Word: affective
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...there are echoes of the work of Sigmund Freud. Psychoanalysis, the family of psychological theories and methods he devised in the 1890s, underpins the many forms of psychotherapy available today. Freud postulated the existence of the unconscious, which he said is shaped by early experience and can profoundly affect moods and behavior, its secrets detectable in dreams and slips of the tongue. "[Braydle] would justify his treatment of [Beddoe] as building a relationship with her," says Jureidini, who wrote the foreword to Beddoe's book, "but it's a bastardization of psychotherapy, just as the way she was treated with...
...Crimson recently reported that those UC members involved with crimsonreading.org were banned from collecting ISBN numbers in The Coop. Were either of you involved in the recording, and how will it affect the UC’s future relationship with The Coop...
...behalf, including seventy-nine year-old former schoolteacher Francis J.S. Pierce, who described herself as “retired, but not tired.” Pierce expressed her support for the Commission, saying that “the decisions that we make today will not only affect our young people...but will affect our generation yet unborn.” “When I hear the word ‘peace,’ I get excited,” Pierce said. —Staff writer William M. Goldsmith can be reached at wgoldsm@fas.harvard.edu. —Staff...
...increasingly accepting racial attitudes at Harvard and elsewhere still affect black students in several unintended ways. For many, such attitudes reduce the importance of, or need for, the black community. While I have often been approached by those outside our community in awe of our seemingly impenetrable solidarity, in reality, that monolith—diverse as it is—only represents a fraction of black students at Harvard. No longer denied social and extracurricular opportunities within the greater Harvard community, many black students feel little need to associate with other blacks. This dynamic creates a schism within the mainstream...
...should” return some of its profits because it has so much will be fruitless; the only thing that Nike and almost every other for-profit company cares about is its bottom line, and arguing about moral imperatives—no matter how profound—does not affect the bottom line. Nike would fire workers if consumers did not take the hit and pay for laborers’ increased wages...