• Neurosis (pl.: neuroses) is a term mainly used today by followers of Freudian thinking to describe mental disorders caused by past anxiety, often that...
    98 KB (11,295 words) - 14:42, 13 June 2024
  • Thumbnail for Neurosis (band)
    Neurosis is an American post-metal band from Oakland, California. It was formed in 1985 by guitarist Scott Kelly, bassist Dave Edwardson, and drummer Jason...
    39 KB (3,317 words) - 05:16, 18 July 2024
  • Noogenic neurosis is a term in logotherapy denoting a form of neurosis stemming from "existential frustration" (see existential crisis). The term was...
    1 KB (166 words) - 19:51, 30 November 2023
  • Narcissistic neurosis is a term introduced by Sigmund Freud to distinguish the class of neuroses characterised by their lack of object relations and their...
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  • Thumbnail for Neurosis discography
    The following is a comprehensive discography of Neurosis, a Californian post-metal band. "Top Hard Rock albums". Billboard. Archived from the original...
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  • Ocular neurosis is the usual cause of eye strain headache that begins abruptly with use of the eyes in which there is a normal ophthalmologic exam. ICD...
    1,004 bytes (100 words) - 08:54, 22 March 2022
  • Neurosis & Jarboe is a collaboration between American avant-garde metal band Neurosis and singer-songwriter Jarboe formerly of Swans. It was released...
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  • Transference neurosis is a term that Sigmund Freud introduced in 1914 to describe a new form of the analysand's infantile neurosis that develops during...
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  • Rabid Neurosis (RNS) was an MP3 warez release organization which was founded in 1996, following in the footsteps of Compress 'Da Audio (CDA), the first...
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  • term neurosis refers to mental disorders that involve neither hallucinations or delusions. Neurosis may also refer to: Neurosis (band) "Neurosis", a song...
    300 bytes (67 words) - 13:33, 12 February 2022
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    Hysteria (redirect from Hysterical neurosis)
    neurologist Jean-Martin Charcot tackled what he referred to as "the great neurosis" or hysteria. Charcot theorized that hysteria was a hereditary, physiological...
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  • Thumbnail for Anxiety disorder
    Anxiety disorders are a group of mental disorders characterized by significant and uncontrollable feelings of anxiety and fear such that a person's social...
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    trauma of war. Also known as "combat fatigue", "battle fatigue", or "battle neurosis", it has some overlap with the diagnosis of acute stress reaction used...
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  • The Primal Scream. Primal Therapy: The Cure for Neurosis (1970; second edition 1999) is a book by the psychologist Arthur Janov, in which the author describes...
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  • patients with neurocirculatory asthenia have a cardiac neurosis, and not all patients with cardiac neurosis have neurocirculatory asthenia." None of these terms...
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  • Psychasthenia was a psychological disorder characterized by phobias, obsessions, compulsions, or excessive anxiety. The term is no longer in psychiatric...
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  • Thumbnail for Genitality in the Theory and Therapy of Neurosis
    later published in English as Genitality in the Theory and Therapy of Neurosis. In it, Reich proposed, based on his therapeutic experience and empirical...
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  • Thumbnail for Conversion disorder
    recent surveys of conversion disorder, formerly classified as "hysterical neurosis, conversion type", females predominate, with between two and six female...
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  • Thumbnail for Mass psychogenic illness
    Mass psychogenic illness (MPI), also called mass sociogenic illness, mass psychogenic disorder, epidemic hysteria or mass hysteria, involves the spread...
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  • Learned helplessness is the behavior exhibited by a subject after enduring repeated aversive stimuli beyond their control. It was initially thought to...
    35 KB (4,235 words) - 21:01, 21 August 2024
  • Jung's theory of neurosis is based on the premise of a self-regulating psyche composed of tensions between opposing attitudes of the ego and the unconscious...
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  • Thumbnail for Existential crisis
    existential dread, existential vacuum, existential despair, existential neurosis, existential sickness, anxiety, and alienation. Different authors focus...
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  • terms, including 'shell shock', 'war nerves', neurasthenia and 'combat neurosis'. The term "post-traumatic stress disorder" came into use in the 1970s...
    204 KB (22,305 words) - 03:48, 20 August 2024
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    these claims as fake, sometimes belittling people's pain as litigation neurosis, implying that the only real problem was the injured person making a legal...
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  • Denial of Death, Becker discusses the concept of neurosis starting with Otto Rank's observation that "neurosis sums up all the problems of a human life." Becker...
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  • During World War I, hysterical men were diagnosed with shell shock or war neurosis, which later went on to shape modern theories on PTSD. The notion of male...
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  • Neurosis and Human Growth: The Struggle Toward Self-Realization is the magnum opus of German-American psychoanalyst Karen Horney. In it she outlines her...
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  • Thumbnail for Obsessive–compulsive disorder
    patient of Sigmund Freud, suffered from what was then called "obsessional neurosis". Lanzer's illness was characterised most famously by a pattern of distressing...
    168 KB (18,568 words) - 09:24, 21 August 2024
  • Thumbnail for Karen Horney
    subject led her to compile a detailed theory of neurosis, with data from her patients. Horney believed neurosis to be a continuous process—with neuroses commonly...
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  • considered a legitimate diagnosis. The DSM-II used the term hysterical neurosis, dissociative type. It described the possible occurrence of alterations...
    153 KB (16,793 words) - 12:44, 22 August 2024