Amychophobia-fear of scratches or being scratched
or
Traumatophobia- Fear of injury
Probably the 1st one
The accepted phobia name for this condition is Aeroacrophobia.
the phobia for open doors is called "agoraphobia" You Divvy Agraphobia is the fear of open spaces :P
Cenophobia - fear of wide open spaces or empty things.
With an understanding of the language and a good list of existing phobias, I've come up with a new name for the Fear of Inability to Know or Fear of Not Knowing: Agnosiophobia (From Gnosiophobia - Fear of knowledge, which too many people are afflicted with.)
Phobias are irrational fears. Many of them do not have a reason, such as the fear of spiders, or even sillier - plastic wrap, open spaces, dolls, or homosexuality.
A non-specific phobia is a fear of a more generalized nature. Agoraphobia, for instance, is non-specific. The fear of open spaces, or the more modern attached meaning where the fear includes being in a crowded place
Claustrophobia is considered to be the opposite of agoraphobia. Claustrophobia is the fear of being indoors or in a tight and compacted space. Agoraphobia is the fear of being outdoors and in an open and spacious space.
Claustrophobia (from claustrum "a shut in place")
If you mean to say the fear of public and open spaces, it's called Agoraphobia.
A scientific phobia refers to a scientific name for people who suffer fears of specific objects and/or situations. For example: * acrophobia - fear of heights * agoraphobia - fear of crowds or open spaces * amathophobia - fear of dust
Casadastraphobia is a specific phobia, and, thus, an anxiety disorder, characterized by a persistent fear of falling into the sky, whereby unsecured exposure to the open sky may act as a panic trigger for this particular phobia's sufferers.
There isn't a specific phobia for the fear of peace, but a general fear of peace or an aversion to peaceful situations could be related to different phobias like agoraphobia (fear of open spaces), atychiphobia (fear of failure), or neophobia (fear of new things).