Results 251 to 260 of about 23,461 (309)

Archetypal Scientists [PDF]

open access: possibleSSRN Electronic Journal, 2012
We introduce archetypal analysis as a tool to describe and categorize scientists. This approach identifies typical characteristics of extreme ('archetypal') values in a multivariate data set. These positive or negative contextual attributes can be allocated to each scientists under investigation.
Christian Seiler, Klaus Wohlrabe
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Archetypal healing

American Journal of Hospice and Palliative Medicine®, 1994
With emphasis on healing versus curing, the authors draw from a wide assortment of treatment methods for psychospiritual relief of pain in the terminally ill. These archetypal methods include: • Life-review therapy; • Ministry of presence; • Clinical hypnosis; • Myths, symbols ...
D, Jones, J E, Churchill
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Archetypes

open access: yes, 2015
An exhibition by Robert Leach, senior lecturer on the BA (Hons) Fashion Design course at the University of Westminster, and Andrew Groves, Course Director for BA Fashion Design.
Groves, Andrew, Leach, Robert
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Archetypal Networks

Proceedings of the 2015 IEEE/ACM International Conference on Advances in Social Networks Analysis and Mining 2015, 2015
In this paper we propose a method to analyze and synthesize a set of N networks that refer to a common scenario and that are comparable among each other. Examples of this type of data are: a set of collaboration networks, each defined for a different scientific field; or a set of ego networks, where egos belong to a same category; a set of governance ...
Ragozini, Giancarlo   +1 more
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On the Origins of Archetypes

International Journal of Jungian Studies, 2020
Abstract The question of archetypes and their origins remains an ongoing debate in analytical psychology and post-Jungian studies. The contemporary discussion has historically focused on privileging one causal factor over another, namely, whether archetypes are attributed more to biology than culture and vice versa. Erik Goodwyn offers a mesotheory
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The Odyssey as Archetype

English Journal, 1970
ALL this talk about relevancy has undoubtedly caused a great deal of soul searching on the part of many English teachers as to whether established literary classics such as The Odyssey can be made meaningful for our high school students. True, The Odyssey and other classics are important parts of our Western cultural heritage, but is this a sufficient ...
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The Orphan Archetype

Psychological Perspectives, 1983
This article explores the archetype of the orphan and traces it through myth, story, fairy tale, literature, and perhaps most importantly, through the author's personal experience. This is a treatment of the theme of abandonment that details the “inner orphan's” predicament.
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Archetypes and Code Biology

SSRN Electronic Journal, 2021
As a clinical psychologist, I observe stereotyped formulas of behavior in action every day in the consulting room, despite differences in age, race, or culture; they present themselves as codified rules or typical modes of behavior in archetypical situations. Such circumstances coincide with what C.G.
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The Essence of Archetypes

International Journal of Jungian Studies, 2018
Jung’s notion of the archetype remains an equivocal concept, so much so that Jungians and post-Jungians have failed to agree on its essential nature. In this essay, I wish to argue that an archetype may be understood as an unconscious schema that is self-constitutive and emerges into consciousness from its own a priori ground, hence an autonomous self ...
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CLASSICALLY ARCHETYPAL RULES

The Review of Symbolic Logic, 2018
AbstractA one-premiss rule is said to be archetypal for a consequence relation when not only is the conclusion of any application of the rule a consequence (according to that relation) of the premiss, but whenever one formula has another as a consequence, these formulas are respectively equivalent to a premiss and a conclusion of some application of ...
Tomasz Polacik, Lloyd Humberstone
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