Search results

Jump to: navigation, search

Google site results

Loading...

Wiki results

  • ...he research, which was revolutionary at a certain moment in the nineteenth century, of Krafft-Ebing with his monumental <i>Psychopathia Sexualis, </i>or also ...sm lost in a history to which reference has been made since the nineteenth century with the expectation of restoring, beyond [[Hegel]], [[Kierkegaard]] and [[
    37 KB (6,746 words) - 00:49, 21 May 2019
  • ...beginning in the late nineteenth century. Between the last decades of that century and with the [[global]] [[economic]] crisis of 1930, the country experience
    584 bytes (79 words) - 02:12, 24 May 2019
  • Late nineteenth-century psychologists (Alfred Binet in [[France]], the Würzburg [[school]] in [[Ge
    649 bytes (88 words) - 01:00, 25 May 2019
  • ...iess]], but Freud used it in the general [[sense]] used by late-nineteenth-century authors who began to take an interest in human sexuality, particularly Albe
    10 KB (1,338 words) - 00:53, 26 May 2019
  • ...the [[subject]]'s vitality had been sapped. In eighteenth- and nineteenth-century medical [[practice]], this...
    729 bytes (97 words) - 10:20, 1 June 2019
  • Charles [[Darwin]] and evolutionist sociologists of the nineteenth century used a term of Tartar origin, "[[primitive]] [[horde]]," to refer to the si
    9 KB (1,380 words) - 21:23, 20 May 2019
  • ...is]]''1940a [1938]). It was borrowed from the [[vocabulary]] of nineteenth-century psychologists who were seeking to accord to [[animal]] and [[human]] [[ment
    747 bytes (100 words) - 21:31, 20 May 2019
  • ...e]] [[stages]] of childhood and four of adulthood. In the mid-[[eighteenth century]] [[Jean Jacques Rousseau]] described three stages of childhood: ''[[infans In the late [[nineteenth century]], psychologists familiar with the [[evolutionary theory]] of [[Charles Dar
    30 KB (4,341 words) - 22:03, 27 May 2019
  • ...of [[Oscar Wilde]]. Also, many characters in [[Fyodor Dostoevsky]]'s (19th-Century Russian Writer) writings are lonely Narcissus-types, such as Yakov Petrovic ...967). ''The Narcissus Theme in Western [[Literature]] up to the Nineteenth Century''. (The classic in-depth study).
    7 KB (1,089 words) - 19:50, 20 May 2019
  • ...nship relations between siblings and the exogamous clan. In the nineteenth century, British anthropologists suggested that totemism, characterized by the [[ex
    7 KB (1,010 words) - 02:41, 21 May 2019
  • ...d to do away with what magnetizers called "rapport." In the mid-nineteenth century, the [[English]] physiologist William Carpenter provided scientific support ...return]] of forgotten memories were published at the end of the nineteenth century.
    8 KB (1,103 words) - 23:48, 24 May 2019
  • Until the fifth century BCE, the Greek word mythos was a synonym for [[logos]] (word). With Pindar ..., they helped move the study of myths from the [[impasse]] that nineteenth-century authors had become stuck in. Claude Lévi-[[Strauss]] saw myths as books wi
    7 KB (917 words) - 19:43, 20 May 2019
  • ...o made it popular. Given the work by [[other]] theorists in the nineteenth century, it is not surprising that Freud's concept of mind, especially the unconsci
    32 KB (4,984 words) - 23:10, 20 May 2019
  • ...ded [[Freud]] but had contact with him in the later part of the nineteenth century, also speculated about the unconscious. Fechner conceived the classic illus ..." were often executed. Over [[time]] this view softened. By the eighteenth century, mental illness came to be viewed more as [[irrational]] [[behavior]]. Ment
    8 KB (1,127 words) - 23:09, 20 May 2019
  • ...n be made that virtually every major psychological theory of the twentieth century was either a hybrid of or a reaction to psychoanalysis. Even staunch behavi ...and geographical location, but it is also influenced by a late nineteenth century [[society]] that was Victorian in manner, which manifested as sexually [[re
    16 KB (2,497 words) - 23:09, 20 May 2019
  • ...ept of splitting as defined by [[Freud]]. They are found in the nineteenth century in relation to [[hysteria]] and [[hypnosis]] (splitting of the [[personalit
    6 KB (852 words) - 23:48, 20 May 2019
  • ...the experiment. This view of science, which was dominant in the nineteenth century, characterizes a [[form]] of [[rational]] experimentalism that gradually re
    8 KB (1,224 words) - 22:40, 20 May 2019
  • ...irst appeared in the [[psychiatric]] [[literature]] of the late nineteenth century (Karl Westphal, in 1872, cited [[agoraphobia]]); [[French]] psychiatrists a
    12 KB (1,719 words) - 21:03, 20 May 2019
  • ...nce]] on the primacy of consciousness in the human mind. In the nineteenth century, after Georg Wilhelm Friedrich [[Hegel]]'s [[work]] but before that of Edmu Finally, this notion is found in the work of Ludovic Dugas, a late-nineteenth-century semiologist. Drawing from the work of Hippolyte Taine and Théodule Ribot,
    8 KB (1,114 words) - 22:47, 20 May 2019
  • [[Charles Darwin]] and evolutionist sociologists of the nineteenth century used a term of Tartar origin, "[[primitive horde]]," to refer to the simple
    9 KB (1,326 words) - 21:23, 20 May 2019

View (previous 20 | next 20) (20 | 50 | 100 | 250 | 500)