Results for ' manifest anxiety'

980 found
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  1.  38
    Manifest anxiety scale score and the ready signal in classical conditioning.William F. Prokasy & Francis L. Whaley - 1962 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 63 (2):119.
  2.  18
    An evaluation of the Manifest Anxiety Scale by the use of electromyography.Ascanio Michael Rossi - 1959 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 58 (1):64.
  3.  15
    Manifest anxiety: Have we misread the data?Eli Saltz - 1970 - Psychological Review 77 (6):568-573.
  4.  31
    Activation, manifest anxiety, and verbal learning.Robert E. Thayer & Sheila J. Cox - 1968 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 78 (3p1):524.
  5.  42
    Summation of manifest anxiety and muscular tension.Donald R. Meyer & Merrill E. Noble - 1958 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 55 (6):599.
  6.  29
    Some effects of manifest anxiety on mental set.Irving Maltzman, Jack Fox & Lloyd Morrisett Jr - 1953 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 46 (1):50.
  7.  42
    The correlates of manifest anxiety in stylus maze learning.Howard S. Axelrod, Emory L. Cowen & Fred Heilizer - 1956 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 51 (2):131.
  8.  31
    Replication report: The relationship of manifest anxiety and electric shock to eyelid conditioning.Donald F. Caldwell & Rue L. Cromwell - 1959 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 57 (5):348.
  9.  31
    Supplementary report: The relationship of induced muscular tension to manifest anxiety in learning.O. Ivar Lovaas - 1960 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 59 (3):205.
  10.  33
    Relation of the narrowing of the visual field with an increase in distance to manifest anxiety.Harald-Edwin Schmidt - 1964 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 68 (4):334.
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  11.  29
    The relationship of induced muscular tension, tension level, and manifest anxiety in learning.O. Ivar Lovaas - 1960 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 59 (3):145.
  12.  13
    Perceptual efficiency as related to induced muscular effort and manifest anxiety.Milton F. Shore - 1958 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 55 (2):179.
  13.  30
    The relationship between the Type A behavior pattern, fear of death, and manifest anxiety.James L. Tramill, P. Jeannie Kleinhammer-Tramill, Stephen F. Davis, Cherri S. Parks & David Alexander - 1984 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 22 (1):42-44.
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  14.  50
    Anxiety: Here and Beyond.Beyon Miloyan, Adam Bulley & Thomas Suddendorf - 2019 - Emotion Review 11 (1):39-49.
    The future harbours the potential for myriad threats to the fitness of organisms, and many species prepare accordingly based on indicators of hazards. Here, we distinguish between defensive responses on the basis of sensed cues and those based on autocues generated by mental simulations of the future in humans. Whereas sensed threat cues usually induce specific responses with reference to particular features of the environment or generalized responses to protect against diffuse threats, autocues generated by mental simulations of the future (...)
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  15.  14
    Anxiety and Phobias.Gerrit Glas - 2013 - In K. W. M. Fulford, Martin Davies, Richard Gipps, George Graham, John Sadler, Giovanni Stanghellini & Tim Thornton, The Oxford handbook of philosophy and psychiatry. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
    Philosophical issues with respect to anxiety and its pathological variants arise at the border between everyday and clinical understanding of anxiety, between clinical and scientific approaches and between scientific concepts and the philosophical frameworks they refer to. These four ways of understanding can be seen as epistemic levels that point at different aspects and qualities of anxiety. After a brief historical introduction the three interfaces will be discussed. Philosophical questions at the interface between the first two levels (...)
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  16.  6
    Stimulus processing bias in anxiety-related fear generalisation: drift-diffusion modelling and subgroups differences.Donghuan Zhang, Min Fan, Biyao Zhang, Yixuan Feng, Gao Yu, Wei Chen, Feng Biao & Xifu Zheng - forthcoming - Cognition and Emotion.
    In fear differential conditioning, stimuli that resemble the conditioned stimulus (CS+) are more likely to trigger fear responses. Excessive fear responses on stimuli not like CS + are often associated with anxiety. However, the threat judgments process and how this process manifests itself differently in subgroups with different generalisation rule applications, is unclear. This study examines whether anxiety biases the threat decision process in fear generalisation paradigm and whether subgroups characterised by different generalisation gradients was interpreted differently by (...)
