pol. baskı

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Turkish - English
{i} repression
The involuntary rejection from consciousness of painful or disagreeable ideas, memories, feelings, or impulses
The act of repressing; state of being repressed
The process by which the synthesis of an enzyme is inhibited by the presence of an external substance, the repressor protein
That which represses; check; restraint
the act of repressing; control by holding down; "his goal was the repression of insolence" (psychiatry) the classical defense mechanism that protects you from impulses or ideas that would cause anxiety by preventing them from becoming conscious a state of forcible subjugation; "the long repression of Christian sects
Repression of feelings, especially sexual ones, is a person's unwillingness to allow themselves to have natural feelings and desires. the repression of his feelings about men. In metabolism, a control mechanism by which a protein molecule, called a repressor, prevents the synthesis of an enzyme by binding to (and thus hindering the action of) the DNA that controls the enzyme's synthesis. Though the process has been studied mainly in microorganisms, it is believed to occur in a similar way in higher organisms. See also inhibition. In psychoanalytic theory, the exclusion of distressing memories, thoughts, or feelings from the conscious mind. Often involving sexual or aggressive urges or painful childhood memories, these unwanted mental contents are pushed into the unconscious mind. Repression is thought to give rise to anxiety and to neurotic symptoms, which begin when a forbidden drive or impulse threatens to enter the conscious mind. Psychoanalysis seeks to uncover repressed memories and feelings through free association as well as to examine the repressed wishes released in dreams. See also unconscious
The psychological process involved in not permitting memories and motives to enter consciousness though they are operating at an unconscious level
a state of forcible subjugation; "the long repression of Christian sects"
The ego pushes a threatening thought or forbidden impulse out of awareness into the unconscious See also defense mechanisms, suppression
(psychiatry) the classical defense mechanism that protects you from impulses or ideas that would cause anxiety by preventing them from becoming conscious a state of forcible subjugation; "the long repression of Christian sects
The rejection from consciousness of painful or disagreeable ideas, memories, feelings, or impulses
The condition of an inactive gene Lack of activity (transcription) due to presence of repressor
defense mechanism in which unacceptable affects, ideas or wishes are pushed away so that they remain in the unconscious
{i} state of being repressed, suppression; suppression of undesirable feelings urges or memories within the unconscious (Psychoanalysis)
In Psychoanalytic Theory, the defense mechanism whereby our thoughts are pulled out of our consciousness and into our unconscious
Fear of expression of painful materials
The act of repressing, or state of being repressed; as, the repression of evil and evil doers
The prevention of threatening ideas from becoming conscious
Sigmund Freud’s theory that unpleasant information is often pushed into unconsciousness without our being aware of it (pp 253, 465)
(see also textbook glossary) Freud's theory that memories for unpleasant events are preserved, but prevented from entering conscious awareness
pol. baskı
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