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  • ...and the Analysis of the Ego]]."<ref>{{F}} ''[[Works of Sigmund Freud|Group Psychology and the Analysis of the Ego]]'', 1921c: SE XVIII, 107</ref> ...the person who is its object."<ref>{{F}} ''[[Works of Sigmund Freud|Group Psychology and the Analysis of the Ego]]'', 1921c: SE XVIII, 107</ref>
    7 KB (1,006 words) - 00:00, 25 May 2019
  • ...m]] [[truth]]s [[about]] the [[psyche]], which implies that [[art|creative writers]] can intuit directly the [[truth]]s which [[psychoanalysts]] only discover =====Psychology of the Artist=====
    9 KB (1,212 words) - 02:13, 24 May 2019
  • ...that the direct application of [[biological]] (or [[nature|ethological]]/[[psychology|psychological]]) [[:category:concepts|concepts]] (such as [[adaptation]]) t ...e basis of purely [[science|biological data]], and argues that [[human]] [[psychology]] is regulated by [[complex]]es rather than by [[instinct]]s.<ref>{{1938}}
    5 KB (700 words) - 23:14, 23 May 2019
  • ...ad, he maintains the supremacy of the religion of the Father. Like Group [[Psychology]] and the Analysis of the Ego (1921c), Civilization and its Discontents beg ...ce description of our relation to culture. Citing a [[number]] of European writers, Freud describes the [[impossibility]] of achieving happiness, the "[[essen
    11 KB (1,706 words) - 20:22, 27 May 2019
  • ...dels based on codes, [[media]], and contexts to explain the [[biology]], [[psychology]], and [[mechanics]] involved. Both disciplines also recognise that the tec ...en recognised throughout much of the [[history]] of [[philosophy]], and in psychology as well. [[Plato]] and [[Aristotle]] both explored the relationship betwee
    60 KB (8,683 words) - 22:58, 20 May 2019
  • ...iatrist]] who co-founded the [[psychoanalysis|psychoanalytic school]] of [[psychology]]. Freud is best known for his theories of the [[unconscious mind]], especi ...] and [[feminist]] theories, [[literary criticism]], [[philosophy]], and [[psychology]]. However, his theories remain controversial and widely disputed.
    78 KB (11,491 words) - 23:08, 20 May 2019
  • ...ls with the ''ways'' that [[meaning]] is constructed and [[understood]] by writers, [[texts]], and readers. One way of [[understanding]] the term is that it i ...to [[summary]]. On the [[other]] hand, there is a [[cottage industry]] of writers of variably [[explicit]] sympathy or antipathy to deconstruction (however t
    50 KB (7,273 words) - 21:41, 27 May 2019
  • ...ized as [[Christian existentialism]] and [[Existential therapy|existential psychology]]. Since he wrote most of his early work under various [[pseudonyms]], and ...us on a critique of [[Georg Hegel]] and [[form]] a basis for [[existential psychology]]. ''[[Philosophical Fragments]]'', ''[[The Concept of Dread]]'', and ''[[
    46 KB (7,030 words) - 00:20, 21 May 2019
  • ...s discovery in [[concepts]] borrowed from [[biology]], mechanics and the [[psychology]] of his day. Marx [[thought]] his discovery using [[Hegelian]] notions of existentialism remained within Cartesianism. Its psychology tended to portray the individual as a [[rational]], [[conscious]] actor who
    68 KB (11,086 words) - 00:02, 26 May 2019
  • Abram Kardiner (1977) and Ruth Benedict (1935), writers on culture and [[psychoanalysis]], would later make use of Freud's interest [[Category:Freudian psychology]]
    10 KB (1,463 words) - 20:22, 27 May 2019
  • it, most Slovene writers now are, in no uncertain [[terms]], [[right]]-wing literally Lacan's dictum that psychoanalysis is not [[psychology]], that the
    63 KB (10,146 words) - 21:35, 20 May 2019
  • ...that all the aesthetic [[pleasure]] we gain from the works of imaginative writers is of the same type as the "fore-pleasure," and that the [[true]] [[enjoyme ...Yet this does not echo the [[balance]] of forces in the same universities' psychology departments, where the [[situation]] is almost opposite.