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  17.  25
    “Dizziness of Freedom”: Anxiety Disorders and Metaphorical Meaning-making.Kalina Moskaluk, Jordan Zlatev & Joost van de Weijer - 2022 - Metaphor and Symbol 37 (4):303-322.
    Would metaphors used in the context of psychotherapy by people who experience various forms of anxiety disorders differ from those used by people who experience stress? We investigated this question with the help of the Motivation & Sedimentation Model (MSM), a theory of meaning-making developed within the synthetic new discipline of cognitive semiotics. The analysis of a sample of ten transcripts of psychotherapy sessions concerning the topic of anxiety, and a comparable sample concerning stress, showed a significantly stronger (...)
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  18.  40
    The meaning profiles of anxiety and depression: similarities and differences in two age groups.Shulamith Kreitler - 2017 - Cognition and Emotion 32 (7):1499-1513.
    ABSTRACTThe distinctiveness of anxiety and depression is discussed concerning their nature, definitions, uses, manifestations and determinants. The objective was to examine the difference and similarity of anxiety and depression by applying the psychosemantic approach, which is a theory and methodology based on analysing the cognitive processes applied in communicating meanings. In Study 1, there were 760 participants of both genders, 23–31 years old. They were administered the Meanings Test, which yields the respondent’s meaning profile, and one of seven (...)
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  19. Heidegger on Anxiety in the Face of Death—An Analysis and Extension.Mehrzad A. Moin - 2021 - Southwest Philosophy Review 37 (2):131-147.
    A significant portion of the secondary literature on Martin Heidegger’s Being and Time has focused on interpreting his formal conceptions of death and anxiety. Unlike these previous works, this essay will serve to fill a gap in the Heideggerian portrayal of death. Although he argues that Dasein is anxious about death at a fundamental level and that it proximally and for the most part covers up such anxiety, Heidegger does not provide ontic evidence in support of his claim, (...)
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  20.  44
    Emotional processing and heart rate in incarcerated male adolescents with callous unemotional traits: the role of anxiety.Bruggemann Jason, Goulter Natalie, Hall Jason, Lenroot Rhoshel & Kimonis Eva - 2014 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 8.
    Callous unemotional (CU) traits (i.e., a lack of empathy/remorse and poverty of emotion) that co-occur with childhood antisocial behaviour are believed to be the developmental precursor to psychopathy in adulthood. An increasing volume of evidence supports two distinct variants of CU traits/psychopathy, known as primary and secondary. Primary variants are thought to show core deficits in emotional reactivity (e.g., attenuated autonomic activity), whereas secondary variants present with high levels of anxiety and this may be reflected in increased emotional sensitivity (...)
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  21. Fear and Anxiety in the Dimensions of Art.Maria Popczyk - 2012 - Argument: Biannual Philosophical Journal 2 (2):333–346.
    In the paper I am concerned with various manifestations of aesthetic fear and anxiety, that is, fear and anxiety triggered by works of art, which I am discussing from aesthetic as well as anthropological perspectives. I am analysing the link between fear and pleasure in catharsis, in Edmund Burke’s notion of the sublime, and in reference to Goya’s Black Paintings and to Paul Virilio’s thought. Both aesthetic fear and aesthetic anxiety exist alongside other emotions, such as pity (...)
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  22.  28
    Roots of Ru 儒 Ethics in shi 士 Status Anxiety.Matthias L. Richter - 2021 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 137 (3):449.
    When originally independent pragmatic texts were included in larger early Chinese compilations, this entailed a recontextualization that potentially transformed the meaning of those texts significantly. Focusing on examples from the Analects and the Zengzi chapters in Da Dai Liji, this paper demonstrates that some didactic precepts which have come to be appreciated as general Ru moral and political philosophy are probably rooted in concrete and more modest applications. The texts discussed are in part based on a discourse accompanying the establishment (...)
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  23.  69
    An Assessment of Existential Worldview Function among Young Women at Risk for Depression and Anxiety—A Multi-Method Study.Christina Sophia Lloyd, Britt af Klinteberg & Valerie DeMarinis - 2017 - Archive for the Psychology of Religion 39 (2):165-203.
