The Cambridge Edition of the Letters and Works of D. H. Lawrence Essays

  • Psychological Perspectives: Abnormal Psychology

    2134 Words  | 5 Pages

    making them recall negative aspects of their past through psychoanalytic techniques such as free association, dream interpretation and transference (Wollheim, 2008). According to Sigmund Freud who founded the approach, human personality and behaviour work at three levels of awareness in the mind; what we are thinking of now (conscious), thoughts, memories we can recall (preconscious) and inaccessible desires, thoughts which can be brought into the conscious mind by psychoanalytic techniques (Erickson

  • Anne Bradstreet: The Wife, the Woman And the Legendary Poet

    2441 Words  | 5 Pages

    most issues, there is contention on both sides. “The question of Anne Bradstreet’s value as a poet has often receded behind the more certain fact of her value as a pioneer. This means that, while generations of students have read Anne Bradstreet’s work on the basis that she was the first American poet, and a woman at that, many have emerged from the experience unconvinced of her poetry’s intrinsic worth” (Hall 1). Anne Bradstreet was born in Northampton, England, in 1612, to Thomas and Dorothy Dudley

  • Paul Ricoeur's Intervention In The Gadamer-Stermas

    7962 Words  | 16 Pages

    Recovering Paul Ricoeur's Intervention in the Gadamer-Habermas Debate ABSTRACT: In this paper I will examine a contemporary response to an important debate in the "science" of hermeneutics, along with some cross-cultural implications. I discuss Paul Ricoeur's intervention in the debate between Gadamer and Habermas concerning the proper task of hermeneutics as a mode of philosophical interrogation in the late 20th century. The confrontation between Gadamer and Habermas turns on the assessment

  • Oppenheimer And The Atomic Bomb

    3809 Words  | 8 Pages

    political views that would later affect his life. He studied at Harvard and was good in the classics, such as Latin, Greek, chemistry and Physics. He had published works in poetry and studied Oriental philosophy. He graduated in 1925, it took him only three years, and went to England to do research at Cavendish Laboratory at the University of Cambridge. He didn’t like it there and left at the end of 1925. A man named Max Born asked him to attend Gottingen University where he met prominent European physicists