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  1. 27 gen 2010 · The paper focuses on three different themes to demonstrate the continuing relevance of the early psychoanalyst, Otto Gross (1877–1920), which reverberates through a number of disciplines. With some of his ideas, Gross goes way beyond modernity and post-modernity towards a post-postmodern revolutionizing of both individual as well as collective – political – ways of understanding relating.

  2. Otto Gross was one of the most famous - and controversial - Freudian analysts of the first decade of the 20th century. Highly praised by Freud and also a patient and friend of C. G. Jung, he was rejected from the movement because he wanted to adapt psychoanalysis to function as a philosophy of revolution.

  3. Otto Gross, celým jménem Otto Hans Adolf Gross (17. března 1877 Gniebing-Weißenbach – 13. února 1920 Berlín), byl rakouský lékař, psychiatr a psychoanalytik. Biografie [ editovat | editovat zdroj ]

  4. Nel febbraio del 1908 Freud ripone grandi speranze in due giovani psichiatri, Carl Gustav Jung e Otto Gross. A maggio redige il certificato d’internamento per Gross, che è preso in cura da Jung per una cura disintossicante da oppio e cocaina. Freud conta di poterlo analizzare in autunno. Non andrà così. I due delfini si analizzano a vicenda.

  5. For more than half a century, Otto Gross (1877–1920) was a forgotten figure in the annals of mental medicine and intellectual culture. The man whose name and reputation had once been familiar to many professionals who worked in the fields of psychoanalysis and psychiatry in German-speaking Europe, and who had moved effortlessly in bohemian, anarchistic and counter-cultural circles, had ...

  6. Otto Gross broke with his decreed path of life as a psychiatrist, psychoanalyst and university professor, and turned to Bohemian and anarchist circles. He was incapacitated put under tutelage in 1913 at the instigation of his father, living an unsettled life in Munich, Ascona, Vienna, Prague, Budapest and Berlin.

  7. Otto Gross (1877-1920) was an Austrian philosopher and psychotherapist whose work, in contrast to mainstream philosophy, sought not to discard but to reconstruct the philosophy of conscious and, moreover, to integrate it with biological and historical approaches. The son of the internationally famous criminologist, Hans Gross, he began a career ...