Results 201 to 210 of about 256,328 (257)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
Related searches:
Related searches:
Patient Education and Counseling, 2020
Clinicians often limit hope to life extension. Hope, rather, is a much broader, creative process. This reflective piece underscores this through personal experience I had with my wife and her mom and dad, all of who have passed away.
openaire +2 more sources
Clinicians often limit hope to life extension. Hope, rather, is a much broader, creative process. This reflective piece underscores this through personal experience I had with my wife and her mom and dad, all of who have passed away.
openaire +2 more sources
Inventions and the creative process
IEEE Micro, 2005Patents and inventions, while related (in that the former describes the latter), are orthogonal instruments. A patent is merely a legal document that entitles its bearer to an argument. Although it might contain an invention, this isnt absolutely necessary. Whether it does is generally the subject of the (aforementioned) argument.
openaire +1 more source
The Unconscious and the Creative Process
The Journal of the American Academy of Psychoanalysis and Dynamic Psychiatry, 2006Both psychologist and writer, the author describes the creative process from research, psychological, psychoanalytic, and personal experiential perspectives. The approaches of Ernest Hemingway, Stephen King, and W. Somerset Maugham to their work are very different, illustrating that the expression of creativity is idiosyncratic and unique.
openaire +2 more sources
The Musician and the Creative Process
The Journal of the American Academy of Psychoanalysis and Dynamic Psychiatry, 2005Music is the embodiment through sound of lived experience. Conscious and unconscious modes of subjectivity are woven together in a tapestry of tone and sound, which is less about the world and more the symbolic equivalent of human subjectivity itself. Musicians through their interpretation of a composition invests their performance with self experience,
openaire +2 more sources
Creative Processes in Painting
The Journal of General Psychology, 1962(1962). Creative Processes in Painting. The Journal of General Psychology: Vol. 67, No. 2, pp. 251-263.
openaire +2 more sources
The American Journal of Psychoanalysis, 1964
1. Dreaming is not merely a reactive phenomenon, reactive to instinctual pressure, inner or outer stimuli, a traumatic past or a disturbing present. Dreaming is an active, creative process. 2. Dreaming is not an irrational, regressive, libidinous phenomenon, but a dynamic biological function of the human organism.
openaire +2 more sources
1. Dreaming is not merely a reactive phenomenon, reactive to instinctual pressure, inner or outer stimuli, a traumatic past or a disturbing present. Dreaming is an active, creative process. 2. Dreaming is not an irrational, regressive, libidinous phenomenon, but a dynamic biological function of the human organism.
openaire +2 more sources
Creativity in the Psychoanalytic Process
Journal of the American Academy of Psychoanalysis, 1998Beginning with Nietzsche's doctrine of "perspectivism," there has been an increasing realization in the sciences that the notion of an objective detached observer who reaches truth as he or she studies the subject is incorrect. There is general agreement that the subject-object dichotomy in 19th-century science that lies behind traditional sciences and
openaire +2 more sources

