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Psychoanalysis   /sˌaɪkoʊənˈæləsəs/  /sˌaɪkoʊənˈælɪsɪs/   Listen
noun
Psychoanalysis  n.  
1.
A method or process of psychotherapeutic analysis and treatment pf psychoneuroses, based on the work of Dr. Sigmund Freud (1856- 1939) of Vienna. The method rests upon the theory that neurosis is characteristically due to repression of desires consciously rejected but subconsciously persistent; it consists in a close analysis of the patient's mental history, effort being made to bring unconsciuos and preconscious material to consciousness; the methods include analysis of transferance and resistance. In some variants, stress is laid upon the dream life, and of treatment by means of suggestion.
2.
The theory of human psychology which is the foundation for the psychoanalytic therapy, which explores the relation between conscious and unconscious mental processes in motivating human behavior and causing neuroses.
3.
An integrated set of theories of human personality development, motivation, and behavior based on a body of observations.
4.
One of several schools of psychotherapy, such as jungian psychoanalysis or freudian psychoanalysis.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Psychoanalysis" Quotes from Famous Books



... is really liberal— which means that training and disposition have made it free to move through both the past and the present—it can cope with this Egyptian barbarism; for liberal-minded lovers of literature, by performing a very simple operation in psychoanalysis, can understand how love for the good old times may cause fear lest we lose their fruits, and how fear blinds the critic's eye, makes his tongue harsh, and ...
— Definitions • Henry Seidel Canby

... idea of "Freudianism" and all the overwhelming discoveries, theories, and suggestions due to those who have busied themselves with the lasting effects of infantile and childish experiences, of hidden desires—sexual and otherwise, of "the Unconscious" and psychoanalysis, while there are many books, great and small, there would be no unanimity of opinion among those somewhat familiar with the subjects as to what should be recommended. It would be well if everyone could read in Havelock Ellis, The Philosophy of Conflict ...
— The Mind in the Making - The Relation of Intelligence to Social Reform • James Harvey Robinson



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