(p. pr.) The physiological individual, characterized by definiteness and independence of function, in distinction from the morphological individual or morphon.
Example Sentences:
(1) I relate this clinical observation to the idea of non-attachment as found in spiritual tradition, and I draw on the work of Bion and Matte Blanco to locate these ideas within psychoanalytic theory.
(2) In this research we examined the relationships among cognitive styles using the categorization of Bion and styles of modulation of emotional behavior (hostile content) explored with the Gottschalk, et al.
(3) This phenomenon is interpreted in the framework of an ongoing intergroup interaction among patients and between patients and staff, as conceptualized in the Tavistock Model propounded by Bion.
(4) There are the medical Jungians who have fused psychoanalysis with other traditions, such as Klein, Winnicott, Bion, Langs, Kohut and others, who express Jung and the healing process in technical, scientific terms.
(5) Clinical vignettes illustrate the lack of such empathy, and readings are suggested that enhance our approach to learning this skill, borrowing especially from Kohut and Bion.
(6) Bion is an NHS consultant in intensive care medicine and chief investigator of the high-intensity specialist-led acute care and seven-day services (Hislac) project at Birmingham University.
(7) The development of British object-relations theory over the past twenty years can be viewed as containing the beginnings of an exploration of a realm of experience that lies outside of the states of being addressed by Klein, Winnicott, Fairbairn and Bion.
(8) The first experiment was conducted by Bion & Rickman.
(9) The author discusses the interactional process between the chief resident and ward staff, with reference to Bion's theory of group functioning.
(10) I link this situation with Bion's concept of 'minus K'.
(11) Under license from Goodyear, this same polymer has been manufactured by Lord Corporation for the hinge portion of finger joint prostheses using the tradename Bion.
(12) Since most of the patients who attend for psychiatric consultation at a clinic are little motivated for psychotherapy, analytic group therapy was attempted, with basis on studies on psychological genetics, on groups management, and on the theories of Freud, Klein and Bion.
(13) The aim of this study was to investigate the validity of Bion's hypothesis of valence and the significance of (DSM-III) diagnoses for inpatient group behavior.
(14) Rat skin was deprived of epidermis and the wound was exposed to ions generated with Bion 80 apparatus, for 3 h, just after wounding, only once.
(15) All verbal statements (approximately 17,000) from 91 patients in 75 small group therapy sessions were assessed according to Group Emotionality Rating System, which contains the (Bion) categories of dependency, fight, flight and pairing.
(16) Drawing upon the work of Bion and Kernberg, a specific means for the induction of psychosis is suggested, involving primitive splitting and the projection of "all bad" self-object constellations within a group setting.
(17) In particular, those who were relatively less hostile presented higher frequencies of processes classified by Bion as D2, which are characterized by an attitude of expectancy and waiting, with a tendency to defend internal psychological themas.
(18) For Bion, Faith is a proper primordial and developed response to catastrophe.
(19) For Bion the self is born, evolves and dissolves with a sense of catastrophe.
(20) Culture has been described as contributing to aspects of internalized psychic structure (Horney), to the maintenance of that structure (Bion), and to its members' performance of ongoing functions of mirroring and idealizing (Kohut).
Zion
Definition:
(n.) A hill in Jerusalem, which, after the capture of that city by the Israelites, became the royal residence of David and his successors.
(n.) Hence, the theocracy, or church of God.
(n.) The heavenly Jerusalem; heaven.
Example Sentences:
(1) The author wishes to thank Joanne Damon, R.N., Sandra Zion, R.N., Dorothy Markay, R.N., and Rachel Rotkovitch, R.N., for their advice, encouragement, and support, and Florence Williams, R.N., who provided clinical supervision.
(2) They wanted volunteers from western Europe and the US, Jews from affluent, educated communities, who would enrich the new Zion rather than cling to it like a life raft.
(3) A paradise for canyoneers and rock climbers , Zion boasts rock formations spanning more than 150 million years of geologic history.
(4) Years ago, I co-hosted a regular networking salon with four friends who happened to be Jewish; we named it Protocols as in “Of the Elders of Zion”.
(5) Or the claim that the “Protocols of the Elders of Zion” – an infamous antisemitic libel – is a true account of a sinister Jewish plot to take over the world?
(6) Also, New York State, in the wake of the Libby Zion case, now requires that all residents be credentialed in the procedures they do during training.
(7) Manuel says past guests have compared it with Copper Canyon, Bryce Canyon and Zion Park.
(8) On the hill above Christ Church, for example, the pretty little Mount Zion Primitive Methodist church is a graffiti-daubed mess, its windows bricked up, its doors barred.
(9) Zion officials were spurred to take action after an incident in which an unmanned aircraft was seen harassing bighorn sheep and causing youngsters to become separated from their herd.
(10) I would!” Smith concluded: “I never went to a black person who said that they don’t want to be a rich fat cat.” Facebook Twitter Pinterest Smith talks with Annie Mae Dukes following a service at Mount Zion First Baptist Church in Smyrna, Georgia.
(11) Zion Hospital and Medical Center, San Francisco, believes a hospital has an obligation to provide community service.
(12) In Haifa, Israel, physicians admitted a 24 year old woman with a fever to the Bnai Zion Medical Center for a presumed septic abortion at 15 weeks gestation.
(13) Chronic frontal sinusitis and osteolysis in a herd of desert bighorn sheep (Ovis canadensis nelsoni) in Zion National Park, Utah, was attributed to bacterial infection secondary to aberrant nasal bot migration.
(14) Outside the east entrance is the 4,000-acre Zion Ponderosa Resort, a historic ranch with accommodation ranging from well-appointed holiday homes to rustic cabins and refurbished wagons.
(15) This report compares three different methods for making a dynamic case formulation: 1) the Core Conflictual Relationship Theme (CCRT) of Luborsky (Crits-Christoph and Luborsky 1985a,b; Luborsky 1976, 1977, 1984, and companion paper in this issue; Levine and Luborsky 1981), 2) the Plan Diagnosis (PD) method of Silberschatz, Curtis and colleagues of the Mount Zion group (Caston 1986; Curtis and Silberschatz 1986; Rosenberg et al.
(16) A qualitative, exploratory study was done of problems and issues in health care use by older Russian emigrés at the ambulatory medical clinic of Mount Zion Medical Center, San Francisco.
(17) Nestled in a canyon carved into dramatic red, pink and white sandstone by the Virgin river, Zion is a mecca for hikers, climbers and desert lovers.
(18) Poland lurches to right with election of Law and Justice party Read more Macierewicz told listeners to Radio Maryja in 2002 that he had read Protocols of the Elders of Zion, a pamphlet that purports to be a Jewish plan to control the global economy and media, but which has been exposed as a hoax.
(19) Zion national park In a state that has more parks than it does major cities, Zion stands above the rest as Utah's first national park and its most visited.
(20) Protocols of the Elders of Zion was supposed to have been first published in Russia in the 1900s, translated into various languages and disseminated internationally in the early 20th century.