Search results

Jump to: navigation, search

Google site results

Loading...

Wiki results

Page title matches

  • ...the popularization of [[Sigmund Freud]]'s [[work]] in [[psychoanalysis]], repression is popularly known to be a common [[defense mechanism]]. ...ession]], which is entirely [[conscious]] and thus can be managed. Because repression is unconscious, it manifests itself through a [[symptom]] or series of [[sy
    4 KB (641 words) - 20:58, 23 May 2019

Page text matches

  • ..., complete satisfaction. The primary effect of the [[signifier]] is the [[repression]] of [[the thing]] where we suppose [[full]] ''jouissance'' to be. Once th ...ngle, ''jouissance'' is produced as the excess of repression; without this repression, there can be no jouissance (''LN'': 308). This is why ''jouissance'' canno
    36 KB (5,474 words) - 04:45, 29 July 2021
  • ...us wish — indestructible, [[infantile]] in its origins, the product of [[repression]], permanently insisting in reaching fulfilment through the dream and the o ...a [[normative]] organization, rather than a more or less typical set of [[psychological]] manifestations.
    27 KB (4,091 words) - 21:55, 27 May 2019
  • ...oanalysis; [[Oedipus]] complex; Omnipotence of [[thoughts]]; [[Organic]] [[repression]]; ; Phylogenesis; Phylogenetic [[Fantasy]], A: [[Overview]] of the [[Trans ...re ''cree'' behind which lies [[instinctual]] [[repression (psychological)|repression]].
    10 KB (1,396 words) - 02:41, 21 May 2019
  • ...the application of this technique, every [[dream]] will reveal itself as a psychological [[structure]], [[full]] of [[significance]], and one which may be assigned ...f as much a [[self]]-conscious attempt at [[literary]] analysis as it is a psychological study. Freud here also first discusses what would later become the theory o
    7 KB (1,079 words) - 00:46, 21 May 2019
  • ...nd]], especially involving the [[mechanism]] of [[Psychological repression|repression]]; his redefinition of [[sexual desire]] as mobile and directed towards a w .... In other words, the unconscious was for Freud both a cause and effect of repression.
    78 KB (11,491 words) - 23:08, 20 May 2019
  • ...the inability to comprehend what is taking place. This event then leaves a psychological scar in [[The Subject|the subject]]'s [[unconscious]] that will resurface i ...tion of what is repressed. For Freud there can be no unconscious without [[repression]], but what exactly is it that is repressed: words, images, [[feelings]]? T
    33 KB (5,457 words) - 20:48, 25 May 2019
  • ...struggles. In sex, the effectively hegemonic attitude is not patriarchal [[repression]], but free promiscuity; in art, provocations in the style of the [[notorio ...]]; on the contrary, in all probability, the policeman was — as to his [[psychological]] stance — a standard racist. What triumphed here was simply his "superfi
    164 KB (26,048 words) - 22:09, 20 May 2019
  • ...r: at the same time it fascinates you and repels you. Let's not forget the psychological cliche of Japan: you smile, but you never know if it is sincere or if you a ...there was an extraordinary session of the Central Committee. Okay, this is repression, but what I like about it is that the communist power took the potential, d
    29 KB (5,034 words) - 05:05, 22 May 2006
  • ...des is the mythical starting point of unbridled fullness whose "primordial repression" constitutes the symbolic order.<br><br> ...l the standard claim that a woman who actively participates in patriarchal repression (by way of following the male ideals of feminine beauty, focusing her life
    32 KB (5,329 words) - 03:33, 21 May 2019
  • ...ong in which the delinquents provide the amazed policeman with the socio-[[psychological]] explanation of their attitude: they are victims of disadvantageous social ...out the liberating potential of the unconscious impulses which resist the "repression" of the Authority to which we submit consciously: the Master is unconscious
    28 KB (4,340 words) - 08:08, 24 May 2019
  • ...struggles. In sex, the effectively hegemonic attitude is not patriarchal [[repression]] but free promiscuity; in art, provocations in the style of the notorious ...we live in times of universalized [[perversion]], that the [[concept]] of repression is of no use in our permissive times. The Third Way ideology and political
    75 KB (11,848 words) - 17:15, 27 May 2019