    Increasing rates of psychiatric problems like depression and anxiety among Swedish youth, predominantly among females, are considered a serious public mental health concern. Multiple studies confirm that psychological as well as existential vulnerability manifest in different ways for youths in Sweden. This multi-method study aimed at assessing existential worldview function by three factors: 1) existential worldview, 2) ontological security, and 3) self-concept, attempting to identify possible protective and risk factors for mental ill-health among female youths at risk for (...)
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  24.  44
    Unexpected Acceptance? Patients with Social Anxiety Disorder Manifest their Social Expectancy in ERPs During Social Feedback Processing.Jianqin Cao, Ruolei Gu, Xuejing Bi, Xiangru Zhu & Haiyan Wu - 2015 - Frontiers in Psychology 6.
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  25.  47
    Learned uncertainty: The free energy principle in anxiety.H. T. McGovern, Alexander De Foe, Hannah Biddell, Pantelis Leptourgos, Philip Corlett, Kavindu Bandara & Brendan T. Hutchinson - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    Generalized anxiety disorder is among the world’s most prevalent psychiatric disorders and often manifests as persistent and difficult to control apprehension. Despite its prevalence, there is no integrative, formal model of how anxiety and anxiety disorders arise. Here, we offer a perspective derived from the free energy principle; one that shares similarities with established constructs such as learned helplessness. Our account is simple: anxiety can be formalized as learned uncertainty. A biological system, having had persistent uncertainty (...)
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  26.  69
    The Ontological Import of Heidegger's Analysis of Anxiety in Being and Time.Oren Magid - 2016 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 54 (4):440-462.
    Heidegger's primary concern in Being and Time is the question of the meaning of being—a distinctly ontological concern. Yet, with discussions of death, guilt, conscience, anxiety, uncanniness, authenticity, and inauthenticity, Heidegger seems to end up in existential territory. The ontological import of these existential excursions is difficult to discern—indeed, it has not been identified in leading interpretations. In this paper, I aim to highlight the ontological import of Heidegger's analysis of anxiety—it manifests the inadequacy of Dasein's fallen and (...)
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  27.  18
    Sex Differences in Depression and Anxiety Symptoms: Measurement Invariance, Prevalence, and Symptom Heterogeneity Among University Students in South Africa.N. Florence Tadi, Kaylene Pillay, Ufuoma P. Ejoke & Itumeleng P. Khumalo - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    Adequate measurement is an essential component of the assessment of mental health disorders and symptoms such as depression and anxiety. The present study investigated sex-specific differences in the Patient Health Questionnaire-9 and Generalized Anxiety Disorder-7. This comprehensive cross-sectional design study pursued four objectives: measurement invariance of PHQ-9 and GAD-7 between male and female; depression and anxiety prevalence differences; cross-sex differences in the relationship between depression and anxiety; and a comparison of symptom heterogeneity. A sample of 1966 (...)
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  28.  38
    Struggling for a tomorrow: lived time in social anxiety disorder.Martin Vestergaard Kristiansen - forthcoming - Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences:1-18.
    In this paper, I develop a phenomenological account of social anxiety disorder (SAD) as a disturbance of lived time through an analysis of first-person accounts informed by Minkowski’s notion of disordered temporality. The core psychopathology of the patient, I argue, is a constricted sense of relational time. Instead of the ordinary sense of a taken-for-granted shared future, the patient experiences time as running a predetermined course toward their social death. This manifests itself in a relational life lived as if (...)
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  29.  14
    Parties, Democracy, and the Ideal of Anti-factionalism: Past Anxieties and Present Challenges.David Ragazzoni - 2022 - Ethics and International Affairs 36 (4):475-485.
    This essay weaves together the history of political and legal thought, contemporary democratic theory, and recent debates in legal scholarship to examine the ambivalent relationship between political parties and democracy. Celebrated as a structural necessity for the mechanics of democratic government, political parties are also handled with suspicion for their hybrid nature—neither entirely public nor completely private—and for their always-possible regression into factions. Anti-factionalism, I show, has been a powerful ideal driving constitutional imagination and practice over the centuries, from antiquity (...)
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  30.  31
    Intentional and automatic processing of numerical information in mathematical anxiety: testing the influence of emotional priming.Sarit Ashkenazi - 2018 - Cognition and Emotion 32 (8):1700-1707.
