The Journal of Abnormal Psychology, Zväzok 8

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Old Corner Bookstore, 1913

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Strana 370 - Earth fills her lap with pleasures of her own; Yearnings she hath in her own natural kind, And, even with something of a mother's mind And no unworthy aim, The homely nurse doth all she can To make her foster-child, her inmate Man, Forget the glories he hath known, And that imperial palace whence he came. Behold the Child among his new-born blisses, A six years
Strana 105 - fall" is very commonly employed to indicate the idea in question — one need only mention such expressions as "to fall from grace," "fallen women," "backsliding after conversion," etc. — and the two connotations of the word, the literal and the metaphorical, generally become associated in the unconscious, as do the various connotations of any given word or of any pair of similarly sounding words. (2) The repressed desire to make some one else fall, either literally (to throw them down and hurt...
Strana 206 - Hysteria is a form of mental depression characterized by the retraction of the field of personal consciousness and a tendency to the dissociation and emancipation of the system of ideas and functions that constitute personality."1 In Palmer's classic work, "The Nature of Goodness...
Strana 113 - ... of color, a theory in harmony with the one I devised for the explanation of colored hearing. The fact that the synesthesia could be artificially produced by peripheral stimuli does not militate against the condition being a central phenomenon. A PERVERSION NOT COMMONLY NOTED BY MARGARET OTIS, PH.D. A FORM of perversion that is well known among workers in reform schools and institutions for delinquent girls, is that of love-making between the white and colored girls.
Strana 68 - No amount of work in the slums or removing the slums from our cities will ever be successful until we take care of those who make the slums what they are. If all of the slum districts of our cities were removed to-morrow and model tenements built in their places, we would still have slums in a week's time
Strana 106 - ... by his mother, who. doted on her first-born and nursed him night and day. He no doubt highly appreciated this affection, for when another child arrived — late in his second year — he showed every sign of resentment at this apparently superfluous intrusion into the circle of love where he had hitherto reigned supreme. Particularly did he object to renouncing the pleasure of being cradled in his mother's arms, which till now had always been open to him,* and the having to wait disconsolately...
Strana 144 - From concent divinely framed ; Heaven is music, and thy beauty's Birth is heavenly. These dull notes we sing Discords need for helps to grace them, Only beauty purely loving Knows no discord, But still moves delight, Like clear springs renewed by flowing. Ever perfect, ever in themselves eternal.
Strana 106 - He secretly hated his father, and nursed phantasies of killing him, so he ascribed to his father a similar hostility and also feared the latter's retribution if his evil thoughts became known. Therefore, when first the visitor, and later on the father, forced him into a situation where he was in peril of falling from a height,2 his instinctive reaction was," It's come at last. The all-knowing father has discovered my sinful thoughts, and he is going to do to me what I wanted to do to my little sister.
Strana 389 - ... that type. At the same time I suspected, though without saying so, that the feeling of aversion very probably concealed repressed emotions of an exactly opposite character. I then asked her to fix her mind on the particular type of man she had described and to relate to me all her incoming thoughts. In response to my request she reported that she found herself thinking of a certain blond man with whom we both were slightly acquainted; next, of another man of much the same appearance, whom, also,...
Strana 357 - ... cues for many reactions of the raccoons. These attitudes must be assumed as cues for the rats and dogs in order to explain their reactions. (b) Some intraorganic (non-orientation) factor not visible to the experimenter must be assumed in order to explain a significant number of the correct reactions of the raccoons and all of the successful reactions of the children.

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