We learn from psychoanalysis that some part of our mind always knows or is perpetually in danger of knowing. |
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Treatment approaches have included traditional psychoanalysis, hypnosis, and behavior therapy techniques. |
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In formal psychoanalysis, you lie on a couch and the therapist sits unseen behind you. |
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The characters talk about psychoanalysis, dream study, mind-altering drugs, and sexual affairs with an almost textbook distance and passivity. |
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From the 1930s until the 1950s, psychoanalysis was oversold, especially in the United States. |
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Freud usually claimed that psychoanalysis was a treatment in which direct influence and suggestion played little part. |
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While the recreations adequately portray the father of psychoanalysis they cannot make him likable. |
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Barbanel is a fellow of APA and a diplomate of the American Board of Professional Psychology in psychoanalysis. |
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This openness has also been why psychoanalysis has often been dismissed as not sufficiently empiricist or objective in its methods. |
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The endlessly announced death, disproof and fraudulence of psychoanalysis is not merely the sport of bigots. |
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At the very least, psychoanalysis deserves informed critical examination rather than simple dismissal. |
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This categorisation has to be seen in the context of the place of telepathy and the occult in psychoanalysis. |
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But his treatment was progressive, stressing what he called autognosis or self-understanding through conversation, hypnosis and psychoanalysis. |
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To put it controversially, psychoanalysis must lull the patient into a false sense of security. |
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The spirit of psychoanalysis is not confined to the skin, flesh, bones and marrow of psychoanalysis, but it is also not apart from them. |
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Both are laudable aims, and both may be partially realized in the course of psychoanalysis. |
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After his chess career ended, Fine became an exponent of Freudian psychoanalysis, authoring important works in the field. |
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Evil cannot always be repelled by incantation, by demonstrations, by social analysis or by psychoanalysis. |
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Mack has embraced traditions from Freudian psychoanalysis to the guided meditation of Werner Erhard. |
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Chris Brand has a review of Freudianism and psychoanalysis in which he gives a good short history of it. |
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In order to address them, she transcends her work as historian, marshalling arguments from psychoanalysis, sociology and cultural anthropology. |
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The rise of psychoanalysis did much to validate the contents of mental symptoms, including delusions. |
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One profession deals with the conundrums of the human psyche through talking therapies like psychoanalysis or cognitive behavioural therapy. |
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However, not all of the surrealists saw psychoanalysis and the liberation of the human mind as an end in itself. |
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Predictably, Kipling railed against most aspects of modernity, such as jazz and psychoanalysis. |
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The need for continued research into the affinity for what is unalive is still an important task for students of psychoanalysis and psychiatry. |
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The dancing is ace, but if psychoanalysis isn't your bowl of chutney, bring along a brainy friend to guide you through those pesky talky bits. |
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Talking treatments include counselling, behavioural therapy, cognitive therapy, group therapy and psychoanalysis. |
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As well as being the father of psychoanalysis, Freud might also be considered one of the founders of neuropsychology. |
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The Viennese have contributed medical innovations such as antisepsis and new therapies such as psychoanalysis to the world. |
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Thus it is in opposition to the other that psychoanalysis has conceptualised the self to emerge. |
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Structuralism, semiotics, and later, psychoanalysis were all ransacked for help in understanding how a film achieved its effects. |
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By making us aware of the origins of our unhealthy behaviour, psychoanalysis helps us to adapt to external reality. |
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The concept most fundamental to psychoanalysis is that of the unconscious mind. |
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His parents tried all avenues of speech therapy, hypnotherapy and psychoanalysis to no avail. |
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To discover what psychoanalysis is, the patient needs to experience it for himself from within. |
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Elektra does, however, anticipate not only psychoanalysis, but other developments in psychiatry. |
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In Australia Freudian psychoanalysis has remained on the edge of medical power. |
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Freud once argued that the aim of psychoanalysis was to reduce extreme hysteria to everyday common misery. |
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Thus, psychoanalysis became a technique of helping the patient to help him or herself. |
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Freud invented a therapeutic setting, called psychoanalysis, in which this self could be overheard. |
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Over recent decades psychoanalysis has moved from a focus on the object to a search for the subject. |
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Evil cannot always be repelled by incantations, by demonstrations, by social analysis or by psychoanalysis. |
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First, psychoanalysis provides insight into the meaning of the reversal of the gender roles in the plays. |
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The advantages of psychoanalysis are primarily that it hasn't shied away from studying the mind as it is, as we live it. |
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Habermas follows Alfred Lorenzer, who treats psychoanalysis as a form of linguistic analysis. |
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The first is how psychoanalysis, if it is a myth, can solve psychological problems. |
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Now I guess in Jungian depth psychology and in psychoanalysis, the unconscious figures fairly dominantly. |
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As psychoanalysis has taught us in its methodology of disinterested attention, only after all the tracks have been laid down may one begin to evaluate them. |
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When I was in North America the dominant psychological therapy was psychoanalysis and derived from that was psychodynamically oriented psychotherapy. |
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Its mission is to assure the continued vigour and development of psychoanalysis. |
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All of this, however, is and will be possible only through a free psychoanalysis that in principle is not subsumed to any other discipline. |
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I recommend an extensive course of psychoanalysis and lots of happy pills. |
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Surrealism is based on the world of dreams and the subconscious, thereby linking it with Sigmund Freud's psychoanalysis. |
