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Freud's Family

British Journal of Psychiatry, 1989
Sigmund Freud's family background holds extraordinary fascination, not just because he is an historic figure but because his very ideas centred around the influence of formative family relationships. In addition, Freud used his own experiences as one means of research, from which he concluded that some personal details only may be available in ...
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On Freud's Authoritarianism

The Psychoanalytic Review, 2015
Freud repeatedly described himself as a person with tyrannical impulses, and his dominant leadership style is well attested. Was he, then, an authoritarian personality? When the separate traits in that that pattern are matched against the body of evidence about his complex personality, many of them fit him, but so many do not that it is judged ...
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Freud’s Anthropomorphism

1982
Abstract Freud was a materialist, and at an early stage of his psychological inquiries attempted to construct an explicitly physiological psychology based on the interaction of neurons. This attempt, by now well known under the title “Project for a Scientific Psychology,” was abandoned shortly after Freud sent the draft to Fliess in ...
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Freud and Metaphor

Archives of General Psychiatry, 1962
I. That Freud made liberal use of metaphor in discussing his ideas is evident from even a casual inspection of his writings. Freud was wont to note resemblances between events in the lives of his patients and already familiar events from other domains of his experience.
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Freud's androids

1991
Department of Philosophy technical ...
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Cummings and Freud

American Literature, 1983
o wrote E. E. Cummings to his younger sister Elizabeth in May 1922. In some ways, Cummings' enthusiasm for Freud was very much a part of its time: a post-war Modernist in the arts could scarcely resist Freudian theory as the concomitant "modernism" of psychology. As Frederick Hoffman has shown in Freudianism and the Literary Mind, Freud's theories were
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Janet and Freud

Archives of Neurology And Psychiatry, 1956
"And now from the Vast of the Lord will the waters of sleep Roll in on the souls of men But who will reveal to our waking ken The forms that swim and the shapes that creep Under the waters of sleep?" Sidney Lanier In the textbooks of psychiatry nowadays, Pierre Janet is dismissed in a few brief remarks as one who just failed to realize the beginning ...
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Freud and Freud

CR: The New Centennial Review, 2002
Virgilio Pinera, Stephen D Gingerich
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Freud’s animality

The International Journal of Psychoanalysis
The animal nature of human beings has all but disappeared from psychoanalytic discourse. This reflects Freud's struggle with the issue of animality, which he at once repudiates, and simultaneously conceals at the core of human mental life. Freud's use of the terms "animal" and "man" constantly shifts as he attempts to employ them in key areas of ...
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Inventing Freud

The American Journal of Psychoanalysis, 2008
Written to commemorate the 150th anniversary of Freud's birth, this paper construes Nina Coltart's statement that "if Freud did not exist it would be necessary to invent him," with its implicit comparison of Freud to God, to refer to (a) the things that Freud taught that are incontrovertibly true; (b) the unavoidable subjectivity in all judgments of ...
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