释义 |
Definition of introjection in English: introjectionnoun ˌɪntrə(ʊ)ˈdʒɛkʃ(ə)n mass nounPsychoanalysis The unconscious adoption of the ideas or attitudes of others. Hesse's introjection of his parents' emotional values Example sentencesExamples - This is essentially the biological cycle of ingestion and elimination, becoming the psychological cycle of introjection and projection.
- Identification is a process which may be conscious or unconscious, comprising the processes of introjection, projection and judgement, and through which people are able to find the links of identity and difference amongst themselves.
- Suppose, further, that these are essential to accounting for the other basic psychoanalytic categories like phantasy, projections, introjections, denial, defense, repression etc.
- The exercises enhance introjection of the therapist as a ‘good object’ and the self as ‘good me’.
- Such sensibilities are formed, in part, by introjection via previous encounters with screen cultures.
Derivatives verb ɪntrəˈdʒɛkt [with object]Psychoanalysis Unconsciously adopt the ideas or attitudes of others. they introjected a sense of their own worthlessness Example sentencesExamples - In mourning, Freud claims, loss is conscious; in melancholy (what he characterized as ‘unresolved mourning’), loss is unconscious because the sufferer introjects the emptiness as his own.
- One could say: at a certain level in the development of productive social forces, labor cooperation introjects verbal communication into itself, or, more precisely, a complex of political actions.
- From the beginning the ego introjects objects ‘good’ and ‘bad’, for both of which the mother's breast is the prototype - for good objects when the child obtains it, for bad ones when it fails him.
Origin Mid 19th century: from intro- 'into', on the pattern of projection. Definition of introjection in US English: introjectionnoun Psychoanalysis The unconscious adoption of the ideas or attitudes of others. Hesse's introjection of his parents' emotional values Example sentencesExamples - Identification is a process which may be conscious or unconscious, comprising the processes of introjection, projection and judgement, and through which people are able to find the links of identity and difference amongst themselves.
- This is essentially the biological cycle of ingestion and elimination, becoming the psychological cycle of introjection and projection.
- Such sensibilities are formed, in part, by introjection via previous encounters with screen cultures.
- Suppose, further, that these are essential to accounting for the other basic psychoanalytic categories like phantasy, projections, introjections, denial, defense, repression etc.
- The exercises enhance introjection of the therapist as a ‘good object’ and the self as ‘good me’.
Origin Mid 19th century: from intro- ‘into’, on the pattern of projection. |