Bases of Human Behavior: A Biologic Approach to Psychiatry |
Contents
DUCE TISSUE DAMAGE | 39 |
EMOTIONAL FORCES CAN AFFECT PERCEPTION THINKING | 54 |
Thinking | 60 |
Copyright | |
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activity adaptation adaptation syndrome adult animal anxiety appear basic become behavior biologic organism blood pressure body brain capacity cause cells child childhood compulsion concept conditioning conscience conscious ego consciousness depressed disease disorders disturbances dreams drives dynamic psychiatry effects emotional forces Emotional Maturity emotional stress example experience experimental fear feelings fight or flight fight-flight reaction Freud functions guilt Hence homeostasis hostility human nature hypochondriasis important impulses individual individual's infant infantile inner needs integration lives mechanisms medicine mental mind motivations nervous system neuroses observations parents patient patterns peptic ulcer perceived perception Periarteritis nodosa person physiologic physiologic responses primitive principle processes produce psychoanalytic Psychodynamics psychological psychoses psychosomatic pulse reacting reality result Saul schizophrenia seen Selye sense sexual social stomach structural damage superego symptoms tendency tends tensions thinking thought threat tion tissues tuberculosis unconscious understanding usually vasomotor rhinitis visual visual thinking whole York