I suspect a certain attitude to asylum-seekers is actually a form of transference. |
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These two polymorphic processes function as a complex relation of reciprocal transference. |
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In spite of his recognition of transference and counter-transference, Freud continued to maintain that he was a scientist until his death. |
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The gene transference involves the use of a vector carrier which can be a plasmid or a virus. |
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It must be some kind of transference, so the studio guys think that they're geniuses, too, for discovering them. |
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Still except for sundry exceptions of inadequate transference and omission, he renders them competently. |
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This transference was regarded as a right of conquest, but the excuse was sometimes offered that the artists concerned were of German origin. |
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Here the analysis of dreams and the analysis of the transference become indispensable. |
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Anger and outright rage at the computer, when it doesn't behave the way YOU want it to, may be a symptom of this kind of transference. |
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It's called transference, and it's very dangerous, particularly when you have large corporations. |
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The gothic also mystifies the social system in other ways, most notably through a type of transference. |
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Yet, obviously, such transference might quicken interest and offer other ways of thinking about a subject. |
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The main transference and counter-transference, however, was directed back to the couple and their interaction. |
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The knowledge shared over these two days will help advance research about disease transference between animals and humans. |
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We must make a distinction between the transference of a heritage and that of the future of the planet. |
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It is this basic shape that lies behind the transference of the name to other, completely different foods, such as fishcakes, pancakes, and potato cakes. |
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The transference of the permanent use rights of the water is valued at 200 million yuan and is believed to be the first deal of its kind on the Chinese mainland. |
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Concepts such as thought transference, space travel and mind control all feature in the ground-breaking film. |
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Rabih and Kirsten continue to experience difficulties as they fail to deal with their transference issues. |
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Racism in general, and colonial racism in particular, represents the transference of this self-hatred to the Other. |
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The problem of unemployment in this bloated age group will deflate, making a pension funding problem appear by simple transference. |
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There is therefore the possibility of a significant voter transference from the republican party to the democratic party. |
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We know too that issues of projection and transference are very real ones today. |
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If the transference occurs before the filing, it must be noted under the inventor name. |
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The firebox cavity should include a layer of insulation prior to inserting the firebox using a natural wool fibre to limit heat transference. |
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As an insurer, we assume certain of our customers' risks, and therefore we must carefully manage that transference of risk. |
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As she had an idealized transference towards her consultant, she refused to speak with nursing staff or with registrar. |
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If the apparatus requires transference between the digestion and distillation steps, this transfer must be carried out without loss. |
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Opened up Fleet Executive Board meetings to regional Superintendents to ensure effective transference of operational and management knowledge. |
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The transference of that vision, as Algren helps the defeated Katsumoto perform an impromptu seppuku on the field of battle, defines the real last samurai. |
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But after each discussion and transference and cameras parameters change one has to do recalculation, calculate and compare several variants of cameras placement. |
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The contact with that unconscious process, either by transference or other manifestations, may be the most important lesson in psychodynamic supervision. |
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I am not saying that transference of authority is always inappropriate. |
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And again, when you find something from a body that has been affixed or in some way attached to something else, then questions arise, how might there have been transference? |
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I can see to it that the transference process occurs gradually for it will take years, for one to become accustomed to such extraordinary levels of pure energy. |
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According to Lockard's principle, when there is confrontation between two people, supposedly there is also some transference of one kind of material or another. |
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At many a public meeting we constantly warned of the dangers of product transference and that we would not lose money but in fact could make more. |
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Most psychoanalysts recognize this principle as valid, more especially since analysis of transference became so central a concern of psychoanalytic treatment. |
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Freudians call this transference and countertransference, of course. |
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The regressive effect of trauma often gives rise to a transference that associates the therapist with victimhood, shame and demanding assumptions. |
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The less we know someone, the more likely we are to engage in what therapists call transference, the tendency to project our desires or fears onto another person. |
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Mr. Speaker, when we looked at vulnerable populations oftentimes women were brought up as one group, particularly in regard to the transference of these toxins to their newborns. |
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Because both therapist and patient can observe these transference reactions, as Freud termed them, the exploration of their inappropriateness is deemed a powerful means of resolving them. |
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At the same time, I think it is also important to know the opportunity that new communications offer really puts at a premium, the transference of values. |
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Finally, the future programme should address, with adequate funds, issues of interproject and inter-programme transference of information, knowledge and skills. |
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The indorser remits it to his correspondent, with an indorsation or transference of property. |
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Gaelic was the language of the bardic tradition, which provided a mechanism for the transference of oral culture from generation to generation. |
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In general, the deep sea is considered to start at the aphotic zone, the point where sunlight loses its power of transference through the water. |
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Only the original User is granted winnings, no transference is allowed. |
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One of the classic things that can happen is transference. |
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To strengthen efforts to maintain traditional and collective values through the promotion of traditional ways of learning and the transference of indigenous knowledge. |
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Thus the analysis and assessment, on the one hand, and the transference into action on the other, is carried out by the same persons, whereby there are better chances of the evaluation results being well applied. |
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It has been written into the logic of the politics of normative and institutional transference, since it became a toolkit for the construction of the Western liberal model of the state in the countries concerned. |
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The curators scoured the individual sheets of paper, looking for clues to their original order, such as pigment transference, age and type of paper. |
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The plans for the new Naval Base facilities also foresee the transference of the Lisbon Naval Air Station, from the Bom Sucesso docks to a new air base to be built at Montijo. |
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Better Firewalking With PhysicsFirewalking's journey from ancient religious practice to corporate retreat activity rests on the physics of heat transference. |
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Luv U Mate also talked about the aphotic zone, the point where sunlight loses its power of transference through the water as summarized by Cameron. |
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