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The psychology of functional neuroses

"Thinking, in the form of perception, may be approached through the studies of familiar categories, such as space perception, time perception, the reading process, illusions, and other experiences in which something like an elementary form of inference may be discerned. Thinking, in the form of argument, reasoning and scientific induction, may be approached through the inquiries of logic and methodology. Or, as a momentary and complex experience, thought may be investigated by the systematic methods of introspection as these have developed in the history of psychology. In this volume, instead, thought is approached through the phenomena of sleep, drowsiness and the dream. The best justification of this approach will be found in whatever positive contribution the study is found to make to an understanding of "the higher mental processes." Of the many problems left unsolved, and the topics omitted, no one is more painfully aware than is the author. The book differs from most recent applications of dream observations, in that it finds but scant scientific value in the cherished assertions of the Freudian psychology. But while its attitude toward the Libido, the Unconscious, Symbolism, the Sexual Theory, and Infantilism is entirely sceptical, it seeks nevertheless to indicate and to apply such sober contributions as have from time to time appeared in the literature of "psychoanalogy," in its relation to dreaming, to meaning, and to thinking. The whole literature of this movement, from Herbart, its founder, through Freud, its expositor, to Rivers' recent adaptations of its principles, has a suggestive value, however unscientific its technique and method. Emphasis is laid throughout the book on the mechanism of "redintegration" as a descriptive and explanatory principle of mental phenomena"--Preface. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved).

