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10 pages. According to Freud, there is little good in the world that arises naturally and without coercion of one form or another, of one person to another. Man’s existence is rooted in aggression, and all individual concepts he had originated through his study of the mind Freud found he could apply to social theory. As he ultimately ascribed guilt to nearly every concept he defined through case studies and in the process of refining his theories of personality, so he applied the same concepts to civilization as a whole. Bibliography lists 8 sources.
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File: D0_JGAfred.rtf
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aggressive thoughts that are leftover from her childhood. Freuds theory of transference is explained as follows: "Transference" refers to any distortion of a present relationship because of unresolved (and
mostly unconscious) issues left over from early relationships, especially with the parents in childhood. All distortion of the interaction between doctor and patient (or boss-worker, teacher-student, any hierarchical relationship) by
the needs and behaviors that were most meaningful in childhood are forms of transference. When the manifestation is in the patient -- e.g., Doras being distracted by Freuds smelling of
smoke, which reminds her of both her father and Herr K. -- its just "transference." When the manifestation is in the doctor -- e.g., Freuds insisting that Dora was so
distracted -- its properly called "counter-transference." In psychoanalytic therapy, the very vagueness of the rules and the apparent powerlessness of the patient stimulate transferences distortions of both a sexual and
an aggressive sort. As these are noted and interpreted by the analyst (who is perhaps simultaneously having trouble with their own "counter-transference" reactions to the patients seductiveness and hostility) the
therapy makes it apparent to the patient how neurotic tendencies from earlier life are distorting relationships in the here and now. The analysis and treatment of the "transference neurosis" is
thus often described as the essence of psychoanalytic therapy" (Davis, 2002, PG). According to Freud, there is little good in the world that arises naturally and without coercion
of one form or another, of one person to another. Mans existence is rooted in aggression, and all individual concepts he had originated through his study of the mind
Freud found he could apply to social theory. As he ultimately ascribed guilt to nearly every concept he defined through case studies and in the process of refining his
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