  • ...turned back to front. Public order is no longer maintained by hierarchy, [[repression]] and strict regulation, and therefore is no longer subverted by liberating ...power mechanisms and procedures become 'reflexively' eroticised: although repression first emerges as an attempt to regulate any [[desire]] considered 'illicit'
    27 KB (4,340 words) - 03:40, 21 May 2019
  • ...ion that transposes the external network of social relations into inherent psychological features. One is even tempted to say that the flashback chapter on the preh ...e Woman) is "primordially repressed," and what we get in the place of this repression, what fills in its gap, is the multitude of the "returns of the repressed,"
    214 KB (35,802 words) - 14:38, 12 November 2006
  • ...is filled by somebody or something else. /.../ if those who suffer inhuman repression are unable to enact Human Rights that are their last recourse, then somebod ...[[identifying]] two modes of their intersection? We all [[know]] the pop-[[psychological]] notion of the "[[passive aggressivity|passive-aggressive behavior]]," usu
    25 KB (3,745 words) - 01:55, 21 May 2019
  • ...military homophobia should therefore not focus primarily on the explicit [[repression]] of homosexuality; it should rather "move the underground," disturb the im ...n direct brutal infliction of [[pain]], while the US soldiers focused on [[psychological]] [[humiliation]]. Furthermore, recording the humiliation with a camera, wi
    33 KB (5,457 words) - 19:38, 20 May 2019
  • ...turned back to front. Public order is no longer maintained by hierarchy, [[repression]] and strict regulation, and therefore is no longer subverted by liberating ...power mechanisms and procedures become 'reflexively' eroticised: although repression first emerges as an attempt to regulate any [[desire]] considered 'illicit'
    27 KB (4,379 words) - 03:41, 21 May 2019
  • ...the same [[time]] it fascinates you and repels you. Let's not forget the [[psychological]] cliche of Japan: you smile, but you never know if it is sincere or if you ...was an extraordinary [[session]] of the Central Committee. Okay, this is [[repression]], but what I like about it is that the [[communist]] power took the potent
    30 KB (5,061 words) - 22:00, 20 May 2019
  • the Central Committee. Okay, this is [[repression]], but what I like about it is you and repels you. Let's not forget the [[psychological]] cliche of Japan: you
    32 KB (5,235 words) - 20:21, 27 May 2019
  • ...rties, your [[personality]] in the sense of your personal features, your [[psychological]] properties. But only when you are deprived of all your positive [[content ...is [[dreams]] in a perverse scenario, not because he or she is afraid of [[repression]] or the law, but because he always has this doubt: I can do this, but what
    15 KB (2,505 words) - 23:50, 24 May 2019
  • Thus, [[real]] and fantasized transgression is at the heart of all [[psychological]] mechanisms, as the result, or source, of a [[conflict]]. We also [[encoun Transgression can be found everywhere in the milieu of the unconscious. Psychological functioning is based on the way conflicts between different [[agencies]] ar
    12 KB (1,739 words) - 02:47, 21 May 2019
  • ...[[sexual]] [[freedom]], merely arguing that his own culture took sexual [[repression]] too far, wider circles have treated him as a liberator of sexual expressi
    9 KB (1,246 words) - 01:07, 26 May 2019
  • ...morality and the socioeconomic [[structures]] that produced it. As sexual repression was the [[cause]] of the [[Neurosis|neuroses]], the best [[cure]] would be ...s]] when they came to [[power]]. Reich was expelled from the International Psychological Association in 1934 for [[political]] militancy. German newspapers started
    39 KB (5,735 words) - 03:29, 21 May 2019
  • ...ity]]"; marital fidelity was supposed to express pathological [[sexual]] [[repression]]; following [[Benjamin]]'s motto on how every document of [[culture]] is a ...ign of mental illness: Christian [[self]]-[[denial]] and especially sexual repression caused [[hatred]] of Jews. The Frankfurt school was enthusiastic [[about]]
    82 KB (13,178 words) - 17:18, 27 May 2019
  • ...coming the internal [[resistances]]" (1905a, p. 267); analysis "replaces [[repression]] by condemnation" (1909b, p. 145); the patient must "make the advance from ...nt, adding that "The business of analysis is to secure the best possible [[psychological]] [[conditions]] for the functions of the ego; with that it has [[discharge
