4 results
Search Results
2. JOB DESIGN AND PRODUCTIVITY.
- Author
-
KEMPNER, T. and WILD, RAY
- Subjects
WORK design ,LABOR productivity ,INDUSTRIAL productivity ,WORK measurement ,JOB satisfaction ,PSYCHOLOGY ,PERSONNEL management ,FACTORS of production ,EMPLOYEE attitudes - Abstract
Six years ago a small research unit was established at the Management Centre of the University of Bradford, with the purpose of investigating the effects of changes in job design and job content on worker productivity. Since that time a number of studies have been completed, and the philosophy and strategy of the programme of research have changed. This paper describes the evolution of the project and summarizes the major results obtained up to the present date. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1973
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. The Historical Pattern of Psycho-Analysis.
- Author
-
Barbu, Z.
- Subjects
PSYCHOANALYSIS ,PSYCHOLOGY ,MENTAL illness ,PSYCHOTHERAPY ,CONSCIOUSNESS ,SUBCONSCIOUSNESS - Abstract
The article focuses on the historical pattern of psycho-analysis. Some twenty years ago psycho-analysis, Freudianism in particular, seemed to have been assimilated and consequently given its own place within Western civilization. Psycho-analysis was regarded as one among many hypotheses about the structure and evolution of the human mind. The first important fact about the present psycho-analytical revival is that it comes from the U.S. where psycho-analysis has been adopted mainly as a clinical practice. The lead taken by U.S. literature in making use of psycho-analytical ideas is a characteristic aspect of this phenomenon. The second factor in the popularity of psycho-analysis derives from the psychological repercussions of the Second World War. Due to the high frequency of mental disorders during the post-war period, psycho-analysis as a psycho-therapeutic method is more useful now than at any other time. The late war had a second even more important effect. It has in many aspects brought Western society nearer to the socio-cultural pattern characteristic of the Austro-Hungarian Empire during the last decades of its existence. It would be more accurate to say that it has brought London and Paris closer to the Vienna of 1900. All these circumstances have contributed greatly to the weakening of the critical resistance which was present twenty years ago. This study is a short account of the historical conditions of some fundamental psycho-analytical ideas, such as the discovery of the unconscious, as the principal layer of the mental energy; the bivalence of this energy as the life and death instincts; the stratification of mental life and the relationship between consciousness and the unconscious.
- Published
- 1952
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Reflections on training analysis.
- Author
-
Fordham, Michael and Fordham, M
- Subjects
TRAINING ,PSYCHOANALYSIS ,PSYCHOTHERAPY ,THERAPEUTICS ,PSYCHOLOGY ,MENTAL health ,PSYCHOANALYTIC interpretation ,PATHOLOGICAL psychology - Abstract
Offers insights into training analysis. Effect of training analysis in approximating to an ordinary therapeutic analysis; Assumption that training analysis must be conducted by one analyst only if the earliest pre-oedipal conflict-patterns are to be adequately worked through; Question of whether analysis of childhood gives sufficient attention to the shadow, the animus and the anima.
- Published
- 1970
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.