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Freudianism

2012
A. Schetz, T. Szubka
exaly   +2 more sources

The Influence of Freudianism on the Formation of the Concept of the Subject at the Turn of the 19th-20th Centuries

Bulletin of Liberal Arts University
The purpose of this article is to study the influence of Freudianism on the formation of the concept of the subject in the context of the history of Western philosophy. Content analysis has become a key research method.
Sergey S. Rusakov
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Freudian snaps

Endeavour, 2006
Sigmund Freud claimed to hate being photographed, yet he carefully fashioned his public image. Always immaculately dressed, he sported an old-fashioned beard that helped to establish his status as the founding father of psychoanalysis. An avid collector, Freud chose objects for their symbolic as well as their aesthetic interest.
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The Freudian superego

Journal of Religion and Health, 1994
Beginning psychotherapists tend to judge themselves in terms of their Freudian superego, their idea of how a stereotypical classical analyst is supposed to work. This Freudian superego derives from culturally prevalent negative stereotypes about the nature of Freudian psychoanalysis.
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The Freudian Influence

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1977
THE IDEAS of Sigmund Freud have had the widest impact in medicine and have also influenced anthropology, education, sociology, art, literature, and other areas. His ideas have filtered into the common consciousness. I recall words uttered long ago by my revered chief, Stanley Cobb, to the effect that one needn't concern himself about the seeming ...
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BIOLOGICAL FREUDIANISM

Pediatrics, 1966
Many experiences of early life affect the biological characteristics of the adult in a lasting manner. This phenomenon has been illustrated by epidemiological observations in man and by several experimental models in mice. It has been shown, for example,
R. Dubos, D. Savage, R. Schaedler
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Reasons for the Freudian Revolution

The Psychoanalytic Quarterly, 1977
Freud's revolution may be viewed as the discovery of a way of locating in the mind objective entities which can be studied like physical things. If Freud's is representative of scientific revolutions, perhaps what Thomas Kuhn has described as a change of paradigm might generally consist of the demonstration of new entities.
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Commentary: Traditional Freudian and Kleinian Freudian analysis

Psychoanalytic Inquiry, 1994
(1994). Commentary: Traditional Freudian and Kleinian Freudian analysis. Psychoanalytic Inquiry: Vol. 14, Contemporary Kleinian Psychoanalysis, pp. 462-475.
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Freudian blip

Journal of Illustration, 2016
Abstract Contrary to his later supreme self-belief, as a young man Lucian Freud considered his artistic abilities meagre. Determined, nevertheless, to hammer out a viable means of creative expression he applied his formidable powers of concentration to make up for a lack of natural talent. By and large, his early chosen means was drawing.
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