Similar words: freudian, schadenfreude, sigmund freud, freudian slip, freedom of religion, feud, feudal, pseudo. Meaning: n. Austrian neurologist who originated psychoanalysis (1856-1939).
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31. Such crude alignments concealed the fact that realists such as Fairfield Porter or Freud were no more politically committed than their abstract colleagues.
32. Sigmund Freud, the father of psychoanalysis, was born in 1856.
33. Freud explained the significance of some of the objects and situations in Anna's dream.
34. No answer was offered by Freud about why men and women seem to repudiate the feminine.
35. The arguments against Freud which have weighed most heavily with psychologists are those concerned with his theory's unscientific character.
36. Berger sees a discontinuity between the social psychology of Cooley and Mead and that of Freud.
37. This is a perfect example of the mechanism of negation as postulated by Sigmund Freud.
38. In his Totem and Taboo Freud made such an act of primal parricide and rape the origin of all subsequent human culture.
39. Freud later developed the technique of free association, a triumph which is often neglected in the discussion of his controversial theories.
40. Novels, newspapers and films feed the public with the ideas of a Freud without ever invoking his name.
40. Wish you can benefit from our online sentence dictionary and make progress day by day!
41. Killion took pity on Callaghan and tried to discuss Freud, which only confused Callaghan the more.
42. It was Freud who made the first extensive use of hypnosis to probe the depths of the subconscious mind.
43. Freud examines around 250 dreams with a verbal skill and humour which, the translator says, have given her delight.
44. And most recently, Freud eliminated the discontinuity between the rational world of the ego and the irrational world of the unconscious.
45. There was a bust of Marx in the local cemetery and a bust of Freud outside the swimming baths.
46. Giddens in particular has pointed to the very varying ways in which Freud used the words id, ego and superego.
47. This appears reactionary because Freud states it in such general, ahistorical terms.
48. Jung and Freud fell out when Jung disagreed with some of Freud's central theories.
49. Freud, however, did not hold this view and hoped to find the true root of his patients' hysteria.
50. Freud introduced the idea that a part of the ego is unconscious too.
51. After being enrolled at the university at the age of seventeen, Freud studied physiology, biology and anatomy.
52. Freud observed that people tend to puff up the status of their forefathers.
53. In effect, Freud attributes to the unconscious the power of a writer brilliantly deploying the classical tropes to transform his material.
54. Or you may be a personal friend of Lucian Freud - lucky old you.
55. Through his work, Freud realised that some taboos of the time were much more commonly breached than was acknowledged by society.
56. Freud emphasized the importance of the latency period for the cultural development of the individual, and hence the society.
57. The modern spirit of revolt was best exemplified by the work of Kafka and Freud.
58. Freud took these as the basic questions of the new psychological therapy he was inventing.
59. The somewhat better-known Sigmund Freud at one time worked with Janet.
60. As is clear from the above, Giddens's querying of Freud is more than a pedantic concentration on sloppy terminology.
More similar words: freudian, schadenfreude, sigmund freud, freudian slip, freedom of religion, feud, feudal, pseudo, feudalism, pseudonym, reuse, pseudocode, eudaemonia, feudalistic, pseudomorph, flare up, fire up, Reuter, reunite, thereunto, hereunto, shore up, reunion, reunify, square up, thereupon, pseudoscience, reusable, whereupon, thereunder.