It would be equally fruitless from a scientific and a therapeutic point of view to contradict a patient who brings these accusations against this ego. He must surely be right in some way and be describing something that is as it seems to him to be true. Feeling Good: The New Mood Therapy - Page 56by David D. Burns - 1999 - 736 pagesLimited preview - About this book
| Thomas Buckley - History - 2002 - 339 pages
...the melancholias existential situation. The sufferer, Freud writes, must surely be right in some way and be describing something that is as it seems to...Indeed, we must at once confirm some of his statements. ... he has a keener eye for the truth than other people who are not melancholic. ... he has come pretty... | |
| Esther Sánchez-Pardo - Family & Relationships - 2003 - 510 pages
...contradict a patient who brings these accusations against his ego. He must surely be right in some way and be describing something that is as it seems to...confirm some of his statements without reservation" ([1915, 1917] 1953, 41). 2 Kleinian Metapsychology 1 After the death of her favorite brother, Emanuel,... | |
| R. Peter Hobson - Psychology - 2004 - 332 pages
...patient who brings these accusations against his ego [his self]. He must surely be right in some way and be describing something that is as it seems to him to be . . .' But in what way is he right, and what might this tell us about the cause of his condition? Freud... | |
| Gregorio Kohon - Family & Relationships - 1999 - 248 pages
...contradict a patient who brings these accusations against his ego. He must surely be right in some way and be describing something that is as it seems to him to be. (Freud. 1917, p. 246) Freud is doing exactly what my patient's father could not do. He sets aside the... | |
| Michael Parsons - Creative ability - 2000 - 248 pages
...contradict a patient who brings these accusations against his ego. He must surely be right in some way and be describing something that is as it seems to him to be. (Freud 1917: 246) Freud is doing what my patient's father could not. He sets aside the automatic, ordinary... | |
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