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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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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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Journal of the American Academy of Psychoanalysis, 1992
Theatre historians credit Freud and his theories for being the prime impetus for the birth of the modern theatre. Freud's theatre-going activities varied throughout his life. In his younger days, he seemed to enjoy attending performances. In later life, he rarely went to the theatre except for an occasional Mozart opera or Shakespeare play.
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Theatre historians credit Freud and his theories for being the prime impetus for the birth of the modern theatre. Freud's theatre-going activities varied throughout his life. In his younger days, he seemed to enjoy attending performances. In later life, he rarely went to the theatre except for an occasional Mozart opera or Shakespeare play.
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JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1970
To the Editor.— I should like to comment on a point in the editorial on Sigmund Freud ( 213 :1892-1893, 1970), because of its practical significance today. It states that Freud considered knowledge of the unconscious gained by hypnosis to be incomplete. But he was clearly handicapped by the limitations of his own experience at the time.
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To the Editor.— I should like to comment on a point in the editorial on Sigmund Freud ( 213 :1892-1893, 1970), because of its practical significance today. It states that Freud considered knowledge of the unconscious gained by hypnosis to be incomplete. But he was clearly handicapped by the limitations of his own experience at the time.
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Trauma and the state with Sigmund Freud as witness.
International Journal of Law and Psychiatry, 2016E. Danto
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Freud's hysteria and its legacy.
Handbook of Clinical Neurology, 2016Richard A. Kanaan
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