SEARCH RESULTS
Found 25 text references:
1.
" In "The Doctor and the Doctor's Wife" we discover a source of the doctor's cultural blindness in a Victorian sensibility that represses "base" emotions or instincts, privileges reason, and constructs absolute dichotomies of right and wrong, "civilized" and "primitive."..."
Source:
SCHEDLER, CHRISTOPHER. "THE `TRIBAL' LEGACY OF HEMINGWAY'S NICK ADAMS"
Hemingway Review
19.1 Sept. 22 1999: 64
2.
" Blindness can be especially difficult to maintain in studies of nicotine replacement, since many smokers are quite familiar with the feeling of nicotine withdrawal."
Source:
. "Researchers find flaws in double-blind procedure for nicotine replacement studies"
Brown University Digest of Addiction Theory and Application
23.9 Sept. 1 2004: 2-4
3.
"... blindness or foot amputations. [14-17] Furthermore, studies of the psychological impact of diabetes and its effects on patient quality of life were considered important for understanding the patient's ability to adhere to often difficult and demanding treatment regimens. [18] While earlier treatment..."
Source:
Testa, Marcia A. "Quality-of-Life Assessment in Diabetes Research: Interpreting the Magnitude and Meaning of Treatment Effects"
Diabetes Spectrum
13.1 Jan. 1 2000: 29
4.
" Journal of Visual Impairment & Blindness, 29, 454-456. (Dr. Helm is the Director of New Hope Seminars, Professor of Psychology and Education, and the author of numerous articles..."
Source:
HELM, DAVID JAY. "NEURO-LINGUISTIC PROGRAMMING: ENHANCING LEARNING FOR THE VISUALLY IMPAIRED"
Education
120.4 June 22 2000: 790
5.
" Thus Arendt treats Marx's ideas not as psychological defenses against an inner repression of a truth about himself, but rather as insights into a world in which capital was in fact becoming the preeminent force--insights, however, with serious blindnesses attached to them."
Source:
COCKS, JOAN. "Individuality, Nationality, and the Jewish Question"
Social Research
66.4 Dec. 22 1999: 1191
6.
" Paper, [pounds]12.99. ISBN 1 85433 231 7. Blindness poses some fundamental problems for psychologists interested in normal processes of cognitive, language, social and emotional development."
Source:
Leekam, Sue. "Blindness and Psychological Development in Young Children"
British Journal of Psychology
90.2 May 1 1999: 312-314
7.
" This is particularly true when disabilities such as blindness or deafness are at issue, because it is difficult and expensive to provide accommodations for individuals with such disabilities."
Source:
Tucker, Bonnie Poitras. "Deaf culture, cochlear implants, and elective disability"
Hastings Center Report
v28.n4 July 1 1998: 6-15
8.
"... appear in 1975, Vol. 66), handedness--which was pioneered by Chris McManus in particular during the early 1990s, and Susanna Millar's almost single-handed studies of psychological issues related to blindness through the 1980s."
Source:
Richards, Graham. "The British Journal of Psychology centenary: a preliminary content survey and its problems"
British Journal of Psychology
95.4 Nov. 1 2004: 523-544
9.
" Maybe it's part of her survival instinct that she tends to whitewash or forget the difficult parts of her life."
Source:
. "Author chronicles the Reagans' partnership"
Washington Times
Nov. 5 2004: 01
10.
" In 'The Ego and the Id," Freud (1923) expands on the psychological roots of the death instinct and relates the striving for decomposition and the bursting forth of the death instinct as central expressions of many severe neuroses."
Source:
Manor, Iris,Vincent, Michel,Tyano, Sam. "The wish to die and the wish to commit suicide in the adolescent: two different matters?"
Adolescence
39.154 June 22 2004: 279-294
11.
"... Valenti find it difficult to explain why Lyndon B. Johnson's superb political instincts failed him when he had to deal with the problem of Vietnam."
Source:
. "CORRESPONDENCE"
Wilson Quarterly
24.3 June 22 2000: 4
12.
" This is largely due to frequent reference to the instinct of a native speaker, particularly when making claims about the Chinese meaning of the word "support." This, I admit, is a difficult--and frequently encountered--predicament."
Source:
Charles, Mirjaliisa. "The Cultural Context in Business Communication"
Journal of Business Communication
37.2 Apr. 1 2000: 188
13.