    8 KB (1,195 words) - 21:17, 27 May 2019
  • ...he term is also and especially discussed in [[terms]] of [[fantasy]] and [[psychological]] [[conflict]]. ...the parent of the opposite sex (the "positive" [[oedipal]] complex) and [[repression]] of that desire. The [[theory]] was put forth in [[Three]] Essays on the T
    4 KB (574 words) - 00:22, 25 May 2019
  • ...tual, [[moral]], and artistic activities of human beings, there are also [[psychological]] conditions that are independent of the former. ...e of [[environment]] and social [[reality]]. Social psychology studies the psychological characteristics shared by members of a group and the group's [[instinctual]
    6 KB (884 words) - 19:10, 20 May 2019
  • ...the popularization of [[Sigmund Freud]]'s [[work]] in [[psychoanalysis]], repression is popularly known to be a common [[defense mechanism]]. ...ession]], which is entirely [[conscious]] and thus can be managed. Because repression is unconscious, it manifests itself through a [[symptom]] or series of [[sy
    4 KB (641 words) - 20:58, 23 May 2019
  • :''The following article is [[about]] the [[defense]] [[mechanism]] as a [[psychological]] [[concept]]. Since her [[time]] researchers have [[identified]] many more * [[Psychological repression|Repression]]. The process of pulling thoughts into the unconscious and preventing pain
    18 KB (2,618 words) - 21:44, 27 May 2019
  • ...lude e.g. motor skills - but rather, only what is actively [[psychological repression|repressed]] from conscious [[thought]]. ...d painful emotions put out of mind by the [[mechanism]] of [[psychological repression]]. However, the [[contents]] did not necessarily have to be solely [[negati
    10 KB (1,380 words) - 02:59, 21 May 2019
  • ...scow <i>Nomenklatura</i> sided with the rank and file, who complained of [[repression]] by the regional elites. In 1937 Stalin openly mobilized the 'party masses ...of the Western Communist observers to perceive this hypocrisy as a true [[psychological]] fact about the accused. In a letter to [[Benjamin]] from 1938, [[Adorno]]
    60 KB (9,765 words) - 23:51, 20 May 2019
  • ...dynamics of melancholia is that he does not specify the variations in the psychological mechanisms corresponding to the different degrees of depressive states. ...are limited, but are not qualitatively affected. This very narrow form of repression is often insufficient, and the ego also has to resort to maniacal defenses
    6 KB (871 words) - 21:52, 27 May 2019
  • ...[[idea]] of a pathological nervous state; in Nancy, on that of a link or [[psychological]] influence that was not necessarily pathological. ...]] [[Henri Bergson]] to prove the [[existence]] of unconscious ideas and a psychological unconscious. Freud the [[psychoanalyst]] undoubtedly emerged from this plet
    8 KB (1,103 words) - 23:48, 24 May 2019
  • [[Psychological]] types Organic [[repression]]
    48 KB (5,452 words) - 20:34, 20 May 2019
  • ...his [[defense]] that "no longer [has] any resemblance to the process of '[[repression]]"' (p. 164). Thus the obsessive ceremony strives not only to prevent the [ ...cter]] of the defense, from the series of mechanisms discovered by Freud—repression, [[foreclosure]], [[negation]] (or denegation), [[disavowal]] (or [[denial]
    4 KB (558 words) - 03:00, 21 May 2019
  • ...c ones and to strive for perfection. The superego works off the basis of [[psychological]] rewards and punishments. If a person responds in the "right" manner, the ...s. His classic example is the patient [[Anna O]]., who displayed a rash of psychological and [[physiological]] [[symptoms]]: assorted paralyses, [[hysterical]] squi
    32 KB (4,984 words) - 23:10, 20 May 2019
  • ...ed by a [[number]] of [[other]] theorists, resulting in a splintering of [[psychological]] [[thought]]. ...ation of mechanisms, drives, or [[dynamic]] parts. And in contrast to most psychological [[thinking]] of the time, Adler believed that human beings are fundamentall
    16 KB (2,497 words) - 23:09, 20 May 2019
  • ...the meaning of the dreams are recognized, it helps the patient unlock the repression that has kept the material hidden and allows the patient new potential to d ...nce that unconscious processes of cognition exist. Defense mechanisms like repression and denial against emotions that are unpleasant are well documented as real
