The 1945 Year Book of Neurology, Psychiatry and Endocrinology
Abstract
â39 andthat feralstructures,primitive,Id ; he hascooperate, bitterness are stressed in thisin theshuffle. The old psychoanalysis has disapthough now and then the integrated habit of thought of the writers comes out as, for example, when they state that the American soldier loves milk because of maternal linkage. This hardly explains why he also likes beer and cigarettes, and why he seeks night-clubs when he returns home. He likes milk because it is a very fine drink, onethat he has been trained to think of as the best ofpoor leadership. All these excellent book when the discussion remains on what I call, without any adverse implications, a commonsense bevel. It loses its validity, so far as one reader is concerned, when the term identification is used. And I am rather weary of the psychiatric clich#{233} âregression.â If this merely means that a person of one level of cohesion and physiological and psychobogical integrity is reduced to a lower level, the term is good enough. This is the kind of thingfluids so far as calories and vitamins are concerned. He has no more maternal fixation than the men of those countries in which wine or beer take the place of milk