THE RHETORICS OF THE CASE 4, KATHARINA
sex is nothing....men and women have a mental ilness all because of sexual desire which is innate in infants..
Gordon Allport
He saw circumcision as a painful and unnecessary religious rite which it was. In any case he was a European and they have never practiced this sort of genital mutilation.
yes
Freud incorporated full body massage (known as general massage at the time) as a means of relaxing the patient, in the belief that it had a mesmeric effect that would allow them to express their emotions with greater ease. He also used it to ease muscular discomfort, tension and cramp. However as his ideas coalesced, and he obtained a greater understanding of the 'mind' he subsequently abandoned the practice. He was also fearful and concerned that touch would arouse sexual feelings in both patient and client. See for example the case of Frau Emmy von N in Studies in Hysteria.
Little Hans was a young boy Freud studied while developing his theory of the Oedipus complex. Hans had a phobia of horses, and Freud concluded that this was actually a sign of Hans going through the Oedipus complex. He was actually afraid of his father castrating him, which he displaced onto a fear of horses.
Gordon Allport
He saw circumcision as a painful and unnecessary religious rite which it was. In any case he was a European and they have never practiced this sort of genital mutilation.
yes
Sigmund Freud believed dreams were often wish fulfilment. In this case it would mean you wish the person was still alive.
Hi everybody, Freud employed case studies and clinical observations.
This is the argument of a case rather than the hard facts of a case
The cast of My Martyrdom in Every Case - 2008 includes: Katharina Noppeney Jeff Wolfshohl as Garv
By asking a lead in question.
An amicus is a person in law who is not party to a case but who submits a brief and/or presents an oral argument in that case.
17
i dont realy no
Freud incorporated full body massage (known as general massage at the time) as a means of relaxing the patient, in the belief that it had a mesmeric effect that would allow them to express their emotions with greater ease. He also used it to ease muscular discomfort, tension and cramp. However as his ideas coalesced, and he obtained a greater understanding of the 'mind' he subsequently abandoned the practice. He was also fearful and concerned that touch would arouse sexual feelings in both patient and client. See for example the case of Frau Emmy von N in Studies in Hysteria.