Creativity |
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Page 114
... nature of the comic : that is , the nature of that form of amusement to which we tend to respond with laughter , smiles , and a merry atti- tude . In this chapter , perhaps helped by what we have already es- * In Chapter 5 we reported ...
... nature of the comic : that is , the nature of that form of amusement to which we tend to respond with laughter , smiles , and a merry atti- tude . In this chapter , perhaps helped by what we have already es- * In Chapter 5 we reported ...
Page 221
... nature , as it was conventionally done . He allowed a special subjective element to enter into his work , so that such work would not reproduce but " represent " nature . In comparison to what was to de- velop later , Cézanne's works ...
... nature , as it was conventionally done . He allowed a special subjective element to enter into his work , so that such work would not reproduce but " represent " nature . In comparison to what was to de- velop later , Cézanne's works ...
Page 265
... nature . But for Frazer , who follows Tylor ( 1874 ) , magic is not science but pseudoscience , because it is based on two types of erroneous association of ideas . Religion does not assume the immu- tability of nature ; on the contrary ...
... nature . But for Frazer , who follows Tylor ( 1874 ) , magic is not science but pseudoscience , because it is based on two types of erroneous association of ideas . Religion does not assume the immu- tability of nature ; on the contrary ...
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abstract abstract art accept aesthetic archipallium areas Arieti artistic aspects ative beauty becomes cerebral cortex Chapter characteristics cognitive comic concept concrete conscious cortex creative person creative process creative product culture Dante described discovery dreams elements emotions endocept engrams example experience expression external fact factors feeling Figure Freud functions genius human ideas identified imagery images imagination important individual inner instance Italian Jewish Jews joke Kroeber logic meaning mechanisms mental metaphor mode motivation mystical neolithic neurons Nobel Prize Non-Jewish object occur original paleologic paleologic thinking pars pro toto patient perception philosophy poem poet poetry primary process primitive Psychiatry psychoanalytic psychological reality recognize religious represented reproduce schizophrenic secondary process sexual sick rose similar stage stimuli symbolic system theory tertiary process theory things tion tivity uncon unconscious unity Venus de Milo verbal visual witticisms woman words York