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USING FEELING CONTENT OF AN EARLY RECOLLECTION TO OVERCOME RESISTANCE TO DISCLOSURE IN SHORT TERM IN-DEPTH COUNSELING.Witta, Marlis Eugenia, 1934- January 1982 (has links)
No description available.
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The Relationship of Responses to Geometric Designs to Inferiority Feelings and Certain Personality VariablesMartin, John Daniel 01 1900 (has links)
The present investigation was initiated in order to determine the relationship of responses to geometric designs to inferiority feelings and certain personality variables. The major problem was divided into the following sub-problems: 1. What is the relationship of responses to geometric designs to selected clinical scales on the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory? (MMPI). 2. What is the relationship of responses to geometric designs to selected personality variables on the Edwards Personal Preference Schedule? (EPPS). 3. What is the relationship of responses to geometric designs to selected personality characteristics on the Guilford-Zimmerman Temperament Survey? (G-Z).
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'Damned If They Do And Damned If They Don't': The Inferiority Complex, Nationalism, and Maclean's Music Coverage, 1967-1995Capel, Gordon Matthew Donald January 2007 (has links)
This thesis critically analyses music coverage in Maclean’s between 1967-1995, and reveals that the magazine continually stressed Canadian music as inferior to that produced by foreign artists. Only during times of intense nationalism were Canadian musicians positively received in its pages. More generally, domestic productions were seen as deficient. The historical components of this investigation reveal an essential irony in the perception of Canadian music during the last four decades of the 20th century. Despite nationalist rhetorics and Maclean's self-appointed title of "Canada's National Newsmagazine," its critics consistently emphasised that Canadian music was of poor quality in the 1967-1995 period.
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'Damned If They Do And Damned If They Don't': The Inferiority Complex, Nationalism, and Maclean's Music Coverage, 1967-1995Capel, Gordon Matthew Donald January 2007 (has links)
This thesis critically analyses music coverage in Maclean’s between 1967-1995, and reveals that the magazine continually stressed Canadian music as inferior to that produced by foreign artists. Only during times of intense nationalism were Canadian musicians positively received in its pages. More generally, domestic productions were seen as deficient. The historical components of this investigation reveal an essential irony in the perception of Canadian music during the last four decades of the 20th century. Despite nationalist rhetorics and Maclean's self-appointed title of "Canada's National Newsmagazine," its critics consistently emphasised that Canadian music was of poor quality in the 1967-1995 period.
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Frontal asymmetry, depresssion, gender, and excessive reassurance-seeking a contextual analysis /Minnix, Jennifer A. Joiner, Thomas E. January 2005 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Florida State University, 2005. / Advisor: Dr. Thomas E. Joiner, Florida State University, College of Arts and Sciences, Dept. of Psychology. Title and description from dissertation home page (Sept. 14, 2005). Document formatted into pages; contains vi, 24 pages. Includes bibliographical references.
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Děti s pocitem a komplexem méněcennosti / Chidrern with a sense of inferiority complexTRUBAČOVÁ, Václava January 2010 (has links)
This work deals with children with a sense of a complex of inferiority, especially in school age. The theoretical part explains the problem of feeling, oran inferiority komplex important role and as the Administrative raise a child to avoid this problem, or at least this problem soften. The practical part is devoted to rosearch. Seeks to analyze and komplex sense or inferiority in the context of different circumstances, and aspects (family, school, welfare and oxen time).
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Insights from the lives of Olive Doke and Paul Kasonga for pioneer mission and church planting todayMbewe, Conrad Chanda January 2014 (has links)
In this thesis, the researcher observes that one of the most difficult phases in the work
of church planting missions is that of the handover stage from pioneer missionaries to
indigenous leaders. This is often fraught with suspicions and fightings, and hence tends
to delay the work until such issues are finally dealt with. Having observed a different
story in the relationship between Olive Doke and Paul Kasonga in the early years of the
planting of Baptist work in Zambia, the researcher has argued that the key lay in their
mutual respect and admiration. He, therefore, posits that where these two ingredients
are nurtured in the early stages of missions there will be a smooth handover process. In order to show that this was not just a philosophical or pragmatic idea, the researcher
began his work with a biblical interpretation of missions. Drawing from the way the Lord
Jesus Christ and his apostles went about their own handing over process to the next
generation of leaders, he identified these same attitudes of mutual respect and
admiration. He argues that these played an important role in ensuring a meaningful
handover process.
The researcher then entered upon finding as much information as he could on the lives
of Olive Doke and Paul Kasonga, and about their working relationship. This was through
unearthing various archived materials and conducting key interviews in the region where they once laboured. This formed the core of this research and, upon subjecting
this to analysis, it proved the thesis that the success of their working relationship and
handover process at the Kafulafuta Mission lay in their mutual respect and admiration.
