1999
DOI: 10.1590/s0102-79721999000300011
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Versões do supereu e perversão

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“…In the face of that, the Ego ideal constituted a model to be followed by the Ego to reacquire the lost perfection. Rudge (1999) highlights that, with the introduction of the notion of the superego, the Ego ideal is maintained in the Freudian terminology, whether as a synonym for superego -as in the excerpt quoted aboveor as an agency based on which the superego will compare the Ego, punishing it if it is significantly beneath the ideals. Cardoso (2002) affirms that it is possible to see a certain counterpoint between the superego and the ego ideal.…”
Section: Paradoxical Element: the Ego And The Idmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…In the face of that, the Ego ideal constituted a model to be followed by the Ego to reacquire the lost perfection. Rudge (1999) highlights that, with the introduction of the notion of the superego, the Ego ideal is maintained in the Freudian terminology, whether as a synonym for superego -as in the excerpt quoted aboveor as an agency based on which the superego will compare the Ego, punishing it if it is significantly beneath the ideals. Cardoso (2002) affirms that it is possible to see a certain counterpoint between the superego and the ego ideal.…”
Section: Paradoxical Element: the Ego And The Idmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Rudge (1999) points out that, throughout Freud's work, we find many passages in which the themes of prohibition, guilt and morality are formed, long before the text in which the agency is named in a definite way. Still in the second half of the 1910s, Freud (1907Freud ( /1979 describes the distress that impels the neurotic to perform his obsessive acts, in an impressive parallel with the religious practices carried out by the devotee.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%