| unconscious |
A central psychic zone defined by Freudian psychology. For Sigmund Freud, human behavior are driven by forces of the unconscious. To varying degrees all three components of the human psyche -- the id, the ego, and the superego -- all work in the unconscious.
Ãâó: www2.cumberlandcollege.edu/acad/english/litcritweb...
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| unconscious |
Freud argues that aspects of our conscious life which are socially/culturally taboo or forbidden, or which are traumatic, become repressed. The Unconscious is thus constructed out of repressed instincts, desires, fears and anxieties. Although our Unconscious is completely unknowable to us, it does manifest itself in disguised form for example in Freudian slips, neuroses, compulsions and dreams. Jacques Lacan argues that the Unconscious presents itself in metaphorical and metonymic form ie. ...
Ãâó: www.adamranson.freeserve.co.uk/critical%20concepts...
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| unconscious |
refers to thoughts and feelings that a person is not directly or fully aware of.
Ãâó: www.a2zpsychology.com/psychology_guide/mental_illn...
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| unconscious |
a state that appears like deep sleep when a person loses all awareness of their surroundings following an injury or illness
Ãâó: tilz.tearfund.org/Publications/PILLARS/Preparing+f...
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| unconscious |
The unconscious contains the neurophysiological processes that keep the physical body alive and healthy under ideal conditions, or those that cause disease and death through psychosomatic illnesses under adverse conditions. The unconscious creates, maintains, and controls the brain, nervous system, and nerve impulses, and mediates between the organic mental apparatus and mental activity. ...
Ãâó: www.astralvoyage.com/projection/Glossary.html
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