Friday, August 27, 2010

Vascular Dementia Prognosis

Freud e Back: due approcci diversi al mondo delle emozioni




The historical period from 1916 to 1936 is a period of fruitful ideas and studies. In psychology, the beginning of the '900 Freud began to formulate his new theory of mental dynamics and in 1905 wrote the first edition of the "Three Wise Men's Sexual Theory," in 1916-17 "Introduction to Psychoanalysis" in 1926 'Inhibitions, Symptoms and Anxiety. "
During his studies he defines emotions as complex states are subject to removal, movement, distortion, alteration, knowable only through inference or observation of behaviors, dreams, blunders, etc.. He attributes the other hand, drives to the function of the psychic energy boost. The impulse is defined as an energy boost that is the body strive towards a goal. The unclear source of this process is of organic origin, physical chemistry, psychology and inaccessible to the mostly remains unknown. The drive theory in Freud remains dualistic and in this way he will define two basic types of drives, that of life and that of death, as fundamental principles that govern in the final analysis, the activity.
So the speech "emotion" remains in the background. He prefers to give his creation, "the drive" from which everything comes, the thrust of the psychic energy.
From 1916 to 1936 Freud and Cannon with their studies give an important contribution to the science of the Soul. What's even more amazing is that this time there are also studies of E. Bach simply, gently, gently experience the effect of flowers on the diseases of his patients. He builds in those years and sets out his theory attributing the mental state the source of discomfort and some emotions, feelings and moods, the cause of disease.
Bach himself wrote in "Free Yourself": "as the most important things in the body reflects the true causes of the disease (which are, for example fear, indecision, doubt, etc..) In the disorder of its equipment and textiles. Disease is therefore the result of interference: interfering with someone else or allow others to interfere with us. " Dr. Bach stands, writes Ellis Barker in the thirties, because "its claims are staggering." advocate the unity of the individual, this genius of holistic medicine September 24, 1936, during a conference in Wollingford thus encourages physicians to treat their patients according to their uniqueness:
"Once again, you may be quite sure that if we are declining, or we are not everything ourselves, if we are trying to prevent a disease - it's a short or long illness - the principle is the same: the patient treated according to the state of mind, according to the character, individuality, and can not go wrong. "

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