Advertisement
Advertisement
psychodynamics
[ sahy-koh-dahy-nam-iks ]
noun
- any clinical approach to personality, as Freud's, that sees personality as the result of a dynamic interplay of conscious and unconscious factors.
- the aggregate of motivational forces, both conscious and unconscious, that determine human behavior and attitudes:
Mythologists see the myths as having developed through the psychodynamics of the human social psyche.
psychodynamics
/ ËŒ²õ²¹Éª°ìəʊ»å²¹ÉªËˆ²Ô泾ɪ°ì²õ /
noun
- functioning as singular psychol the study of interacting motives and emotions
Derived Forms
- ËŒ±è²õ²â³¦³ó´Ç»å²âˈ²Ô²¹³¾¾±³¦, adjective
- ËŒ±è²õ²â³¦³ó´Ç»å²âˈ²Ô²¹³¾¾±³¦ally, adverb
Other ˜yÐÄvlog Forms
- ±è²õ²â·³¦³ó´Ç·»å²â·²Ô²¹³¾Â·¾±³¦ adjective
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of psychodynamics1
Example Sentences
In my psychotherapy practice of 30-plus years, I have not seen such a common theme of existential anxiety created not by individual psychodynamics but by profound fear about the state of the Earth.
You will gain a far better understanding of the psychodynamics of how police agencies impose their will by sitting through “Is This a Room†than you would most streamed crime procedurals.
Allen and Schuur committed to delivering the same pleasures of the original — the radical intimacy, the hyper articulacy, the intense focus on the psychodynamics of two people in a nice room.
In the real-time argument that ensues — punctuated by shouts, murmurs, microaggressions and micro-reconciliations — Marie will give voice to everything from the invisibility of women’s emotional labor to the psychodynamics of the artist-muse hierarchy.
There was not any one thing in the book that surprised me about Trump's psychology or psychodynamics.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse