Category: E
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Ego psychology
The study and elucidation of those slowly changing functions known as psychic structures that usually shape, channel, and organize mental activity into meaningful and tolerable patterns of experience. The usual structures referred to in this sense are memory, speech, locomotion, cognition, drive, restraint, discharge, and the capacity to make judgments and decisions.
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Egomania
Pathological preoccupation with self.
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Ego ideal
The part of the personality that comprises the aims and goals for the self; usually refers to the conscious or unconscious emulation of significant figures with which one has identified. The ego ideal emphasizes what one should be or do in contrast to what one should not be or not do. A part of the…
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Ego functions
According to the theoretical system of carl gustav jung (1875–1961), the ego has four inseparable functions (i.e., four different fundamental ways of perceiving and interpreting reality): thinking, feeling, sensation, and intuition. Thinking is the opposite of feeling, and sensation is the opposite of intuition. Jung suggested that most people start life developing one of these…
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Ego-dystonic
Referring to aspects of a person’s behavior, thoughts, and attitudes that are viewed by the self as repugnant or inconsistent with the total personality and sense of self. Contrast with egosyntonic. To something repulsive to the individual’s self-image.
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Egocentric
Self-centered. Limited to concern for oneself. To a withdrawal from the external world with concentration on the self.
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Ego boundaries
Hypothesized lines of demarcation between the ego and 1) the external world (external ego boundary) and 2) the internal world, including the repressed unconscious, the id, and much of the superego (internal ego boundary). Refers to the ability of the intact ego to differentiate the real from the unreal.
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Ego analysis
Intensive psychoanalytic study and analysis of the ways in which the ego resolves or attempts to deal with intrapsychic conflicts, especially in relation to the development of mental mechanisms and the maturation of capacity for rational thought and action. Modern psychoanalysis gives more emphasis to considerations of the defensive operations of the ego than did…
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Ego
In psychoanalytic theory, one of the three major divisions in the structural model of the psychic apparatus, the others being the id and the superego. The ego represents the sum of certain mental mechanisms, such as perception and memory, and specific defense mechanisms. It serves to mediate between the demands of primitive instinctual drives (the…
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Effexor
Brand name for the serotonin-norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor (SNRI) antidepressant drug venlafaxine.