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Paul Kleinman

  • Myselfhar citeretfor 2 år siden
    The movement of the fist (the conditioned stimulus) became associated with the unconditioned stimulus (the sound), and made you flinch (the conditioned response).
  • Myselfhar citeretfor 2 år siden
    If parents were too lenient
  • Myselfhar citeretfor 2 år siden
    In 1913, Carl Jung coined the term the “Electra complex,”
  • Myselfhar citeretfor 2 år siden
    when a child thinks twice about doing something inappropriate because he understands the negative outcome that will occur, this is the ego
  • Myselfhar citeretfor 2 år siden
    Freud believed that, in a truly healthy person, the ego would be stronger than the id and superego so that it could consider the reality of the situation, while both meeting the needs of the id and making sure the superego was not disturbed. In the case of the superego being strongest, a person will be guided by very strict morals, and if the id is strongest, a person will seek pleasure over morality and could end up causing great harm (rape, for example, is when one chooses pleasure-seeking over morality, and is a sign of a strong id).
  • Eriñigerhar citeretfor 9 måneder siden
    psyche—The Greek word for “spirit, soul, and breath”

    logia—The Greek word for “the study of something”
  • Ascemhar citeretfor 7 måneder siden
    The Pythagorean School
    Philosopher and mathematician Pythagoras (570–497 b.c.), perhaps most famous for the Pythagorean theorem named after him, believed that the basis of all reality was mathematical relations and that mathematics governed everything. To Pythagoras, numbers were sacred, and with the use of mathematics, everything could be measured and predicted. The impact and image of Pythagoras was astounding. His school was cult-like, with followers listening to his every word … and even his strange rules, which covered anything from what and what not to eat, how to dress, and even how to urinate. Pythagoras philosophized on many areas, and his students believed that his teachings were the prophecies of the gods.
  • Ascemhar citeretfor 7 måneder siden
    Xenophanes of Colophon
    Xenophanes (570–475 b.c.) is known for his critique of religion and mythology. In particular, he attacked the notion that the gods were anthropomorphic (or took a human form). Xenophanes believed there was one god that, while it did not physically move, had the ability to hear, see, and think, and controlled the world with his thoughts.
  • Ascemhar citeretfor 7 måneder siden
    Parmenides had an incredible impact on Plato and all of Western philosophy. His work led the school of Elea to become the first movement to use pure reason as the only criterion for finding truth.
  • Ђорђе Вујичићhar citeretfor 2 år siden
    The word philosophy means “love of wisdom.”
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