Few people can avoid feeling a twinge of resentment when they find that their name has been forgotten, particularly if it is by some one with whom they had hoped or expected it would be remembered. They instinctively realize that if they had made a greater... The American Journal of Psychology - Page 488edited by - 1911Full view - About this book
| Ernest Jones - 1913 - 470 pages
...is apt to be intuitively attributed to the forgetting of names is that where our own are forgotten. Few people can avoid feeling a twinge of resentment...name has been forgotten, particularly if it is by someone with whom they had hoped or expected it would be remembered. They instinctively realise that... | |
| Ernest Jones - 1913 - 458 pages
...twinge of resentment when they find that their name has been forgotten, particularly if it is by someone with whom they had hoped or expected it would be remembered. They instinctively realise that if they had made a greater impression on the person's mind he would certainly have remembered... | |
| Ernest Jones - Child development - 1918 - 762 pages
...people can avoid feeling a twinge of resentwhen they find that their name has been forgotten, uLtrly if it is by some one with whom they had hoped or trtl it would be remembered. They instinctively realise if they had made a greater impression on the... | |
| Ernest Jones - 1919 - 760 pages
...is apt to be intuitively attributed to the forgetting of names is that where our own are forgotten. Few people can avoid feeling a twinge of resentment...expected it would be remembered. They instinctively realise that if they had made a greater impression on the person's mind he would certainly have remembered... | |
| Victoria Fromkin - Language Arts & Disciplines - 1973 - 276 pages
...come from an account of our subject written in English by Dr. Ernest Jones, at that time in Toronto: Few people can avoid feeling a twinge of resentment...that if they had made a greater impression on the persons's mind he would certainly have remembered them again, for the name is an integral part of the... | |
| Sigmund Freud - Psychology - 2003 - 324 pages
...was in Toronto (The Psychopathology of Everyday Life', American Journal of Psychology, October 1911): 'Few people can avoid feeling a twinge of resentment...name has been forgotten, particularly if it is by someone with whom they had hoped or expected it would be remembered. They instinctively realize that... | |
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