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Enter your query below to search our database containing over 45,000+ essays and term papers
Search results 131 - 140 of 252 matching essays
- 131: A Dolls House-victorian Morals
- ... determined solely by its utility; Karl Marx s (1818-1883) ideology, nicknamed Marxism, of dialectical materialism , communism and socialism; Darwinism, Charles Darwin s (1809-1882) entire theory of evolution; Sigmund Freud s (1856-1939) suggested workable cures for mental disorders. Freud s theories were at highly disputed. Victorian virtues were centered on the home and the family. This is easily evident in a conversation at the top of page 65: HELMER ...
- 132: The Shelter Of Each Other, A B
- ... Finally, families are being affected by theories that are limited to a time and a place. Family issues cannot be handled as they were in the past. What worked for Freud, worked in nineteenth century Vienna. The theories of yesterday do not take into account the troubles of today. Theorists had no exposure to the gangs, drugs, and/or violence that ... become the roots of all evil. Poor parenting creates dysfunctional individuals. Parents also prevent their children from becoming consumers. Chapter 6: Therapy, The Trojan Horse One of the first psychoanalysts, Freud focused on biology. Who we were was innate. He ignored the cultural aspect of society that is fundamental to psychoanalysis today. In the middle part of this century humanistic therapy ...
- 133: Stranger Than Fiction Brave Ne
- ... are living their lives for a purpose that is greater than themselves. Huxely also realizes that the concept of religion can be manipulate to fit the situation. Our Ford - Our Freud as, for some inscrutable reason, he chose to call himself whenever he spoke of psychological matters... ( pg. 34) This quote emphasizes this point. To make Ford all knowing and powerful in the area of psychology they change his name to the name of one of the best known psychiatrists Freud. Religion is also just another reason for them to have sex. Their solidarity service that has a remarkable resemblance to a church service turns into an orgy at the end ...
- 134: Cocaine
- ... chewing gum, and several “tonics”, most notably Coca Cola. Coca-Cola advertised itself as “the drink that relieves exhaustion”. Pope Leo XII, Sherlock Holmes, Thomas Edison, Jules Verne, and Sigmund Freud all endorsed its use. Freud described it as a magical drug. He wrote a song of praise in its honor and practiced self-experimentation. Sherlock Holmes said that cocaine was so transcendentally stimulating and clarifying ...
- 135: Hamlet's Odd Behavior
- ... internal and external stimuli. The unconscious contains thoughts, memories, and desires that are well below the surface of awareness but that nonetheless exert great influence on behavior."(Weiten) Jung and Freud agree upon the existence of the unconscious, but their perspectives are vastly different. The core of the Freudian perspective is centered around Hamlet’s relationship with his mother, and the ... thousand pound". A probable conclusion lies in the possibly that Hamlet does not want to kill the king. Take into consideration the relationship between Hamlet and his mother. According to Freud, all boys develop a sense of sexuality at the early age of three. Due to the mother’s proximity to the child, the boys sexuality is directed toward the mother ...
- 136: Into The Abyss Marquis De Sade
- ... or to say that it comes from denying and sacrificing the claims of the ego is, according to Sade, to talk utter nonsense." Sade insists that we give into what Freud would later label, our ego, to give into our instinctual desires. We should not hide from our true selves; rather we should face and embrace it. It is difficult to ... For years his work has been buried. Whatever the individual may think of him, his work is nonetheless both significant and relevant. Aspects of Social Darwinism, concepts that would influence Freud, Camus, Nietzche and others decades after him would all cite Sade. Sade is disturbing not because he is demented, but because his arrival of his conclusions is logical. Crocker argues ...
- 137: The Crying Of Lot 49
- ... king, marrying the former king's wife, who of course is his mother. When Oedipus finds out what he has done, he blinds himself and becomes a wandering beggar. Sigmund Freud took the legend of Oedipus as a metaphor for the wish of every small boy to get his father out of the way so he could have his mother all ... to be a part -- in Oedipus' case, Thebes; in Oedipa's, twentieth-century America. But her discovery makes her an alien, and she comes to doubt her own sanity like Freud's conflicted men.
- 138: Depression 4
- ... medications, such as steroids, may also cause depression. B Psychological Factors Psychological theories of depression focus on the way people think and behave. In a 1917 essay, Austrian psychoanalyst Sigmund Freud explained melancholia, or major depression, as a response to loss—either real loss, such as the death of a spouse, or symbolic loss, such as the failure to achieve an important goal. Freud believed that a person’s unconscious anger over loss weakens the ego, resulting in self-hate and self-destructive behavior. Cognitive theories of depression emphasize the role of irrational thought ...
- 139: Criticism of Keats' Melancholy
- ... focus his entire article about the inclusion of the first stanza. The article Mourning Becomes Melancholy by Anselm Haverkamp is about the emotional state of melancholy. Haverkamp incorporated many of Freud’s opinions about mourning and melancholy that he (Haverkamp) took from Beyond the Pleasure Principle. Haverkamp explained that Freud felt that mourning was a normal behavior, whereas, melancholia is a “certain pathological disposition” (quoted in Haverkamp 694). Haverkamp also discusses melancholia itself for quite some time, in order to ...
- 140: Consciousness As Determined Th
- ... Titchener who were advocates off a science of introspection. Early in the 20th century the transparency doctrine came to a setback for three different reasons. The first reason was Sigmund Freud’s compelling evidence that some very important mental activity is not only subconscious but firmly resists conscious access through repression. At first Freud’s idea of unconscious was treated as self-contradictory, but it has since won acceptance as being useful and entirely possible. the second difficulty for the transparency doctrine was that ...
Search results 131 - 140 of 252 matching essays
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