Finally, the researcher offers a model or strategy to ensure that what may have
happened inadvertently between Olive Doke and Paul Kasonga is nurtured among
missionaries and indigenous leaders. The researcher works these principles into all the
stages of church planting missions—all the way from the training of the missionaries to
the time when the work is totally handed over into the hands of local leaders and the
missionaries have withdrawn from the work. / Thesis (PhD)--University of Pretoria, 2013. / gm2014 / Science of Religion and Missiology / unrestricted
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Incidence de la déficience visuelle sur l’estime de soi : étude comparative du complexe d’infériorité chez des sujets malvoyants syriens et français / Impact of visual impairment on self-esteem : comparative study of the inferiority complex in subjects blind Syrian and FrenchCharrouf, Ansab 05 September 2011 (has links)
L’objectif de cette recherche est d’étudier l’incidence de la déficience visuelle sur l’estime de soi. Nous proposons une approche théorique de la théorie d’Alfred Adler « le complexe d’infériorité » afin d’étudier l’existence possible d’un complexe d’infériorité chez un malvoyant en raison de son infériorité organique. Grâce à l’approche de la psychologie interculturelle, cette recherche étudie les effets que la culture peut avoir sur l’estime de soi des malvoyants.Nous faisons l’hypothèse que la déficience visuelle a un effet négatif sur l’estime de soi, que les déficients visuels auraient un manque notable d’estime de soi, et que cela peut, parfois, se traduire par un complexe d’infériorité.Nous faisons également l’hypothèse que la variable culturelle représentée, en particulier, par les moyens qui favorisent l’autonomie et le regard de la société, joue un rôle important dans l’estime de soi des malvoyants.Les sujets de cette étude sont représentent 68 personnes malvoyantes et 112 personnes voyantes d’un âge moyen de 36 ans. L’Echelle Toulousaine de l’Estime de Soi a été utilisée pour mesurer l’estime de soi globale qui regroupe cinq domaines du soi.Les résultats révèlent un manque d’estime de soi chez les sujets malvoyants. Ils ne montrent pas de différences en ce qui concerne le sexe, ni la culture.Enfin, une approche clinique approfondie des études de cas confirme la théorie du complexe d’infériorité ; cette étude révèle, également, qu’un sentiment d’infériorité peut exister chez les malvoyants à cause de leur handicap. / The purpose of this research is to study the influence of visual impairment on the self-esteem. We propose a theoretical approach to the theory of Alfred Adler « the inferiority complex » in order to study the possible existence of an inferiority complex in the individuals with visual impairments because of their organic inferiority. In an approach to Cross-Cultural psychology, this research studies the effects which culture can have on the self-esteem of the visually impaired.Our hypothesis suggests that visual impairment has a negative effect on the self-esteem. That visually impaired would have a significant less self-esteem and that can, sometimes, to result in a inferiority complex. We also make the hypothesis that the cultural variable represented, in particular, by the means which support the autonomy and the glance of the society, plays an important role in self-esteem of the visually impaired.The subjects in this study consist of 68 visually impaired subjects and 112 subjects with normal vision (mean age = 36 years). The Toulouse Scale of Self-Esteem was used to measure the general self-esteem which gathers five fields of self-esteem.The results reveal a less self-esteem in blind subjects. They show no differences on this subject between the sexes, or between cultures. Finally, a clinical approach of clinical case study supports the theory of inferiority complex. It shows a feeling of inferiority that may exist among the visually impaired because of disability.
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Dismemory: On history, the Southern imaginary, and abusing the visual recordShelton, Matthew Pendleton 24 April 2012 (has links)
Using the literary device of a fictional interview between the artist and a sympathetic intellectual, I explore concepts relating to subjectivity, pedagogy, memory, “Southernness,” whiteness, the deceptive nature of images, social justice, and 20th century art as they relate to a contemporary artistic practice.
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Možnosti rozvoje zdravého sebevědomí žáka v sociálním, kulturním a náboženském kontextu / The Possibilities of the Pupil's Self-esteem Development in Social, Cultural and Religious ContextSedláčková, Daniela January 2015 (has links)
The doctoral dissertation deals with the description and analysis of healthy self-esteem in terms of its formation; influences that enter into the process of formation and possibilities of the healthy self-esteem development in the school environment with regard to social, cultural and religious context in which the student lives. The theoretical part of the thesis on the basis of literature compiled the most fundamental assumptions and circumstances that largely affect pupil's confidence and contribute to its development in a positive sense. Attention is paid to themes theoretical definition of the concept of self and internal influences that act on the formation of self-esteem. Family, school and peer group are presented as a major social and cultural external influences, together with a religious context influencing the formation of self-esteem. The performance is a phenomenological theory of Chris Mruk shows the issue of confidence in more complex form. The theoretical part is concluded by outlining the possibilities for the development of healthy self-esteem in school through the pupil )including peer mediation) and analysis of some international research which raises questions for a Czech context. The aim of the research is to determine whether and to what extent has felt self-esteem,...
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