| Sue Nathanson Elkind - 1992 - 358 str.
...Basically, Freud asserted, the termination of analysis is a practical matter. He wrote: Our aim will not be to rub off every peculiarity of human character for...to demand that the person who has been "thoroughly analysed" shall feel no passions and develop no internal conflicts. The business of the analysis is... | |
| Padmasiri De Silva - 1992 - 248 str.
...factor; 3. the rigidity of the Ego based on defence mechanisms. Freud remarks that his "aim will not be to rub off every peculiarity of human character for...of a 'schematic normality,' nor yet to demand that a person who has been 'thoroughly analysed' shall feel no passions and develop no internal conflicts."30... | |
| Joseph Sandler, Anna Ursula Dreher - 1996 - 162 str.
...other we want to correct something in the ego. (p. 238) Finally, Freud states: Our aim will not be to rub off every peculiarity of human character for...to demand that the person who has been 'thoroughly analysed' shall feel no passions and develop no internal conflicts. The business of the analysis is... | |
| David H Brendel - 2009 - 201 str.
...one avoids any exaggerated expectations and sets the analysis no excessive tasks. Our aim will not be to rub off every peculiarity of human character for...to demand that the person who has been "thoroughly analysed" shall feel no passions and develop no internal conflicts. The business of the analysis is... | |
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