The British Journal of Medical Psychology, 第 5 卷Cambridge University Press, 1925 The British Journal of Medical Psychology is an international journal with a traditional orientation towards psychodynamic issues. While maintaining a broad theoretical base and insisting upon sound and sensible methodology, its objective is to avoid the more simplistic approaches to psychological science. The Journal aims to bring together the medical and psychological disciplines. Collaborative studies between psychiatrists and psychologists are especially encouraged. Original theoretical and research contributions are invited from the fields of psychodynamic and interpersonal psychology, particularly as they have a bearing upon vulnerability to, adjustment to and recovery from both medical and psychological disorders. The Journal aims to promote theoretical and research developments in the fields of subjective psychological states and dispositions, interpersonal attitudes, behaviour and relationships only if they illustrate unusual forms of psychopathology or innovative forms of therapy which carry important theoretical implications. |
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第 1 到 5 筆結果,共 78 筆
第 7 頁
... objects the separate , simple sensations , say of whiteness , softness and sweetness are differentiated . But these sensations , we must remember , are not wholly projected . Red , for example , clearly resides in the object , but pain ...
... objects the separate , simple sensations , say of whiteness , softness and sweetness are differentiated . But these sensations , we must remember , are not wholly projected . Red , for example , clearly resides in the object , but pain ...
第 8 頁
... object on this higher plane to create emotional feeling . Where sentiment enters , a number of alternative conflicting emotional feelings have become integrated about a common idea , and a new sentiment - feeling , e.g. that of love or ...
... object on this higher plane to create emotional feeling . Where sentiment enters , a number of alternative conflicting emotional feelings have become integrated about a common idea , and a new sentiment - feeling , e.g. that of love or ...
第 11 頁
... objects suffices to show the extravagance of this view . Deterioration or disorder in cognitive processes is not always dependent on affective factors . We must recognise that the act may suffer through its excessive exercise , as well ...
... objects suffices to show the extravagance of this view . Deterioration or disorder in cognitive processes is not always dependent on affective factors . We must recognise that the act may suffer through its excessive exercise , as well ...
第 14 頁
... object that it seems difficult to attribute to the factor of number a significance so great as to make it capable by itself of arousing in our mental life a new instinct that is otherwise not brought into play . Our expectation is ...
... object that it seems difficult to attribute to the factor of number a significance so great as to make it capable by itself of arousing in our mental life a new instinct that is otherwise not brought into play . Our expectation is ...
第 20 頁
... objects and to abstract ideas , " Freud goes on to say : " We will try our fortune , then , with the supposition that love relationships ( or , to use a more neutral expression , emotional ties ) also constitute the essence of the group ...
... objects and to abstract ideas , " Freud goes on to say : " We will try our fortune , then , with the supposition that love relationships ( or , to use a more neutral expression , emotional ties ) also constitute the essence of the group ...
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常見字詞
abnormal activity anal analysis analytical animal appear associated become behaviour biological called cathexis child childhood clinical complex conception conscious definite desire disease disorder Dr Hadfield dreams effect emotional contagion engrams Ernest Jones erotic erotogenic zones excitation experience fact factors father feeling Fiona Macleod fixation formation Francis Thompson Freud Freudian function genetic genital gratification habit human idea Immortal Hour impulses individual infantile inhibited instinct J. A. HADFIELD later libidinal libido manifestations means memory mental method mind mother narcissism neural correlate neurosis neurotic character normal object observation organs orgastic potency patient persons perversions phantasy phase pleasure primitive problem psychiatry psycho psycho-analytical psychological identity psychology reactions reality Recapitulation Theory regard relation repression reproduction result sensations sense sensuous sexual social Spinoza stimuli sucking suggestion Super-ego symbols symptoms tendencies term thalami theory things thought tion unconscious word writing