    9 KB (1,246 words) - 01:07, 26 May 2019
  • ...ies of [[philosophers]] (Theodor Vischer, Kuno Fischer, Theodor Lipps) and writers (Jean [[Paul]], Heinrich Heine, Georg Licthenberg), and gives examples from ...e of [[ideas]] developed earlier in the [[Project]] for a [[Scientific]] [[Psychology]] (1950c [1895]). The [[distinction]] between jokes and the comic allowed F
    5 KB (684 words) - 21:17, 25 May 2019
  • Analytical [[Psychology]] ([[Jung]]) Analytical psychology
    48 KB (5,452 words) - 20:34, 20 May 2019
  • ...st"; Death and psychoanalysis; Dream and myth; [[Drive]]/instinct; Group [[psychology]] and the [[analysis]] of the ego; [[History]] and psychoanalysis; Mytholog * Abraham, Karl. (1913). Dreams and myths: A study in race psychology (William A. White, Trans.). New York: Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease
    7 KB (917 words) - 19:43, 20 May 2019
  • ...es that greatly influenced the French intelligentsia. At the lectures were writers like Raymond Queneau, [[Jean Hyppolite]] (the translator into French of Heg Aga~nst ego-[[psychology]]
    85 KB (14,185 words) - 08:43, 24 August 2022
  • .... Examples include <i>[[Totem]] and [[Taboo]]</i> (1912-1913a), <i>Group [[Psychology]] and the Analysis of the Ego</i> (1921c), "The Acquisition and [[Control]] ...out that an author's [[neurosis]] does not explain his work. In "Creative Writers and Day-dreaming" (1908e [1907]), Freud shifted his focus to the question o
    14 KB (2,013 words) - 18:40, 27 May 2019
  • ...el [[Foucault]], the reinterpreter of [[Marxism]] Louis [[Althusser]], the writers for the periodical Tel Quel, the [[literary]] critic Roland [[Barthes]], an ...]. By way of contrast, Jean Piaget, in his article "La [[psychologie]]" ([[Psychology]]; 1972), characterizes psychoanalysis as a "[[complete]] reductionism" ins
    8 KB (1,182 words) - 23:56, 20 May 2019
  • ...], and [[full]] of [[conflict]]. [[Freud]], [[Lacan]], and a few [[other]] writers assuming a [[psychoanalytic]] viewpoint persistently situated themselves in ...s distinct from [[biology]] and [[psychology]], metapsychology refers to a psychology that runs up against the unconscious. Freud did not hesitate to apply such
    14 KB (1,873 words) - 21:02, 20 May 2019
  • ...] [[Psychology]]</i>: "In this 'Project' the [[intention]] is to furnish a psychology that shall be a [[natural]] science: that is, to [[represent]] [[psychical] ...er]] view, which held that the psychical is unconscious in itself, enabled psychology to take its [[place]] as a [[natural science]] like any other. The processe
    8 KB (1,224 words) - 22:40, 20 May 2019
  • ...reality, that there was no one-toone correlation between [[biology]] and [[psychology]]. Men and women are not physically or socially "made" as [[male]] or femal ...ing patriarchal inequalities. Nancy Chodorow is one of the most well-known writers in the United States on the relationship between psychoanalysis and feminis
    14 KB (2,156 words) - 07:20, 24 May 2019
  • ...cognitivist and neurobiological (see, "[[Project]] for a [[Scientific]] [[Psychology]]," 1950c [1895]) and an "[[event]]-driven" [[traumatic]] conception of neu It could be said that, since Freud, all writers on psychoanalysis have tried to enrich the notion of psychic causality with
    11 KB (1,522 words) - 21:31, 20 May 2019
  • ...dically new '[[linguistic]] turn' in Lacan's work. On the other hand, some writers go to the other extreme and present Lacan's work as a single unfolding [[na ...[Psycho]]-Analytical [[Association]]', '[[school]]', '[[seminar]]', 'ego [[psychology]]'). These entries then refer the reader to more complex terms, which are p
    20 KB (3,089 words) - 18:08, 27 May 2019