    ABSTRACTCurrent theoretical approaches suggest that mathematical anxiety manifests itself as a weakness in quantity manipulations. This study is the first to examine automatic versus intentional processing of numerical information using the numerical Stroop paradigm in participants with high MA. To manipulate anxiety levels, we combined the numerical Stroop task with an affective priming paradigm. We took a group of college students with high MA and compared their performance to a group of participants with low MA. Under low (...) conditions, participants with high MA showed relatively intact number processing abilities. However, under high anxiety conditions, participants with high MA showed higher processing of the non-numerical irrelevant information, which aligns with the theoretical view regarding deficits in selective attention in anxiety and an abnormal numerical distance effect. These results demonstrate that abnormal, basic numerical process... (shrink)
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  31.  38
    Supporting assessment stress in key stage 4 students.David William Putwain - 2008 - Educational Studies 34 (2):83-95.
    Research has indicated that 13% of students in the UK experience a high degree of assessment‐related stress/anxiety, which may have debilitating health, emotional and educational effects. Recent policy initiatives have attempted to encourage a responsibility for promoting well‐being in schools; however, at present there is little known about what, if any, support is provided for students over assessment stress/anxiety. The purpose of this exploratory study was to gather data on the conceptualisation and understanding of assessment stress/anxiety in (...)
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  32. (1 other version)Furcht und Angst.Andreas Dorschel - 1993 - Il Cannocchiale. Rivista di Studi Filosofici (3):53-72.
    Is fear a ‘deficient mode’ of anxiety? This claim made by Martin Heidegger in ‘Being and Time’ (1927) depends on an analysis of intentionality. Emotions take objects: to love, to hate, to fear is to love, to hate, to fear someone or something. Yet anxiety, Heidegger maintains (‘Being and Time’ § 40), is about “nothing” (“nichts”) rather than “something” (“etwas”). Heidegger then turns lack of knowledge or understanding of what one’s anxiety is about into a revelation of (...)
     
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  33.  24
    Effect of COVID-19 Pandemic on Teachers’ Health: Lessons for Improving Distance Education.Iryna Mosiakova, Olena Shcherbakova, Sergiy Gurov, Heorgii Danylenko, Svitlana Podplota & Lyudmyla Moskalyova - 2022 - Postmodern Openings 13 (4):101-112.
    The transition to distance education has led to deterioration in the health of teachers and students. The purpose of the study was to identify controlled factors of the educational environment, the impact of which in an emergency situation due to a pandemic on infectious disease can be influenced by the administration of general secondary education institutions. Material and methods: 339 teachers and 828 parents of general secondary schools of Mykolaiv region (Ukraine) took part in research from May to June 2021. (...)
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  34. 'The Problem of Life': Later Wittgenstein on the Difficulty of Honest Happiness.Gabriel Citron - 2018 - In Mikel Burley, Wittgenstein, Religion, and Ethics: New Perspectives from Philosophy and Theology. New York: Bloomsbury. pp. 33-47.
    This chapter examines Wittgenstein’s battles with the profound anxiety that can arise in response to a sense of the radical contingency of everything one is and everything one cares about. By giving particular attention to entries in Wittgenstein’s ‘Koder Diaries’ from the 1930s, the chapter analyses the nature of ‘the problem of life’ both as it manifested in Wittgenstein’s own life and as a universally relevant problem. It then defends the seriousness of the problem by reconstructing ways in which (...)
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  35.  27
    Cognitive functioning in socially anxious adults: insights from the NIH Toolbox Cognition Battery.Sonya V. Troller-Renfree, Tyson V. Barker, Daniel S. Pine & Nathan A. Fox - 2015 - Frontiers in Psychology 6:139648.
    Theory suggests that individuals with social anxiety manifest unique patterns of cognition with less efficient fluid cognition and unperturbed crystallized cognition; however, empirical support for these ideas remains inconclusive. The heterogeneity of past findings may reflect unreliability in cognitive assessments or the influence of confounding variables. The present study examined the relations among social anxiety and performance on the reliable, newly established NIH Toolbox Cognition Battery. Results indicate that high socially anxious adults performed as well as low (...)
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  36.  30
    Stimulus attributes and drive in paired-associate learning.Herbert Levitt & Albert E. Goss - 1961 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 62 (3):243.