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In addition, recognizing the growing influence of psychoanalysis and social psychology, they enlisted the new prestige of those disciplines in order to make their case. |
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This is the world of neurotics in which psychoanalysis is involved. |
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And since psychoanalysis was not regulated by other means, it can be considered a free and non protected profession. |
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That is a haunting condition: it may help to explain why psychoanalysis and the nostalgia-ridden tango are so popular in Argentina. |
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A new generation of psychiatrists dismissed psychoanalysis as being as dated as Marxism. |
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Classes in yoga, ballet and bridge run alongside workshops in kosher cooking and psychoanalysis and Judaism. |
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Then are Freud's works to be burnt to ashes and an end be put to psychoanalysis? |
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Any psychoanalysis leaves an individual transformed, with a different sense of self. |
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This chapter explores the role psychoanalysis can play in deepening understanding of the interaction of culture and the individual. |
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But I thought foolishly that Freudian psychoanalysis was deeper and more intensive than other, more directive forms of therapy, so I was trained in it and practiced it. |
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But I think Popper may have wanted to find out criteria of demarcation between science and such pseudosciences as astrology and Freudian psychoanalysis. |
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Freud thought psychoanalysis was all you needed for the healthy soul. |
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For example, dialectical behaviour therapy, classic psychoanalysis and analytically oriented psychotherapy are employed. |
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In the early twentieth century, Sigmund Freud's psychoanalysis was in the ascendant and raised subjects that could be depicted in films too. |
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The Mental Health Trust Fund is used to pay for psychoanalysis treatment of deserving New Brunswick residents. |
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From Einstein to Picasso and from quantum physics to psychoanalysis, the 20th century was a century that overturned accepted concepts. |
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Bunge classifies both psychoanalysis and computational psychology as pseudosciences. |
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The psychoanalysis describes the superego as despot and cruel. |
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There currently exist many branches of psychotherapy, though they all spring from five main schools: psychoanalysis, systemic therapy, humanistic therapy, behaviorism and cognitivism. |
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The historical period of psychoanalysis was ushered in with the observation that the abreaction that follows hypnosis is not enough to cure the patient because there is resistance and repression. |
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A vacuum cleaner, a closet, photographs, a linty pill in an old wallet — each is examined through varying lenses of anthropology, philosophy and psychoanalysis. |
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In relation to this doxy, that in the treatment the one whointerprets is the analyst, the actual experience of psychoanalysis causes us todiscover that the unconscious is an interpretation. |
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Enlightens me the psychoanalysis on what is zen? |
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Wurmser was one of the first psychoanalysts after Freud to refute the idea that severe borderline personality disorder was untreatable with psychoanalysis and showed at least partial success in such treatments. |
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In all treatises on psychology, parapsychology and psychoanalysis where the processes of consciousness, subconsciousness or infraconsciousness are mentioned and studied, those 49 regions pointed out by you are not mentioned. |
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Stone's thesis seeks to reinvigorate a discussion about psychoanalysis and new historicism as methods of reading gender in Shakespeare. |
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As a poet of extremes, he created characters which disconcerted his contemporaries but which became more intelligible as psychoanalysis developed. |
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Hegarty is not keen on public psychoanalysis and pretty wary of sharing even the facts of his life, preferring mystery, but he hints that the abrupt shift across the Atlantic was not an especially happy one for him. |
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Accompanied by Dominique Sarfone, they will open the conference with a discussion on the role of neuroscience and how it has advanced knowledge in tandem with psychoanalysis. |
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He also lectures in psychoanalysis at the University of Bremen. |
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We also have a workshop designed on understanding contemporary trends in psychoanalysis, and a paper on speaking honestly about countertransference highlighted by case material. |
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Because it is often confused with psychoanalysis, psychodynamics has at times been considered an outdated and outmoded approach to therapy. |
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This edition includes new cases on psychoanalysis, client-centered therapy, and existential, interpersonal, and multicultural psychotherapies. |
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The authors, who are psychoanalysts and psychotherapists, ethnographers, and political scientists, present anthropological work based on psychoanalysis. |
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Mitchell, arguably the birthparent of relational psychoanalysis. |
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Help Me Help You,'' starring Ted Danson as a psychiatrist in need of some psychoanalysis himself, and the assorted nutcases in his group-therapy session. |
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It may be fertile to consider, by way of a response to those who see psychoanalysis as mendaciously inculcating a narrative of loss, a passage taken from Elizabeth Costello. |
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This leads logically to the Woody Allen syndrome, in which 33 years of psychoanalysis only produce rationalizations for having an affair with one's de facto stepdaughter. |
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Moreover, against the view that psychoanalysis treats desire and psychic life ahistorically, Belsey argues that part of her own project is to show that desire has a history. |
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As is well known, Freud introduced the concept of the uncanny into psychoanalysis in 1919 and used The Sandman as a prime illustration for his definition. |
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This led him to attack the claims of both psychoanalysis and contemporary Marxism to scientific status, on the basis that their theories are not falsifiable. |
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Under Gowing, an option programme was introduced, which encompassed workshops in experimental music, poetry, psychoanalysis, philosophy and anthropology. |
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In 1920, aged 16, in what was a radical step for the time, he was sent for psychoanalysis for six months in London, afterwards returning to school as a day student. |
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Feminist cultural analyst, theorist, and art historian Griselda Pollock contributed to cultural studies from viewpoints of art history and psychoanalysis. |
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Belsey's way is finally not the way of the New Historicists with their thick descriptions of culture, their anthropological bent, and their eschewal of psychoanalysis. |
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