
A General Introduction To Psychoanalysis
Lo que tenés que saber de este producto
- Género: Phisicology.
- Subgénero: Psicología - En General.
- PSICOLOGIA.
- Número de páginas: 482.
- Incluye no.
- ISBN: 9786319007220.
- Dimensiones: 14cm de ancho x 21cm de alto.
Características del producto
Características principales
Autor | Sigmund, Freud |
---|---|
Idioma | Inglés |
Editorial del libro | Signal |
Tapa del libro | Blanda |
Año de publicación | 2023 |
Otros
Cantidad de páginas | 482 |
---|---|
Altura | 21 cm |
Ancho | 14 cm |
Con páginas para colorear | No |
Con realidad aumentada | No |
Género del libro | Phisicology |
Subgéneros del libro | Psicología - En General |
Tipo de narración | PSICOLOGIA |
Cantidad de libros por set | 1 |
Descripción
This series of 28 lectures was delivered by Sigmund Freud (1856-1939),
the founder of psychoanalysis, during World War I and published for the
first time in English in 1920.
The purpose of this general introduction was to present his work and
ideas —as they had evolved at that point— to a large audience; and even
though there was to be considerable development and change over
the following years, these lectures still offer a valuable and remarkably
approachable entry point to his revolutionary concepts.
The talks are divided into three sections: “The Psychology of Errors”
(which later became known as “Freudian Slips”), “The Dream” (his broad
views on interpretation), and “General Theory of Neuroses”. Within
these divisions appear many of his concepts that have found their
way into the wider consciousness of modern man —the key role of sex
in forming our thoughts and behavior, the Oedipus complex, the libido,
sublimation, fixation, regression and suppression, and the unconscious.
He was determined to prove how psychoanalysis could help reveal the
causes of neuroses and lead to clarity for the patient —as opposed to
the approach taken by psychiatrists.
Freud refers to his early use of hypnotism, which he later discarded,
and many more steps that led him to his conclusions that the powerful
part played by sexual impulses, often dating back to childhood, pursued
individuals into adulthood.