| Amitai Etzioni - 1975 - 612 sider
...Freud took care to instruct psychoanalysts that theirs was an office charisma, not a personal one. The analyst 'must recognize that the patient's falling...not to be ascribed to the charms of his person.'" (1959, p. 171). and shallow teacher who fascinates undergraduates with his colorful language, imagery,... | |
| Philip Rieff - 1979 - 468 sider
...took special care to instruct psychoanalysts that theirs was an office charisma, not a personal one. The analyst "must recognize that the patient's falling...is not to be ascribed to the charms of his person." *0 If we view the psychoanalyst historically, as the descendant of earlier moral physicians, this routinization... | |
| Zvi Giora - 1992 - 272 sider
...mind of the patient. Further, in his "History of the psychoanalytic movement", Freud (1 914) wrote that the analyst must recognize that the patient's...falling in love is induced by the analytic situation. Is, then, transference induced or does it develop spontaneously, influenced by the rules of the treatment?... | |
| Hans W Cohn - 1997 - 148 sider
...useful warning against any tendency to a counter-transference which may be present in his own mind. He must recognize that the patient's falling in love...induced by the analytic situation and is not to be attributed to the charms of his own person' (Freud, 1915: 160-61). It is often forgotten - not surprisingly... | |
| Robert I. Simon - 2003 - 686 sider
...treatment may contain the seed for even greater difficulty later. Freud's admonition that the therapist must recognize that the "patient's falling in love" is induced by the treatment situation and not the charms of the therapist is especially pertinent here. A literary classic... | |
| Robert I. Simon, Daniel W. Shuman - 2007 - 272 sider
...experience of falling in love as it occurs outside of therapy. Freud (1914/1968) stated that the clinician "must recognize that the patient's falling in love...induced by the analytic situation and is not to be attributed to the charms of his own person; so that he has no grounds whatever for being proud of such... | |
| Susan Budd, Ursula Sharma - 1994 - 256 sider
...particularly remarkable or loveable (or malign or seductive). As Freud mordantly remarked, the physician 'must recognize that the patient's falling in love...induced by the analytic situation, and is not to be attributed to the charms of his own person' (Freud, 1915: 160-1). Rather, it is because of the abstinence... | |
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