The Caveman Within Us: HIS PECULIARITIES AND POWERS: HOW WE CAN ENLIST HIS AID FOR HEALTHRoutledge, 2014年2月4日 - 392页 This is Volume III of thirty-eight in the General Psychology series. First published in 1922 this study looks at the ‘caveman’ aspects of human character, his peculiarities and powers and how an individual can enlist his help for health and efficiency. |
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共有 32 个结果,这是第 1-5 个
第xii页
... organism , and yet each is as real in the distinctive characteristics that it manifests as though the span of a hundred thou- sand years separated their existence . When two such heterogeneous factors - each with innate tendencies ...
... organism , and yet each is as real in the distinctive characteristics that it manifests as though the span of a hundred thou- sand years separated their existence . When two such heterogeneous factors - each with innate tendencies ...
第xiv页
... organism , which so often has reflected itself in their character and conduct . Not in- frequently has the Caveman broken out in all his primordial abandon . Everywhere in the realm of Genius , he is in evidence . And from these peaks ...
... organism , which so often has reflected itself in their character and conduct . Not in- frequently has the Caveman broken out in all his primordial abandon . Everywhere in the realm of Genius , he is in evidence . And from these peaks ...
第15页
... organism which we have inherited , with its ingrained impressions , instincts and emotions that have been picked up during millions of years of struggle with the remorseless forces of nature . And over the mechanism of this wild and ...
... organism which we have inherited , with its ingrained impressions , instincts and emotions that have been picked up during millions of years of struggle with the remorseless forces of nature . And over the mechanism of this wild and ...
第16页
... for the evolution of the simplest monocellular structures into and through the metazoa to their present day goal in man . Biologists are generally agreed that one - celled organisms reached 16 THE CAVEMAN WITHIN US Man's Great Antiquity.
... for the evolution of the simplest monocellular structures into and through the metazoa to their present day goal in man . Biologists are generally agreed that one - celled organisms reached 16 THE CAVEMAN WITHIN US Man's Great Antiquity.
第17页
... organisms reached their utmost limits of com- plexity millions of years ago ; since when they have shown many diversities , many adaptations , but little , if any , progress . Many - celled animals and plants also long ago reached the ...
... organisms reached their utmost limits of com- plexity millions of years ago ; since when they have shown many diversities , many adaptations , but little , if any , progress . Many - celled animals and plants also long ago reached the ...
目录
1 | |
15 | |
III The Cavemans VeneerOur Cultural Personality | 43 |
IV The Caveman UnmaskedReveling in Dreams | 65 |
V The Cavemans Diversions | 98 |
VI The Cavemans Tricks | 117 |
VII The Cavemans Passion | 134 |
VIII The Caveman Fretting | 159 |
XI The Caveman Rebels | 204 |
XII The Cavemans Halted Development | 221 |
XIII The Caveman Breaks Loose | 241 |
XIV The Caveman Disowned | 262 |
XV The Caveman and the Genius | 276 |
XVI The Caveman Split Off | 305 |
XVII The Caveman Partly Dissociated | 328 |
XVIII The Caveman Conciliated | 344 |
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常见术语和短语
abnormal adult ancient animals anxiety neurosis asso autonomic nervous system Autosexuality become biological body brain cause Caveman CHAPTER character characteristic Charles Lamb child childhood conflict consciousness crowd cultural degree desires Disease Doris dreams ductless glands Edipus emotional energy environment epilepsy evolution experience expression fact factor father fear feeling force Freud genius glands gout human hysteria ical ideas individual influence insanity instance instincts intellectual intelligence joke later less lived manifestations mechanism memory ment mental Miss Beauchamp modern Morton Prince mother nature nerve nervous system neurasthenia neurosis neurotic normal observed organism outlet pain pathological patient period phallic Phallic Symbolism physical primitive personality psychic psycho Psychology puritan race rational reality religious repressed result sadism scious sexual sleep social somnambulism sonality spirit suffered suggestion symbols symptoms tendency thought tion tional tive uncon unconscious mind urges victim woman York