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  • ""Thinking, in the form of perception, may be approached through the studies of familiar categories, such as space perception, time perception, the reading process, illusions, and other experiences in which something like an elementary form of inference may be discerned. Thinking, in the form of argument, reasoning and scientific induction, may be approached through the inquiries of logic and methodology. Or, as a momentary and complex experience, thought may be investigated by the systematic methods of introspection as these have developed in the history of psychology. In this volume, instead, thought is approached through the phenomena of sleep, drowsiness and the dream. The best justification of this approach will be found in whatever positive contribution the study is found to make to an understanding of "the higher mental processes." Of the many problems left unsolved, and the topics omitted, no one is more painfully aware than is the author. The book differs from most recent applications of dream observations, in that it finds but scant scientific value in the cherished assertions of the Freudian psychology. But while its attitude toward the Libido, the Unconscious, Symbolism, the Sexual Theory, and Infantilism is entirely sceptical, it seeks nevertheless to indicate and to apply such sober contributions as have from time to time appeared in the literature of "psychoanalogy," in its relation to dreaming, to meaning, and to thinking. The whole literature of this movement, from Herbart, its founder, through Freud, its expositor, to Rivers' recent adaptations of its principles, has a suggestive value, however unscientific its technique and method. Emphasis is laid throughout the book on the mechanism of "redintegration" as a descriptive and explanatory principle of mental phenomena"--Preface. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)."@en
  • ""It is psychologically as well as socially and medically desirable that representative cases of the functional neuroses be accorded the more thorough individual and group attention already given to the various other neuropsychiatric conditions. From this point of view it is fortunate that during the recent war a special hospital was designated where soldiers with persistent psychoneurotic symptoms were assembled for further observation and diagnosis, care and treatment. U. S. A. General Hospital No. 30, at Plattsburg Barracks, N. Y., was so designated. Along with the other hospital services, a psychological service was established, of which the writer was the director. Along with the routine duties of the service, which was also charged with the conduct of occupational therapy, a group of about 1,200 consecutive cases was given special attention. Through the courtesy of the medical staff and the cordial cooperation of the various hospital services, complete data and records concerning all cases were accessible. Personal observations of all cases and extended examination and observation of cases of special interest were facilitated. Psychological examinations were made of each individual, of such range and technique as the case and the interest and time of the psychological staff seemed to warrant. The briefest examination undertaken was such an investigation of intellectual capacity and mental alertness as would enable a record to be made of the individual's mental age. The examinations ranged from this minimum to cases studied for a total of ten hours or more, by nearly every available form of qualitative and quantitative psychological technique. The value of such an opportunity is apparent. Here was an array of over a thousand psychoneurotics, whose symptoms were at least of such definite character that the individuals were found unadaptable to the conditions of service in a group enterprise. In the classification of patients in the data here reported, the final diagnoses as recorded in the patients' clinical record were followed. No attempt is made to explain the significance of these various categories, since they accord with the common use of the terms in contemporary neuropsychiatric literature. Readers unfamiliar with the terms will find them clearly explained and illustrated in the modern texts in psychiatry." (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2006 APA, all rights reserved)"
  • ""It is psychologically as well as socially and medically desirable that representative cases of the functional neuroses be accorded the more thorough individual and group attention already given to the various other neuropsychiatric conditions. From this point of view it is fortunate that during the recent war a special hospital was designated where soldiers with persistent psychoneurotic symptoms were assembled for further observation and diagnosis, care and treatment. U.S.A. General Hospital No. 30, at Plattsburg Barracks, N.Y., was so designated. Along with the other hospital services, a psychological service was established, of which the writer was the director. Along with the routine duties of the service, which was also charged with the conduct of occupational therapy, a group of about 1,200 consecutive cases was given special attention. Through the courtesy of the medical staff and the cordial cooperation of the various hospital services, complete data and records concerning all cases were accessible. Personal observations of all cases and extended examination and observation of cases of special interest were facilitated. Psychological examinations were made of each individual, of such range and technique as the case and the interest and time of the psychological staff seemed to warrant. The briefest examination undertaken was such an investigation of intellectual capacity and mental alertness as would enable a record to be made of the individual's mental age. The examinations ranged from this minimum to cases studied for a total of ten hours or more, by nearly every available form of qualitative and quantitative psychological technique. The value of such an opportunity is apparent. Here was an array of over a thousand psychoneurotics, whose symptoms were at least of such definite character that the individuals were found unadaptable to the conditions of service in a group enterprise. In the classification of patients in the data here reported, the final diagnoses as recorded in the patients' clinical record were followed. No attempt is made to explain the significance of these various categories, since they accord with the common use of the terms in contemporary neuropsychiatric literature. Readers unfamiliar with the terms will find them clearly explained and illustrated in the modern texts in psychiatry." (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2006 APA, all rights reserved)."@en
  • ""Thinking, in the form of perception, may be approached through the studies of familiar categories, such as space perception, time perception, the reading process, illusions, and other experiences in which something like an elementary form of inference may be discerned. Thinking, in the form of argument, reasoning and scientific induction, may be approached through the inquiries of logic and methodology. Or, as a momentary and complex experience, thought may be investigated by the systematic methods of introspection as these have developed in the history of psychology. In this volume, instead, thought is approached through the phenomena of sleep, drowsiness and the dream. The best justification of this approach will be found in whatever positive contribution the study is found to make to an understanding of "the higher mental processes." Of the many problems left unsolved, and the topics omitted, no one is more painfully aware than is the author. The book differs from most recent applications of dream observations, in that it finds but scant scientific value in the cherished assertions of the Freudian psychology. But while its attitude toward the Libido, the Unconscious, Symbolism, the Sexual Theory, and Infantilism is entirely sceptical, it seeks nevertheless to indicate and to apply such sober contributions as have from time to time appeared in the literature of "psychoanalogy, " in its relation to dreaming, to meaning, and to thinking. The whole literature of this movement, from Herbart, its founder, through Freud, its expositor, to Rivers' recent adaptations of its principles, has a suggestive value, however unscientific its technique and method. Emphasis is laid throughout the book on the mechanism of "redintegration" as a descriptive and explanatory principle of mental phenomena"--Préface."
  • ""Thinking, in the form of perception, may be approached through the studies of familiar categories, such as space perception, time perception, the reading process, illusions, and other experiences in which something like an elementary form of inference may be discerned. Thinking, in the form of argument, reasoning and scientific induction, may be approached through the inquiries of logic and methodology. Or, as a momentary and complex experience, thought may be investigated by the systematic methods of introspection as these have developed in the history of psychology. In this volume, instead, thought is approached through the phenomena of sleep, drowsiness and the dream. The best justification of this approach will be found in whatever positive contribution the study is found to make to an understanding of "the higher mental processes." Of the many problems left unsolved, and the topics omitted, no one is more painfully aware than is the author. The book differs from most recent applications of dream observations, in that it finds but scant scientific value in the cherished assertions of the Freudian psychology. But while its attitude toward the Libido, the Unconscious, Symbolism, the Sexual Theory, and Infantilism is entirely sceptical, it seeks nevertheless to indicate and to apply such sober contributions as have from time to time appeared in the literature of "psychoanalogy, " in its relation to dreaming, to meaning, and to thinking. The whole literature of this movement, from Herbart, its founder, through Freud, its expositor, to Rivers' recent adaptations of its principles, has a suggestive value, however unscientific its technique and method. Emphasis is laid throughout the book on the mechanism of "redintegration" as a descriptive and explanatory principle of mental phenomena"--Preface. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)."@en

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  • "Electronic books"@en

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  • "Psychology of thought Approached through the studies of sleeping and dreaming"
  • "The psychology of functional neuroses"@en
  • "The psychology of functional neuroses"
  • "The Psychology of thought"
  • "The Psychology of Thought. Approached through studies of sleeping and dreaming"@en
  • "The psychology of thought, approached through studies of sleeping and dreaming"
  • "The psychology of thought, approached through studies of sleeping and dreaming"@en
  • "The psychology of thought"@en
  • "The psychology of thought"
  • "The Psychology of Functional Neuroses"@en
  • "The Psychology of Functional Neuroses"
  • "Psychology of thought approached through studies of sleeping and dreaming"
  • "The psychology of functional neurosis"@en
  • "Psychology"
  • "Psychology"@en
  • "The psychology of thought approached through studies of sleeping and dreaming"@en
  • "The psychology of thought approached through studies of sleeping and dreaming"
  • "Psychology of functional neuroses"
  • "The Psychology of Thought : approached through studies of sleeping and dreaming"
  • "The psychlogy of thought, approached through studies of sleeping and dreaming"@en
  • "The psychology of thought : approached through studies of sleeping and dreaming"@en
  • "The psychology of thought : approached through studies of sleeping and dreaming"
  • "The psychology of thought : approached studies of sleeping and dreaming"@en
  • "Psychology : its facts and principles"@en

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