  37.  65
    Ethics of Incongruity: moral tension generators in clinical medicine.Nicholas Kontos - 2019 - Journal of Medical Ethics 45 (4):244-248.
    Affectively uncomfortable concern, anxiety, indecisionand disputation over ‘right’ action are among the expressions of moral tension associated with ethical dilemmas. Moral tension is generated and experienced by people. While ethical principles, rules and situations must be worked through in any dilemma, each occurs against a backdrop of people who enact them and stand much to gain or lose depending on how they are applied and resolved. This paper attempts to develop a taxonomy of moral tension based on its intrapersonal (...)
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  38.  42
    The Hermeneutical and Rhetorical Nature of Law.Francis Joseph Mootz - 2011 - Journal of Catholic Social Thought 8 (2):221-254.
    In its most venal manifestation, scholarly writing betrays the anxiety of influence by claiming to offer a radically new solution to age-old conundrums. The goal is to make a clean break from a traditional path of thought that has become trapped in a cul-de-sac, to make progress by finding a new way forward. Not so with Jean Porter’s work, and particularly her most recent book. Professor Porter demonstrates that thinking through an established tradition – one that has responded to (...)
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  39. (1 other version)Intentionality as the mark of the mental.Tim Crane - 1998 - In Tim Crane , Contemporary Issues in the Philosophy of Mind. Cambridge University Press. pp. 229-251.
    ‘It is of the very nature of consciousness to be intentional’ said Jean-Paul Sartre, ‘and a consciousness that ceases to be a consciousness of something would ipso facto cease to exist’.1 Sartre here endorses the central doctrine of Husserl’s phenomenology, itself inspired by a famous idea of Brentano’s: that intentionality, the mind’s ‘direction upon its objects’, is what is distinctive of mental phenomena. Brentano’s originality does not lie in pointing out the existence of intentionality, or in inventing the terminology, which (...)
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  40.  11
    (1 other version)From Society to Shehui: The Early Configuration of a Basic Concept in Modern China.Gongzhong Li - 2020 - Cultura 17 (2):11-28.
    : As a traditional term used in ancient Chinese, shiehwui mainly implied the gatherings and meetings related to folk festivals for the worship of and making offerings to shie, the gods of soil. The manifestation of shiehwui frequently was the target of condescension or outright condemnation from the government or Confucian elites. During the early dissemination of the western concept of society into China, one factor that facilitated its entry was the Christian missionaries’ knowledge of traditional Chinese shie and hwui, (...)
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  41.  23
    Contagious Terror: Violence, Haunting and the Work of Refugee Protection.Azar Masoumi - 2021 - Studies in Social Justice 15 (3):475-496.
    This article argues that contrary to its humanitarian semblance, state-controlled refugee protection is a project of substantial violence, and that the violence of refugee protection is continuously disseminated through and across a wide range of unlikely actors and institutions. Drawing on Avery Gordon and Franz Fanon, I show that the violence of refugee protection makes itself known in its haunting effects on those who come in contact with it in various capacities: those who carry through the work of refugee protection, (...)
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  42. " I would rather be a cyborg than a goddess": Becoming-Intersectional in Assemblage Theory.Jasbir K. Puar - 2012 - philoSOPHIA: A Journal of Continental Feminism 2 (1):49-66.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:“I would rather be a cyborg than a goddess”Becoming-Intersectional in Assemblage TheoryJasbir K. Puar“Grids happen” writes Brian Massumi, at a moment in Parables for the Virtual where one is tempted to be swept away by the endless affirmative becomings of movement, flux, and potential, as opposed to being pinned down by the retroactive positioning of identity (2002, 8). For the most part, Massumi has been less interested in how (...)
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  43.  34
    Symptoms as latent variables.Dennis J. McFarland & Loretta S. Malta - 2010 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 33 (2-3):165 - 166.
    In the target article, Cramer et al. suggest that diagnostic classification is improved by modeling the relationship between manifest variables (i.e., symptoms) rather than modeling unobservable latent variables (i.e., diagnostic categories such as Generalized Anxiety Disorder). This commentary discusses whether symptoms represent manifest or latent variables and the implications of this distinction for diagnosis and treatment.
