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  • ...eloped the [[notion]] that there were degrees of [[consciousness]] ranging from completely unconscious to fully [[conscious]]. A century later, German phil ...mples of misconceptions about [[mental]] [[illness]]. In the Middle Ages [[people]] who were mentally ill were perceived as [[being]] possessed by the devil.
    8 KB (1,127 words) - 23:09, 20 May 2019
  • ...ope]], England, and America. Adler was for a [[time]] the president of the Vienna Psychoanalytic [[Association]] and the editor of its journal. Yet there had ..."No [[experience]] is a [[cause]] of success or failure. We do not suffer from the shock of our experiences—the socalled trauma—but we make out of the
    16 KB (2,497 words) - 23:09, 20 May 2019
  • .... As therapy progresses, childhood feelings and conflicts begin to surface from the unconscious. A patient may unconsciously transfer feelings of love, sex ...ghts or experiences. Freud views resistance as an unconscious process that people use to protect themselves against intolerable anxiety and pain that might r
    23 KB (3,543 words) - 07:18, 12 November 2006
  • ...l]] brought [[about]] a deep [[change]] in him. In April 1908 he visited [[Vienna]] with [[Abraham]] Arden Brill, met [[Sigmund Freud]] for the first [[time] ...ll over the United States. In the meantime, he kept in touch with Freud in Vienna and accompanied Freud when the latter visited the United States to lecture
    9 KB (1,282 words) - 06:43, 24 May 2019
  • <p>Physician and [[psychoanalyst]] Kurt Robert Eissler was [[born]] in [[Vienna]] on June 2, 1908, and died in New York on February 17, 1999.</p> <p>Eissler studied psychology at the [[University]] of Vienna. He took his Ph.D. in 1934 and his M.D. in 1937. After [[training]] at the
    8 KB (1,180 words) - 23:47, 25 May 2019
  • ...d completed his studies at the Gymnasium and entered the [[University]] of Vienna, where he obtained a Ph.D. in [[philosophy]], while also studying [[psychoa ...umgarten, where nearly [[three]] hundred [[Jewish]] [[children]], refugees from [[Poland]], were housed. His first book, published in 1921, examined this s
    6 KB (874 words) - 23:08, 20 May 2019
  • ...in an atmosphere of calm and comparative sensory [[deprivation]] resulted from the [[conditions]] imposed by somnolescent [[suggestion]] and later by the ...and every distracting sensory impression which might divert his attention from his own [[mental]] [[activity]]" (1904a, p. 250). Through the transference,
    11 KB (1,574 words) - 20:52, 23 May 2019
  • ...(1909d), who had been a "sniffer" in his [[childhood]], [[identifying]] [[people]] through their particular odor. In this case study he wonders whether "the ...fixed by heredity, and can occasionally occur without any [[help]] at all from education" (p. 178-179).
    8 KB (1,131 words) - 20:30, 20 May 2019
  • ...in an atmosphere of calm and comparative sensory [[deprivation]] resulted from the [[conditions]] imposed by somnolescent [[suggestion]] and later by the ...and every distracting sensory impression which might divert his attention from his own [[mental]] [[activity]]" (1904a, p. 250). Through the transference,
    11 KB (1,572 words) - 20:54, 23 May 2019
  • Interviewer: This is a sort of [[terrorism]]. One feels violently torn out from oneself. ...forgetting]] something. As Freud formulated it, repression is inseparable from the phenomenon of "the [[return]] of the repressed". Something continues to
    32 KB (5,422 words) - 00:50, 25 May 2019
  • ...isorder common in Freud's [[female]] [[patients]] in turn-of-the-century [[Vienna]], characterized by a grab-bag of somatic [[symptoms]]: limb [[paralysis]], ...e "cathected" and fixated onto various objects. [[Psychic energy]] derived from the sex [[drive]].
    8 KB (1,065 words) - 00:25, 21 May 2019
  • ...first [[phase]] when Freud was [[working]] with [[patients]] [[suffering]] from [[hysteria]], nor with the last phase when Freud was speculating [[about]] ...of the whole. All three are evidence of Freud's attempt to derive the mind from the [[body]].3
    26 KB (4,193 words) - 00:41, 21 May 2019
  • ...to pursue my activities in every way I desired, that I found full support from all concerned in this respect, and that I have not the slightest [[reason]] ...felt to be ambiguous; [[others]] admired his audacity. Eventually, some [[people]] ended up believing that Freud had actually added this sentence to the Naz
    4 KB (686 words) - 08:34, 24 May 2019
  • ...ers proposed his own [[theory]] of a "subliminal" [[subconscious]] derived from his observations of cases of multiple [[personality]] and hysteria. The gro ...ings and a short story by Lytton Strachey was titled "According to Freud." From the members of the Bloomsbury Group came the [[analysts]] [[James]] and Ali
    24 KB (3,589 words) - 08:49, 24 May 2019
  • ...end of the nineteenth century, by Charcot in [[Paris]] and [[Breuer]] in [[Vienna]]. Freud (Charcot's student and Breuer's collaborator) and Janet (Charcot's For Freud, the explanation of the choice of neurosis evolved directly from the theory of neurosis, initially described in 1896. This is expressed clea
    11 KB (1,607 words) - 20:14, 27 May 2019
  • ...s [[seminar]] is intended to maintain that these imaginary incidences, far from representing the [[essence]] of our experience, reveal only what in it rema ...ed in vain, if it served, in your opinion, only to abstract a general type from phenomena whose [[particularity]] in our [[work]] would remain the essentia
    71 KB (12,550 words) - 22:56, 20 May 2019
  • * Lacan is [[discharged]] from military service because of excessive thinness. In the following years he s ...he lecture on [[Joyce]]'s ''[[Ulysses]]'' by Valéry Larbaud with readings from the [[text]], an [[event]] organized by La maison des amis des livres, and
    71 KB (10,839 words) - 20:42, 25 May 2019

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