  • ...psychoanalysis]], despite the abundant [[literature]] on the topic by such writers as Jean-Martin Charcot, Valentin Magnan, Richard von Krafft-Ebing, Albert M ...] position; Persecution; Perversion; [[Phallic]] mother; [[Projection]]; [[Psychology]] of Women, The: A Psychoanalytic [[Interpretation]], Psycho-pathologie de
    9 KB (1,274 words) - 23:39, 24 May 2019
  • ...nd Parricide" (1928), several of Freud’s contemporaries as well as later writers produced studies of literary figures and literary works that established el ...y on Freud’s theoretical relation of the poet to the dreamer ( "Creative Writers and Day-dreaming," 1908) and translated backwards from literature to uncons
    15 KB (2,226 words) - 04:51, 13 July 2006
  • Beginning in the mid-1950s with the [[work]] of the Cahiers du cinéma writers the [[notion]] of film authorship gained wide critical currency (see, e.g. ...during the 1950s; part 2 deals with methodological approaches, including [[psychology]], sociology, semiotics, and psychoanalysis; and part 3, which he refers to
    38 KB (5,523 words) - 07:26, 24 May 2019
  • ...ce Doane and Devon Hodges describe the evolution of [[object-relations]] [[psychology]] running from Klein through D. W. [[Winnicott]] to Kristeva as an increasi ...e in Holland’s [[Guide]] to Psychoanalytic Psychology and Literature and Psychology (1990).
    19 KB (2,756 words) - 21:59, 20 May 2019
  • ...system of [[knowledge]], has made use of (and criticised) [[ethology]], [[psychology]], [[philosophy]], [[linguistics]], [[logic]] and [[mathematics]]. He has p ...aspects tend to stress Lacan's [[antagonism]] to humanistic philosophy and psychology, disciplines that treat man as an actor who wills his [[action]]. In contra
    26 KB (4,193 words) - 00:41, 21 May 2019
  • ...]]/bad object; [[Child Analysis|Child analysis]]; [[Childhood]]; "Creative Writers and Day-Dreaming"; Creativity; [[Fantasy]] (reverie); [[Fort-Da]]; [[Humor] * ——. (1908e). Creative writers and day-dreaming. SE, 9: 141-153.
    6 KB (864 words) - 20:12, 27 May 2019
  • ...interest areas. The group is open to the postgraduates across humanities, writers, artists, and academics interested in Lacan and his theories. Lacan Reading artists and writers and a guestbook
    65 KB (9,479 words) - 15:34, 13 March 2023
  • ...uring this period, he was [[active]] in the busy [[Paris]]ian world of the writers, artists and intellectuals who made up the [[surrealism|surrealist movement ...e he became well known for his work in establishing the programme of [[ego-psychology]]. -->
    51 KB (8,172 words) - 00:52, 25 May 2019
  • ...ue of Psychoanalysis]. ''These essays, by some of the finest analysts and writers in the Lacanian psychoanalytic world in Paris today, carefully lay out the '''Bruce Fink '''is a Lacanian Psychoanalyst and Associate Professor of Psychology at Duquesne University. '''Maire Jaanus '''is Professor of English at Bar
    3 KB (433 words) - 00:15, 15 July 2019
  • The relationship between literature and psychology is long and richly complex, and no more so than in the work of Jacques Laca ...Other essays examine Lacan’s theories in conjunction with works of major writers such as Samuel Beckett. The book concludes with essays that investigate Lac
    2 KB (229 words) - 00:15, 15 July 2019
  • ...and "pathological" narcissism is indelibly marked by the tradition of ego-psychology, because the notion of "normal narcissism" is based on the "strong" Ego cap ..., at this level, has been described in terms of the "Third Wave" theory of writers such as Toffler. Now we can finally return to the key issue of the relation
    71 KB (11,547 words) - 02:55, 20 July 2019