Adaptation to LifeHarvard University Press, 1998 M08 11 - 416 páginas Between 1939 and 1942, one of America's leading universities recruited 268 of its healthiest and most promising undergraduates to participate in a revolutionary new study of the human life cycle. The originators of the program, which came to be known as the Grant Study, felt that medical research was too heavily weighted in the direction of disease, and their intent was to chart the ways in which a group of promising individuals coped with their lives over the course of many years. |
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... Freud called the psychopathology of everyday life. This attempt of mine to describe how these men adapted to life is a presumptuous task, and one beset by myriad difficulties. The greatest pitfall is that I try to suggest that some ...
... Freud's middle-class concept of lieben und arbeiten by half a century. Freud was only six months old when Tolstoy advised his almost-fiancee, Valery Arsenev, "One can live magnificently in this world, if one knows how to work and how to ...
... Freud in his earliest psychiatric papers of 1894-1896.11 Today, the majority of recent college graduates would probably recognize several of the following terms: sublimation, projection, repression, reaction formation, and displacement ...
... Freud, Harry Stack Sullivan, and Heinz Hartmann all significantly influenced modern understanding of personality; but in I937— 1942 their work was still too novel to shape the early design of the Grant Study. By 1940 Harry Stack ...
... Freud first published in English The Ego and the Mechanisms of Defense,3 and Heinz Hartmann had presented in German Ego Psychology and the Problem of Adaptation.' Not until 1967 did the Grant Study focus on these men's styles of ...
Contenido
Basic Styles of Adaptation | 73 |
Development Consequences of Adaptation | 193 |
Concluions | 327 |
References Cited | 376 |
A Glossary of Defenses | 383 |
The Interview Schedule | 387 |
The Rating Scales | 389 |