| ego |
I, myself. This term is used in forming genealogical tables, to represent the person who is the object of inquiry.
Ãâó: www.new-york-lawyer.ws/law-dictionary/e.htm
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| egophony |
Case which is determined by having the patient say the letter "E", while you're listening through the stethoscope to a suspected area of involvement. If you are listening for an "E", and it comes through like "A", then egophony is present. What is happening is that the pure sound has become louder and more nasal in quality. It can be heard directly above an area of pleural effusion due to compression atelectasis of the lung.
Ãâó: sprojects.mmi.mcgill.ca/mvs/GLOSSARY/E.HTM
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| ego |
In psychoanalysis, the part of personality that represents reason, good sense, and rational self-control.
Ãâó: www.elissetche.org/dico/E.htm
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| egoism |
the view that we are always motivated by self-interest or that we always should be so motivated. Contemporary rational choice theorists attempt to understand how actual social institutions can be based on the choices of individuals acting according to egoist principles. The prisoner's dilemma and other problem cases show difficulties with this approach.
Ãâó: www.filosofia.net/materiales/rec/glosaen.htm
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| ego |
One of the three components of the human psyche delineated by Sigmund Freud. The ego mediates between the pleasurable desires of the id and the moral imperatives of the superego. The mature ego embodies the reality principle as it works to protect the individual from the oppression of society and to find a means for healthy self-expression in society.
Ãâó: www2.cumberlandcollege.edu/acad/english/litcritweb...
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