neurosis - translation to spanish
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neurosis - translation to spanish

TERM AND DISEASE IN PSYCHOLOGY
Neuroses; Psychoneurosis; Neurotic disorders; Psychoneurotic; Neurotic conditions; Psychoneurotics; Neurotic disorder; Depressive neurosis
  • [[Albert Ellis]] pioneered what became known as cognitive behavioral therapy.
  • [[Carl Jung]] developed psychoanalytic theories of neurosis.
  • Edna Foa]] co-developed prolonged exposure therapy.
  • [[Jean-Martin Charcot]] discovered the connection between the mental illness known as hysteria and psychological trauma.
  • [[Josef Breuer]] discovered the psychoanalytic technique of treating neurosis.
  • [[Karen Horney]] developed the psychoanalytic understanding of neurosis through a series of books and by establishing a journal.
  • [[Aaron Beck]] advanced cognitive behavioral therapy.
  • Hans Seyle]] devised the general adaptation syndrome of stress.
  • [[Sigmund Freud]] established psychoanalysis as the dominant treatment for many mental conditions.
  • [[William Cullen]] coined the term ''neurosis''.

neurosis         
= neurosis, neuroticism.
Ex: The article is titled "Teenagers and reading: a generational neurosis".
Ex: Job stress is related both to neuroticism.
----
* neurosis producida por el trabajo = occupational neurosis.
neurosis         
n. neurosis, any of several mental disorders involving physical and emotional symptoms (such as bodily pain, anxiety, depression, etc.) that do not stem from any obvious physiological change (Medicine)
neurosis         
neurosis

Definition

néurosis
neurosis o, no frec., néurosis (de "neuro-" y "-osis") f. Psi. Nombre genérico aplicado a un grupo de enfermedades en las que aparecen trastornos de ansiedad y del comportamiento sin que exista lesión en el sistema nervioso.

Wikipedia

Neurosis

Neurosis (plural: neuroses) is a term mainly used today by followers of Freudian thinking to describe mental disorders caused by past anxiety, often that has been repressed. This concept is more usually known today as psychological trauma.

In recent history, the term has also referred to anxiety-related conditions more generally.

Sublimation can be considered neuroses' positive counterpart.

Neurosis should not be mistaken for psychosis, which refers to a loss of touch with reality. Nor should it be mistaken for its descendant term neuroticism, which refers to a personality trait of being prone to anxiousness and mental collapse.

Pronunciation examples for neurosis
1. We all have this neurosis.
Dealing With The Mental Pain of Everyday Life _ Barry Cohen _ Talks at Google
2. as being at different levels of neurosis.
Dealing With The Mental Pain of Everyday Life _ Barry Cohen _ Talks at Google
3. Psychosis and neurosis is a distinction
Shrinks - the Untold Story of Psychiatry _ Jeffrey Lieberman _ Talks at Google
4. I was equating neurosis in the sense
Shrinks - the Untold Story of Psychiatry _ Jeffrey Lieberman _ Talks at Google
5. Americans call it PTSD or traumatic neurosis.
ted-talks_2374_JeanPaulMari_2015X-320k
Examples of use of neurosis
1. El procedimiento exigía dar un rodeo, pero la recompensa se acomodaba a su neurosis aislacionista.
2. Sus sacerdotes administran esa neurosis en provecho de la casta dominante.
3. Este juez parece que sufre una neurosis mediática". Desde La Rural también criticaron al juez.
4. Es una pasión, a veces descontrolada, por unas piezas deseadas, donde se mezcla la obsesión y la neurosis.
5. La ciencia avanza en el espacio que la razón humana ha ido arrebatando a la neurosis de la religión.