freud
freud
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1.
by Lance Winslow - 2007-01-29
It is amazing how we hold certain folks in history out in such high-esteem. Did you know that Freud may not have been the super psychologist we believe he was? In fact did you realize that he openly a...
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2.
by MICHAEL BRESCIANI - 2007-06-08
In the sixties one of the more hackneyed slogans of the time was from Friedrich Nietzsche's Joyous Wisdom. "God is dead: Nietzsche. It was often countered with Nietzsche is dead: God. The prime de...
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3.
by Rev. Michael Bresciani - 2007-06-10
Even a better than middling mind is bound to find a reason to be bored with Hitchens book "God is not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything." Impeccable English and brilliant elucidation does little ...
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4.
by Olivia Hunt - 2007-07-06
Aggressiveness can transform into sadism that is closely connected with Eros or sexuality. Sadism is a part of sexual instinct and a person should have a ‘strong alloy between trends of love and the...
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5.
by Olivia Hunt - 2007-07-06
It is precisely these frustrations of sexual life which people known as neurotics cannot tolerate. The neurotic creates substitutive satisfactions for himself in his symptoms, and these either cause h...
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6.
by Olivia Hunt - 2007-07-06
As we discussed, there are two types of love according to Sigmund Freud: fully-sensual that is called Eros, and aim-inhibited that is called Ananke: ‘Eros and Ananke (Love and Necessity) have become...
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7.
by Olivia Hunt - 2007-07-06
Happiness is something Phaedre wants to feel. Happiness is the problem of a person's libido. There is no rule how to achieve this, however, everyone tries to find it in his own way. Phaedre and Hippol...
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8.
by Olivia Hunt - 2007-07-06
Phaedre's feelings seem to her eternal and limitless, unbounded. It is our nature that we are sure in our feelings and emotions ‘of our own ego' (Freud 12). This ego is Phaedre's autonomous part, ho...
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9.
by Olivia Hunt - 2007-07-06
According to Friedrich Nietzsche, there are two kinds of people: those who are ‘in complete power of destiny' and those who are victims. As we discussed in class, Phaedre belongs to the second kind ...
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10.
by Olivia Hunt - 2007-07-06
Being a part of a civilized world, Phaedre was suffering as she was confused by her opposite feelings to Hippolytus that led to neurosis. She felt aggressiveness, uneasiness, and a sense of guilt as a...