we must not invent an unconscious or an infantile [[neurosis]] for a character, or do wild [[analysis]] on the [[author]]; we must not g ...ttp://soc.enotes.com/psychoanalysis-encyclopedia/failure-neurosis">Failure neurosis</a>; <a href="http://soc.enotes.com/psychoanalysis-encyclopedia/hamlet-oedi
    8 KB (1,081 words) - 23:06, 20 May 2019
  • ...ental reality are taken for external reality (cf. [[hallucination]]). In [[neurosis]], these two [[topographical]] spaces remain distinct, even if "psychical r ...[[pleasure]] [[principle]] and [[hallucinatory]] [[satisfaction]]. But the failure of this as a means of attaining satisfaction forces the [[infant]] to "[[re
    10 KB (1,404 words) - 00:41, 25 May 2019
  • ...foreigner" (1939a) who is the father to adoption. For Jacques [[Lacan]], a failure of this metaphorizing [[recognition]] is [[responsible]] for the [[foreclos * [[Infantile neurosis]]
    6 KB (882 words) - 07:13, 24 May 2019
  • * [[Failure neurosis]] * [[Traumatic neurosis]]
    5 KB (635 words) - 00:05, 21 May 2019
  • ...from the hypnotic treatments that he used after his [[recognition]] of the failure of medicinal and [[physical]] therapies in vogue at the [[time]]. Sessions ...is encouraged to advance through the [[development]] of the transference [[neurosis]], whose [[infantile]] origins are revealed in analysis, but that it is als
    11 KB (1,574 words) - 20:52, 23 May 2019
  • ...e of the "Wolf Man" 's dream (related in "From the History of an Infantile Neurosis" [1918b]), in which the scary immobility of the wolves was a reversal of a ...trary, a feeling of triumph may provoke a dream that recalls a humiliating failure. In the dream of the "uncle with the yellow beard," Freud's "warm dream fee
    8 KB (1,298 words) - 05:11, 10 June 2006
  • ...from the hypnotic treatments that he used after his [[recognition]] of the failure of medicinal and [[physical]] therapies in vogue at the [[time]]. Sessions ...is encouraged to advance through the [[development]] of the transference [[neurosis]], whose [[infantile]] origins are revealed in analysis, but that it is als
    11 KB (1,572 words) - 20:54, 23 May 2019
  • ...In cases where sound psychic defensive systems are lacking—above all, a failure of [[defense]] through [[repression]], which would prevent [[satisfaction]] ...tion; this is the Freudian approach to the concept of "actual (or defense) neurosis," advanced relatively early on. This approach requires levels of discharge
    8 KB (1,171 words) - 06:58, 24 May 2019
  • ...the anxiety of the dream is identical to the anxiety experienced during [[neurosis]]. ...sorship, reached its [[complete]] realization. In this [[case]] there is a failure to form the compromise that constitutes the dream, which then fails to fulf
    3 KB (485 words) - 23:26, 23 May 2019
  • ...ory]] traces. As a [[form]] of parapraxis, forgetting combines [[partial]] failure with partial success and must be distinguished from the customary [[psychol ...[[particular]] syndrome from neurasthenia under the description "anxiety [[neurosis]]." SE, 3: 85-115.
    7 KB (1,031 words) - 07:38, 24 May 2019
  • ...bing, Albert Moll, Magnus Hirschfeld, and [[others]]. Though Freud views [[neurosis]] as the "[[negative]] of [[perversion]]" (without mentioning homosexuality ...[[Interpretation]], Psycho-pathologie de l'échec ([[Psychopathology]] of Failure); Sadger, Isidor Isaak; Suicide; Three Essays on the Theory of Sexuality.
    9 KB (1,274 words) - 23:39, 24 May 2019
  • ...paradigm; in the emergence of obsessive [[ideas]] as in [[obsessional]] [[neurosis]] (in which case secondary symptoms might arise also as defenses against th ...language"). This view did not hold [[good]], however, beyond the sphere of neurosis proper: in the "actual neuroses," the [[manifest]] symptoms had no [[psychi
    12 KB (1,683 words) - 00:16, 21 May 2019
  • ...en actual and [[infantile sexuality]] in the causation of the two kinds of neurosis entailed correspondingly different therapeutic approaches, namely prophylax ...[[excitation]] and [[object]] representations in the [[unconscious]]. This failure of somatopsychic [[communication]] was caused by [[particular]] [[condition
    7 KB (999 words) - 00:57, 24 May 2019
  • ...rful stimuli of the [[outside]] [[world]] (SE 1, p. 306). The outcome of a failure in this protective contrivance is [[pain]], along with the intrusion of exc ..." of repression remains, for, in contrast with [[hysteria]], "compulsive [[neurosis]]" can arise without symbol-[[formation]] (p. 352). Thus the "proton pseudo
    11 KB (1,638 words) - 17:19, 27 May 2019
  • ...apsychological aspects of character and its relation to [[symptoms]] and [[neurosis]]. ...specifically, the convergence between character and the major concepts of neurosis, [[psychosis]], and borderline [[conditions]].
    9 KB (1,227 words) - 20:06, 27 May 2019
  • ...no mystery other than, concerning the Prefect, an incompetence issuing in failure-were it not perhaps, concerning Dupin, a certain dissonance we hesitate to ...sane stagnation, and that is why he will behave according to the mode of [[neurosis]]. Like the man who withdrew to an island to forget, what? he forgot-so the
    71 KB (12,550 words) - 22:56, 20 May 2019
  • ...ield free for him to deploy his potential, so that his success will be his failure, since the lack of any external obstacle will confront him with the absolut ...being the "small other" (the obstacle which stands for the inconsistency, failure, of the big Other). The analyst who occupies the place of the big Other is
    150 KB (25,356 words) - 02:55, 20 July 2019
  • ...neurosis and psychosis were the rule and that, unlike traditional cases of neurosis and psychosis, they were far from exceptional in everyday practice. ...al" symptoms of obsession, polyphobia, "dissociation reactions", impulsive neurosis, pathological hypochondria, paranoid ideas).
    71 KB (11,547 words) - 02:55, 20 July 2019