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psychoanalytically

Definitions

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • adverb In a psychoanalytical manner.

Etymologies

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License

psychoanalytical +‎ -ly

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Examples

  • In the dictionary of insults, “castrating bitch” ranks high or low, but psychoanalytically all women threaten castration.

    Bloodlust Russell Jacoby 2011

  • Turkle is a psychoanalytically trained psychologist at MIT who has specialized for years in studying artificial intelligence and its effect on humans who invent it, use it and enjoy it.

    Sherry Turkle's meditation on technology, "Alone Together" Jane Smiley 2011

  • Mr. Lear instead offers a psychoanalytically tinged reworking of the whole ironic category.

    Insight By Surprise Andrew Stark 2011

  • We can define war “psychoanalytically,” wrote one doctor, “as a criminal act, fantasized individually and consummated collectively for the purpose … of preserving the love object through a paranoid process.”

    Bloodlust Russell Jacoby 2011

  • In the effort to emulate and finally surpass "anterior" texts, poems that fire the poet's passion for poetry in the first place, strong poets "misread" these texts in a psychoanalytically defensive gesture that allows the "something new" of literary creation to occur.

    Principles of Literary Criticism 2010

  • In the dictionary of insults, “castrating bitch” ranks high or low, but psychoanalytically all women threaten castration.

    Bloodlust Russell Jacoby 2011

  • Memoirs of My Nervous Illness by Daniel Paul Schreber, a nineteenth-century German judge who also ended up institutionalized, is a favorite of the psychoanalytically inclined—in part because Freud discussed it.

    Bloodlust Russell Jacoby 2011

  • Turkle is a psychoanalytically trained psychologist at MIT who has specialized for years in studying artificial intelligence and its effect on humans who invent it, use it and enjoy it.

    Who cares what a robot thinks? You will. Post 2011

  • We can define war “psychoanalytically,” wrote one doctor, “as a criminal act, fantasized individually and consummated collectively for the purpose … of preserving the love object through a paranoid process.”

    Bloodlust Russell Jacoby 2011

  • Memoirs of My Nervous Illness by Daniel Paul Schreber, a nineteenth-century German judge who also ended up institutionalized, is a favorite of the psychoanalytically inclined—in part because Freud discussed it.

    Bloodlust Russell Jacoby 2011

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