    23 KB (3,543 words) - 07:18, 12 November 2006
  • ...signified, from language to meaning, or from human [[behaviour]] to its [[psychological]] [[significance]]. The bar between signifier and signified is described by ...nd our symptoms. But it is always speaking in the face of censorship and [[repression]]. For Lac~n, Freud's essential insight was not that the unconscious exist~
    85 KB (14,185 words) - 08:43, 24 August 2022
  • Now this "alienation" "constitutes" a form of "[[repression]]" in the subject. How? We know that the [[dynamic]] thrust that initially ...d "[[primal]]" (Urverdrangung) (1977, p. 286/690). It should be noted that repression in this sense also constitutes a "[[splitting]]" of the subject between the
    49 KB (8,036 words) - 00:54, 21 May 2019
  • [[Psychology/psychological, 28, 35, 52, 59,76,81,110,115,131,145,151, 156, 173, 181, 182, 185, 192, 19 [[RepreSSIOn, 40, 138, 139, 148, 192, 196,204,205,220,228,242,245, 247,248,254,325-327,3
    29 KB (1,304 words) - 00:00, 26 May 2019
  • ...and in Pierre Janet's [[work]], in which the concept of a deficiency of [[psychological]] [[synthesis]] plays an important [[role]]. Freud and [[Breuer]] [[return] However, the splitting mentioned here goes back to [[neurotic]] [[repression]]. Now, Freud, writes, "There is, however, a much more energetic and succes
    6 KB (852 words) - 23:48, 20 May 2019
  • ...sciousness]] (René [[Descartes]], Franz Brentano), with the result that [[psychological]] investigation overlooked the unconscious. These philosophers misunderstoo ...and the [[Oedipal]] [[structure]], [[transference]], [[resistance]], and [[repression]]. This same content can be grasped a posteriori in fundamental [[concepts]
    14 KB (1,873 words) - 21:02, 20 May 2019
  • ...butions that psychoanalysis could make to all the previously constituted [[psychological]] and social [[sciences]], the [[unconscious]] often playing a [[role]] of ...oups, as well as on the organizational imaginary and on the processes of [[repression]], suppression, and [[idealization]] at work in organizations. In South Ame
    8 KB (1,056 words) - 23:25, 23 May 2019
  • ...idea of obsessive actions, which are among the defenses and result from [[repression]]. Freud cited ceremonials associated with the [[anal]] zone and with [[inf ...written in 1923, Freud presented this study in a broad context: "If the [[psychological]] discoveries gained from the study of [[dreams]] were firmly kept in view,
    9 KB (1,303 words) - 22:20, 20 May 2019
  • ...sychological]] investigations [[Freud]] explored the interface between the psychological and the [[physical]], a context in which a "sum of excitation" had the foll ...or "amount of affect"; the fate of the sum of excitation in the event of [[repression]] was somatic innervation in the shape of hysterical conversion, and in the
    4 KB (538 words) - 00:06, 21 May 2019
  • ...several [[linguistic]] [[categories]]. The test was used to [[diagnose]] [[psychological]] typology and [[psychopathology]]. ...e called these clusters [[complexes]]. Jung used [[Freud]]'s theories of [[repression]] to account for the [[autonomous]] [[nature]] of complexes. Freud praised
    4 KB (504 words) - 03:34, 21 May 2019
  • ...c]] organization, notably those of the choice of neurosis and pathological repression (Sulloway, 1979). The same Lamarckian and biogenetic model of [[human]] [[d ...shed, in the course of which Freud perfected complementary theories, one [[psychological]] and the [[other]] organo-phylogenetic. The [[instincts]] rooted in phylog
    8 KB (1,131 words) - 20:30, 20 May 2019
  • ...ot feel ourselves to be there when we're face to face with a person with [[psychological]] difficulties, a timid person, for example, or an [[obsessional]]. Their c REPRESSION OF TRUTH
    32 KB (5,422 words) - 00:50, 25 May 2019
  • ** ''[[Complete]] [[Psychological]] Works'', [[Dora]] (1905) ** ''Complete Psychological Works'', [[Totem]] and [[Taboo]] (1905)
    16 KB (2,279 words) - 23:10, 20 May 2019
  • ...here one is unaware that one has forgotten), forgetting is the result of [[repression]]. The forgotten name inhabits the [[preconscious]] and quickly returns to ...uses the example of forgetting because it was one way of talking [[about]] repression before 1900. Forgetting appears in his first theory of neuroses, which expl
    7 KB (1,031 words) - 07:38, 24 May 2019

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