Papers On Psychology
Page 72 of 179
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FREUD, JUNG AND SUBSTANCE ABUSE
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This paper examines the theories of Sigmund Freud and Carl Jung, and discusses how these theories can be used to help treat substance abuse. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Filename: MTfrejun.rtf
Freud, Jung, & Perls on Dreams
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A 5 page research paper that examines the differences between Freud, Jung and Perls on the meaning and interpretation of dreams Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Filename: khfjp.rtf
Freud/Civilization at Risk
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A 4 page research paper that answers the question: "Why according to Freud, is civilization permanently at risk?" The writer draws on Freud's text Civilization and Its Discontents to show that Freud felt that civilization would always be at risk from the primitive urges that lurk just below the surface of our civilized veneer. Bibliography lists 2 sources.
Filename: khfrcivr.rtf
Freud: Magic and Religion
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A 6 page paper which examines whether Sigmund Freud
had anything significant to say about magic or religion. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Filename: RAfreud2.rtf
Freudian Revenant and the Aesthetics of Art
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A 5 page contention that Freudian theory has a diversity of applications to the aesthetics of art. Of these, however, the concept of revenants is perhaps the most obvious in the greatest number of art pieces. While revenants could be a component of any art form, they are most interesting when viewed in terms of human language. Poetry and music, therefore, offer the greatest opportunity to witness the application of one component of Freudian theory on our understanding of the aesthetics of art. Provides an analysis of the poems "Fern Hill" by Dylan Thomas and "Pied Beauty" by Gerard Manley Hopkins as an example of this application. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Filename: PPfreud2.wps
Freudian Theory
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10 pages. According to Freud, there is little good in the world that arises naturally and without coercion of one form or another, of one person to another. Man’s existence is rooted in aggression, and all individual concepts he had originated through his study of the mind Freud found he could apply to social theory. As he ultimately ascribed guilt to nearly every concept he defined through case studies and in the process of refining his theories of personality, so he applied the same concepts to civilization as a whole. Bibliography lists 8 sources.
Filename: JGAfred.rtf
Freud’s Psychoanalytical Theory and Behavioral Theory
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This is a 7 page paper discussing Freud’s psychoanalytical theories of human behavior in comparison with the behavioral theories. When Sigmund Freud (1856-1939) first developed his psychoanalytical theory as treatment for those people who had mental dysfunctions, he was one of the first analysts to attempt to tackle patients head on by developing a series of therapeutic sessions directly with the patients. These sessions were largely based on talking to patients and discovering their repressed feelings which he believed were the cause of the mental disorder. His theory was based largely on the fact that he believed human behavior was developed through a series of stages in childhood that largely relied upon the satisfaction of needs in the individual, mostly sexual. If the unconscious mind was unable to control the interpretation of the needs and how to understand them in relation to the real world then behavioral problems would arise. Once these problems were unearthed, then behavior would change. Behaviorists however did not agree with his methods. Behavior theorists are more concerned with what patients do and say and are not as concerned with the theoretical mental processes which are “behind” the behaviors. Instead, they believe that using conditioning, called behavior therapy, people’s destructive and dysfunctional behaviors can be altered for the better. Those who promote the behaviorist theory believe more that the stimulus and the behavior have a direct relation regardless of the mental process while psychoanalysts believe that there are mental processes and repressive tendencies which have to be resolved before any behavior can be changed.
Bibliography lists 7 sources.
Filename: TJFreud1.rtf
Freud’s Views on Infantile Sexuality and the Meaning of Dreams
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A 5 page overview of Freud’s psychoanalytical thought as revealed by editor Peter Gay in “The Freud Reader”. Gay’s analysis of Freud’s work is directly relevant to two very specific questions: 1. Do dreams have any real psychic significance? 2. Does sexual instinct evolve only during puberty or is it an inherent factor for all age groups? No additional sources are listed.
Filename: PPfreud3.rtf
Freud’s “Dora: An Analysis of a Case of Hysteria”
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A 4 page critical analysis of the named work. Sigmund Freud’s (1856-1939) “Dora: An Analysis of a Case of Hysteria” (1963) is Freud’s account of the case of Ida Bauer, whose father brought to Freud seeking “cure” for her willful refusal to assist her father in securing the affections of his would-be mistress. Freud’s conclusions included diagnosis of hysteria and sexual repression; he firmly believed that Dora’s refusal to assist her father sprang from her own sexual desire for her own father. The paper discusses Freud’s lack of objectivity and his failure to take a moral view of Dora’s position. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
Filename: KSpsychFreudDora.rtf
Fully Human Fully Alive" by John Powell
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A 5 page paper which summarizes the
book "Fully Human Fully Alive" by John Powell. No additional sources cited.
Filename: RAfullyhmn.wps
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