International Series of Monographs on Child Psychiatry, Volum 2Pergammon Press, 1964 |
Inni boken
Resultat 1-3 av 18
Side 37
... emotionally mature woman , happily married and desirous of child- ren . She should welcome the birth of her child and be capable of creating for him a secure emotional atmosphere . She should be motivated more by her own intuitive ...
... emotionally mature woman , happily married and desirous of child- ren . She should welcome the birth of her child and be capable of creating for him a secure emotional atmosphere . She should be motivated more by her own intuitive ...
Side 51
... emotional motivations . They are crystallization centers of varied associations and connections . They are accessible to psychic understanding , but they have not the abstract character of symbols . Therefore , they cannot be approached ...
... emotional motivations . They are crystallization centers of varied associations and connections . They are accessible to psychic understanding , but they have not the abstract character of symbols . Therefore , they cannot be approached ...
Side 53
... emotional experience of " reality " in the dream is for everybody , also for us , not different from the emotional experience of our ordinary reality . As Schopen- hauer has pointed out , only the regular experience of awakening enables ...
... emotional experience of " reality " in the dream is for everybody , also for us , not different from the emotional experience of our ordinary reality . As Schopen- hauer has pointed out , only the regular experience of awakening enables ...
Innhold
The Scientific Aspect of Sleep and Dream in the Child INTRODUCTION | 1 |
The Etiology of Sleep 30 | 30 |
FINCH and JOHN P KEMPH | 47 |
Opphavsrett | |
5 andre deler vises ikke
Andre utgaver - Vis alle
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
activity actually addition adults appear approach associations average awake awakening become bedtime beginning behavior body called cause cent changes child childhood consciousness considerable considered continue demands described difficulties disorders disturbances dream dynamic early effect emotional especially examiners existence experience expressed eyes fact factors fall asleep fear feel frequently Freud function getting girl give go to bed half hour human important indicate individual infant interesting interpretation later less logical manifest material means mental months morning mother movement neurotic night nightmares normal object observations occur once parents patient pattern person play possible present primitive problem psychological reason REM periods reported result seems seen similar sleep disturbances Stage subjects symbol theory things thinking unconscious understanding usually various visual waking whole York