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      • Rank’s theory of emotions highlights anxiety as the affect of separation, and guilt as the feeling that binds the individual to others. His personality theory distinguishes between the partialist, who responds to life fear with identification, and the totalist, who responds to death fear with projection.
      www.researchgate.net › publication › 311215712_Person-Environment_Mergence_and_Separation_Otto_Rank's_Psychology_of_Emotion_Personality_and_Culture
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  2. His personality theory distinguishes between the partialist, who responds to life fear with identification, and the totalist, who responds to death fear with projection.

  3. Ranks theory of emotions highlights anxiety as the affect of separation, and guilt as the feeling that binds the individual to others. His personality theory distinguishes between the partialist, who responds to life fear with identification, and the totalist, who responds to death fear with projection.

  4. Sep 29, 2010 · This article examines Otto Rank's psychology and its profound implications for social work knowledge-building and practice. The paper begins with a brief biographical portrait, highlighting the significance of Rank's relationship and eventual break with Freud, and contextualizing the ideas that became the basis for the Functional Approach .

    • Eric S. Stein
    • 2010
  5. Otto Rank: Pioneering Ideas for Social Work Theory and Practice. ERIC S. STEIN. University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA. This article examines Otto Ranks psychology and its profound im-plications for social work knowledge-building and practice.

  6. Jan 1, 2003 · Otto Rank, 1884–1939. Viennese-American psychologist Otto Rank, Sigmund Freud’s protégé, colleague, and prescient critic, had considerable influence on American psychiatry (1 – 4). Secretary of the Vienna Psychoanalytic Society from 1906, at age 22, and Freud’s closest associate for the next 18 years, Rank was a prolific and ...

    • E James Lieberman
    • 2003
  7. The Ethical and the Empathie in the Thinking of Otto Rank In contemplating the psychology ol the individual it is possible to focus on intra-psychic mechanisms, dynamisms, and structure, as did Freud, or to adopt an interpersonal perspective and to view human thought, emotion, and be havior in the light of interactions between people, as did Rank.

  8. link.springer.com › referenceworkentry › 10Rank, Otto | SpringerLink

    Feb 5, 2019 · Definition. Otto Rank (1884–1939) was an Austrian and then American psychoanalyst, psychologist, therapist, and author of several influential books. He was the secretary of Sigmund Freud’s “Vienna Psychoanalytic Society” and a member of “The Secret Committee of Psychoanalysis” in the 1910s and 1920s.