The Denial of Death, Volume 10Free Press, 1973 - 314 pages Becker presents a daring, convincing challenge to the classic Freudian school. In this inspiring and revolutionary answer to the 'why' of human existence, he sees the denial of death as man's driving force to distinguish himself beyond the grave. |
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Page 41
... body is itself arbitrary . It is not so much that the child sees that neither sex is " complete " in itself or that he understands that the particularity of each sex is a limitation of potential , a cheating of living fulness in some ...
... body is itself arbitrary . It is not so much that the child sees that neither sex is " complete " in itself or that he understands that the particularity of each sex is a limitation of potential , a cheating of living fulness in some ...
Page 44
... body . When they themselves do not transcend the body in their most intimate relations , the child must experience some anxious confusion . How is his struggling ego to handle these double messages and make sense out of them ? Further ...
... body . When they themselves do not transcend the body in their most intimate relations , the child must experience some anxious confusion . How is his struggling ego to handle these double messages and make sense out of them ? Further ...
Page 162
... body and the consciousness of it are no longer separated ; the body is no longer something we look at as alien to ourselves . As soon as it is fully accepted as a body by the partner , our self - consciousness vanishes ; it merges with ...
... body and the consciousness of it are no longer separated ; the body is no longer something we look at as alien to ourselves . As soon as it is fully accepted as a body by the partner , our self - consciousness vanishes ; it merges with ...
Table des matières
Human Nature and | 1 |
THE DEPTH PSYCHOLOGY | 9 |
1 | 70 |
Droits d'auteur | |
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Expressions et termes fréquents
Adler anal animal anxiety basic becomes body burden castration anxiety castration complex causa-sui project character child clinical cosmic heroism creation creative creature creatureliness cultural death instinct denial dualism Erich Fromm existential experience face fact fantasy father fear of death feel fetish fetishist freedom Freud Freudian Fromm give Greenacre guilt helplessness hero system heroic human condition hypnosis idea ideal ideology illusion immortality individual inner insight instinct Jung Kierkegaard kind live magical man's meaning modern mother mystery narcissism nature neurosis neurotic Oedipus Oedipus complex one's oneself Otto Rank paradox parents patient person perversions physical possibility precisely problem psychoanalytic psychology psychosis psychotherapy Rank Rank's reality reason religion represents role sado-masochism schizophrenic scientific secure seems sense sexual social society symbolic talk terror theory thing thought tion transcendence transference object true truly truth understand whole world-view