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The Differential Impact of Cues of Nurturance and Rejection Upon the Thematic Responses of Social Deviants
Abstract
Psychological theorists have given much consideration to the questions of how specific behavior syndromes are produced and what conditions lead to their development by a given individual. The viewpoints expressed can be roughly grouped into three somewhat different types of theories. Some authors (e.g., Sheldon, 1940; Kallman, 1959; Glueck & Glueck, 1956) feel that an individual's innate, constitutional make-up predisposes him to a certain style of life and simultaneously increases the probability of certain types of symptoms in the event he should become psychologically disturbed. This is the view frequently taken with respect to psychosomatic disorders when attributing the "organ neurosis" to a constitutional weakness of the organ involved.
Subject Area
Clinical psychology
Recommended Citation
LEBOW, KENNETH EUGENE, "The Differential Impact of Cues of Nurturance and Rejection Upon the Thematic Responses of Social Deviants" (1967). ETD collection for University of Nebraska-Lincoln. AAI6710670.
https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/dissertations/AAI6710670