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  44.  28
    Feeling in Character: Towards an Ethics of Emotion.John M. Monteleone - 2013 - Dissertation, Syracuse University
    This dissertation contends that emotions are subject to ethical assessment, not simply as motives or overt expressions, but in their own right. Emotions, I argue, are subject to assessment because they are aspects of a person's character. Specifically, emotions involve voluntary acts of attention, which are due to habituation. These acts show character by manifesting certain stable, deeply-held desires called 'concerns.' This view, dubbed 'Attentional Voluntarism,' is opposed to the prevalent view, dubbed 'Rationalism,' that emotions are subject to assessment because (...)
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  45. Writing Images: Visuality in German Romantic Literature.Brad Prager - 1999 - Dissertation, Cornell University
    The following dissertation shows how German Literature negotiates the relationship between language and the visual arts, particularly in Romantic narratives. In contrast with authors of the Enlightenment, the Romantics tend to deny specificity to visual experience and in so doing dedifferentiate visual experience from the textual. ;The initial, methodological, chapter explicates perceptual models informed by the interplay of the philosophical approaches of Kant and Wittgenstein with the psychoanalytic discourse of Freud. In Chapter Two, I turn to Lessing's Laokoon Uder uber (...)
     
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  46. Why ritualized behavior? Precaution systems and action parsing in developmental, pathological and cultural rituals.Pascal Boyer & Pierre Liénard - 2006 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 29 (6):595-613.
    Ritualized behavior, intuitively recognizable by its stereotypy, rigidity, repetition, and apparent lack of rational motivation, is found in a variety of life conditions, customs, and everyday practices: in cultural rituals, whether religious or non-religious; in many children's complicated routines; in the pathology of obsessive-compulsive disorders (OCD); in normal adults around certain stages of the life-cycle, birthing in particular. Combining evidence from evolutionary anthropology, neuropsychology and neuroimaging, we propose an explanation of ritualized behavior in terms of an evolved Precaution System geared (...)
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  47.  21
    Existential injustice in phenomenological psychopathology.Daniel Vespermann & Sanna Karoliina Tirkkonen - 2025 - Philosophical Psychology 38 (1):209-245.
    In this article, we investigate how distressing background feelings can be subject to social injustice. We define background feelings as enduring feeling states that condition our perceptions of everyday situations, interpersonal dynamics, and the broader social milieu. While phenomenological psychopathology has long addressed such affective phenomena, including anxiety, guilt, and feelings of not belonging, the intersection with social injustice remains largely unexplored within the framework. To address this gap, we introduce the concept of existential injustice into phenomenological psychopathology. Existential (...)
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  48.  29
    Trust: Who or What Might Support Us?Adriaan Theodoor Peperzak - 2013 - New York: Fordham University Press.
    This phenomenological study begins by presenting trust as a characteristic form of interpersonal and communal relationship. In the second chapter, the scope is narrowed to someone's reliance on one or more trustworthy individuals. Chapters 3 to 5 explore specific aspects of trust, insofar as we confide in social structures or movements, the impersonal regularities and events of nature, or our own particular talents, motivations, and possibilities. In a world that is ravaged by the omnipresence of suffering and the most outrageous (...)
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  49.  79
    Taming the Beast Within.David Pugmire - 2006 - Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 13 (3):251-253.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Philosophy, Psychiatry, & Psychology 13.3 (2007) 251-253MuseSearchJournalsThis JournalContents[Access article in PDF]Taming the Beast WithinDavid PugmireKeywords cognition, emotion, therapy, depressionI agree with Whiting and others that there can be more to emotions than the cognitive attitudes that inform them, including valuational attitudes. Emotion can also be awakened without these. For that matter, feeling can actually fly in the face of thought. I suggest that despite this, however, even recalcitrant emotions (...)
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  50.  7
    Recovery with yoga: supportive practices for transcending addiction.Brian Hyman - 2024 - Boulder, Colorado: Shambhala.
    This collection of thirty yoga and mindfulness tools will help support those in recovery from addiction of all kinds. Thirty accessible, pointed teachings offer inspiration, comfort, and solidarity in the moment, helping us cultivate a powerful and purposeful life in recovery, and to create a new design for living. Each chapter focuses on a quality-such as vigilance, acceptance, accountability, among others-and delves into how to manifest it in your recovery journey. Brian Hyman, a yoga teacher and recovery activist, understands (...)
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