" The players who provide the psychological backbone of the European team (Darren Clarke, Lee Westwood, Padraig Harrington and Miguel Angel Jimenez) are men who ooze this calm, killer instinct."
Source:
. "Sutton's bad choices doom U.S. from start"
Washington Times
Sept. 20 2004: 01
14.
" Eliot in a letter to the present writer (February 1949) said that he had never read any of Jung's work whatever. (He also referred to his instinct that the less psychology a creative..."
Source:
SMITH, GROVER. "T. S. Eliot and the Fragmented Selves: From "Suppressed Complex" to Sweeney Agonistes"
Philological Quarterly
77.4 Sept. 22 1998: 417
15.
" It is therefore, by definition, diametrically opposed to the Romantic affirmation of natural man and his raw instincts, and to that liberal psychology in which..."
Source:
Levenson, Jon D. "The New Enemies of Circumcision"
Commentary
109.3 Mar. 1 2000: 29
16.
" Psychologically, it represents the level of instinct, the trackless wilderness of primordial fear and orgiastic fantasy, where the reasoning ego can easily lose its way."
Source:
SKRAPITS, JOSEPH C. "ROMANTICS & REALISTS"
American Artist
64.694 May 1 2000: 22
17.
"... moods for the better." TIME TO PLAY -- BEST TOYS FOR KIDS Kathy Hirsh-Pasek, Psychologist, (000)-000-0000; kathryn.hirsh-pasek@temple.edu Trust your instincts--and think back to the toys and games you loved best as a child--as you choose..."
Source:
. "From Family Time to Films, Sit-Down Dinners to Sit-Ups, Shopping to Job Hunting, Temple University Experts Can Address Holiday Issues"
AScribe Business & Economics News Service
Nov. 13 2003
18.
" Most of these scholars, however, do not utilize the instinct psychology that Paul Twomey (1998) has argued is to some degree back in vogue."
Source:
O'Hara, Phillip Anthony,Sherman, Howard Jay. "Veblen and Sweezy on monopoly capital, crises, conflict, and the state"
Journal of Economic Issues
38.4 Dec. 1 2004: 969-988
19.
" My only regret: the old chestnut on the parable of the talents, Milton's sonnet "On his Blindness," didn't make the cut."
Source:
Keen, Suzanne. "Divine Inspiration: The Life of Jesus in World Poetry"
Cross Currents
v48.n3 Sept. 22 1998: 397-400
20.
" Read it. Jeanne Schinto, new to our pages, examines "blindness" in "Shooting Blind" as a way of dealing with memory, recollection, and the actual experiences of the blind as they make their way through the world."
Source:
. "Editorial"
Antioch Review
58.1 Jan. 1 2000: 4
21.
" Especially when using power saws or drilling or cutting masonry or metal, eye protection can make the difference between blindness and sight."
Source:
Tom,Austin, Lana. "DANGER ZONE"
Washington Times
Apr. 18 2000: 4
22.
" His recent blindness makes him anxious that the transparency of his facial expressions will put him at a disadvantage in face-to-face encounters."
Source:
KLEEGE, GEORGINA. "Wearing the Mask Inside Out"
Social Research
67.1 Mar. 22 2000: 47
23.
" Michalko makes it possible to believe that blindness and an enjoyable life are not mutually exclusive."
Source:
Bakker, J.I. "The Mystery of the Eye and the Shadow of Blindness"
Canadian Review of Sociology and Anthropology
36.2 May 1 1999: 305-307
24.
" Not only might you have been inclined to laugh at the hearing-impaired--deafness is a bit of a joke in a way that blindness never is--you probably also took it for granted that the world in general need make no concessions to them."
Source:
Simmons, Michael. "Eh? What? Please speak up: Michael Simmons laments the plight of those who suffer from an unglamorous and neglected condition"
New Statesman (1996)
133.4713 Nov. 8 2004: 29-30
25.
" Larry's pathetic end includes a willed blindness and a refusal of memory; as his world collapses, he fails to gain the self-recognition that makes Lear tragic."
Source:
STREHLE, SUSAN. "The Daughter's Subversion in Jane Smiley's A Thousand Acres"
CRITIQUE: Studies in Contemporary Fiction
41.3 Mar. 22 2000: 211
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