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Word: freude (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Usage:

...rare situations when it satisfies a true need between two adults who fulfill each other. Says Dr. Edward Craig Hobbs of the Episcopal Church Divinity School of the Pacific: "The whole matter of sexual morality is now subject to a different understanding that comes from psychiatry and ultimately from Freud." The Rev. Richard Deam of the First Baptist Church in Brewster, N.Y., says that a course in pastoral psychology taught him that "anger is not always wrong. It can be a healthy, constructive emotion, as when Christ forced the moneylenders from the Temple...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: Learning from Psychiatry | 11/17/1967 | See Source »

...apple of your collective eye. Men do not care for him. Turek is limited by an approximately normal skeletal structure, forcing him to exploit the variety of stuffed poses of which he is capable. He charts the attitude of pomposity with a mathematical vigor, with glorious shamelessness impossible since Freud's tinkerings...

Author: By Charles F. Sabel, | Title: Patience | 11/4/1967 | See Source »

Washington-"neatly divided, like an 18th century Protestant sermon, into five separate parts"-Kennan reiterated all that he had said before, and everybody began listening. Precisely why is unclear. The subconscious motivations of official Washington, he believes, are as intricate "as those of the most complicated of Sigmund Freud's erstwhile patients...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Swing of the Pendulum | 11/3/1967 | See Source »

...this level alone it is very highly readable. It is still amusing to hear, in Woolf's tone of melancholy malice, how "Tom" Eliot confessed that he had "behaved like a priggish, pompous little ass" on a weekend. And it is still poignant to learn that Sigmund Freud, ravaged by terminal cancer of the mouth and giving the appearance of "a half-extinct volcano," presented Virginia Woolf with a flower...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: The Death of Sweet Reason | 11/3/1967 | See Source »

...stuck to his belief that he could print only the best work and still make money. It was not easy. He and his wife were poor until Virginia's novels began to sell, as well as the works of other distinguished authors on his list: Eliot, Auden and Freud (24 volumes in English). It was an exemplary publishing career, but on the personal level Woolf is a singularly jejune autobiographer. The record of a suicide is always painful, but a curious detachment in Woolf's character leads him to describe the series of crippling psychotic episodes that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: The Death of Sweet Reason | 11/3/1967 | See Source »

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