2000
DOI: 10.1159/000029138
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The Doublets of Anger

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Cited by 7 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…Anger is very important for the construction of personal identity: it defends the limits of what is tolerable, the borders of one's moral identity [142] . It becomes dysfunctional when it overcomes the limit within which it can positively be directed into desirable and goal-directed actions, when it dissolves the harmonizing orientation of the subject, and when its appraisal cannot fi nd a moral consensus among neighbours and society [143] .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Anger is very important for the construction of personal identity: it defends the limits of what is tolerable, the borders of one's moral identity [142] . It becomes dysfunctional when it overcomes the limit within which it can positively be directed into desirable and goal-directed actions, when it dissolves the harmonizing orientation of the subject, and when its appraisal cannot fi nd a moral consensus among neighbours and society [143] .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…She usually did not experience anxiety when exposed to social situations, and she did not avoid or only endure them under intense distress. If psychopathological analysis is, as it should be, more than a descriptive enumeration of symptoms, any clinical disorder should be linked to the underlying personality organization in a process-oriented approach [24] , syntagmatically rather than paradigmatically [27] . That is, any phenomenon should be seen in its connection with other phenomena in terms of structure and process [27] .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although the term 'dysphoria' , in the narrower sense of irritable mood, is often used to designate mood states in different psychopathological conditions (including several personality disorders, affective disorders, organic psychoses, delusional disorders and schizophrenias) -and not only in borderline personality disorder -the quality and the consequences of dysphoric mood in borderlines is rather common. [8] Dysphoria manifests itself as a prolonged, unmotivated, indistinct, and quasi-ineffable constellation of feelings that convey a nebula of vague impulses, sensations and perceptions that permeate a person's whole field of awareness. Dysphoria is unfocused and not explicitly intentional; it does not possess directedness and aboutness.…”
Section: The 'Pragmatic Motive' Of Manipulationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Achieving second-order empathy thus requires me to set aside my own prereflexive, natural attitude (in which my first-order empathic capacities are rooted) and to approach the other's world as I would do while exploring an unknown and alien country. [4,[6][7][8]16] …”
Section: Empathising With Manipulationmentioning
confidence: 99%