The Myth of Mental Illness: Foundations of a Theory of Personal Conduct |
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Page 76
... refer their patients to › nonmedical psychotherapists . This practice illustrates my thesis : the need to refer a patient to a psychiatrist confronts the physician with the task of redefining the patient's illness as personal rather ...
... refer their patients to › nonmedical psychotherapists . This practice illustrates my thesis : the need to refer a patient to a psychiatrist confronts the physician with the task of redefining the patient's illness as personal rather ...
Page 124
... refer to a sign- referent relationship . Having distinguished three fundamentally different types of signs , we may now ask : In which type of sign was Freud especially interested ? Clearly , whenever Freud ( and other psychoanalysts ) ...
... refer to a sign- referent relationship . Having distinguished three fundamentally different types of signs , we may now ask : In which type of sign was Freud especially interested ? Clearly , whenever Freud ( and other psychoanalysts ) ...
Page 172
... refer to the rules that men follow in the conduct of their lives , and sometimes also to the study of these rules ( e.g. , ethics as a science of moral conduct ) . The psychoanalytic concept superego refers essentially to the same ...
... refer to the rules that men follow in the conduct of their lives , and sometimes also to the study of these rules ( e.g. , ethics as a science of moral conduct ) . The psychoanalytic concept superego refers essentially to the same ...
Contents
Book One The Myth of Mental Illness | 17 |
MALINGERING | 37 |
33223 | 52 |
Copyright | |
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adult analysis attitude basic believe biological bodily illness body language Breuer called Charcot charity practice cheating concept concerning conflict considered contemporary contrast defined disability discursive disease dream emphasized ethical example fact Freud function game-playing Ganser syndrome goals Hence human behavior hysteria hysterical iconic signs illustration imitation impersonation implies indirect communications interest interpersonal ITALICS ADDED language learning logical malingering means medicine mental illness metagames metalanguage moral neurosis nondiscursive notion object relationships observations one's organic pain patient person phenomena physical physician Piaget play players practice problem protolanguage psychiatry psycho psychoanalytic psychology psychosocial psychosomatic psychotherapy refer regarded religious rule-following rules Salpêtrière schizophrenic scientific secondary gain semiotical sick sick role significant similar situation so-called social role society Soviet speak specific superego symbols symptoms Szasz theory therapeutic therapist thesis tion unconscious vaginismus values witchcraft witches words York