British Journal of Medical Psychology, 第 1-2 卷Cambridge University Press, 1921 |
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第 1 到 5 筆結果,共 42 筆
第 26 頁
... organism . According to this view , such a centre or disposition cannot be in itself dissociated ; nor can its energies be repressed and rendered latent , or detached and transferred in packets and attached to various ideas . Rather ...
... organism . According to this view , such a centre or disposition cannot be in itself dissociated ; nor can its energies be repressed and rendered latent , or detached and transferred in packets and attached to various ideas . Rather ...
第 27 頁
... organism . In these conditions the patient simply lives through the experience again ; and , just because its cognitive content is dissociated , he lives it as in the present , rather than as a memory of the past , or rather without any ...
... organism . In these conditions the patient simply lives through the experience again ; and , just because its cognitive content is dissociated , he lives it as in the present , rather than as a memory of the past , or rather without any ...
第 167 頁
... organism . A somewhat similar relation exists between the cerebral cortex and the optic thalamus . When the cortex is in action the affective over - response which Head and Holmes ob- served in cortico - thalamic lesions is largely ...
... organism . A somewhat similar relation exists between the cerebral cortex and the optic thalamus . When the cortex is in action the affective over - response which Head and Holmes ob- served in cortico - thalamic lesions is largely ...
第 168 頁
... of the all - or - none principle has entailed some mutilation of the living organism whereby that inhibition which he admits to be common to every phase of animal activity is completely abrogated . 168 Critical Notice.
... of the all - or - none principle has entailed some mutilation of the living organism whereby that inhibition which he admits to be common to every phase of animal activity is completely abrogated . 168 Critical Notice.
第 169 頁
... organisms arose in the evolutionary process , the mutual inhibitions which mutual interdependence entailed would ... organism . In such an example of suppression as he found in his case of claustrophobia , Dr Rivers recognises that ...
... organisms arose in the evolutionary process , the mutual inhibitions which mutual interdependence entailed would ... organism . In such an example of suppression as he found in his case of claustrophobia , Dr Rivers recognises that ...
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常見字詞
abreaction activity analysis analytic analytical psychology appears associations attitude autre become bien biological British Psychological Society c'est child complex consciousness d'une dissociation Dr Brown's dream emotional endocrine energy epilepsy epileptic Ernest Jones être existence experience fact factor fait father fear feeling forces Freud Freudian fugue function galvanometer hallucination human hypnosis hysteria hysterical idea images important impulses individual infantile inhibition instinct interesting Jung langage libido malade matter McDougall means Medical Section memory ment mental method mind mother narcissism nature nervous system neurasthenia neurosis normal object observation organism original patient personality peut phantasy phénomènes preconscious present primitive problem psychic psycho psycho-analysis psychology qu'il reaction recognised reflex regard relation repression script seems sexual somnambulism Sphinx subconscious sublimation suggestion symbol symptoms tendency theory thought tion treatment unconscious unconscious mind W. H. R. RIVERS words