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neurosis

noun

  1. term and disease in psychology
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Wiktionary

Pronunciation: /n(j)ʊˈɹəʊ̯.sɪs/ / /n(j)ʊˈɹoʊ̯.sɪs/ / /n(j)ʊˈɹəʉ̯.sɪs/

noun

Etymology: Etymology tree Proto-Indo-European *(s)neh₁- Proto-Indo-European *-wr̥ Proto-Indo-European *snéh₁wr̥der. Ancient Greek νεῦρον (neûron) Ancient Greek νευρο- (neuro-)der. English neuro- English -sis English neurosis From neuro- + -sis.

  1. A mental disorder, less severe than psychosis, marked by anxiety or fear which differ from normal measures by their intensity, which disorder results from a failure to compromise or properly adjust during the developmental stages of life, between normal human instinctual impulses and the demands of human society.

    On inquiry it was found that this neurosis corresponded in time with the oncome of the catamenia.

    In the period from Spinoza to the end of the 19th century, the reading of design into nature received such devastating attacks from naturalists to non-naturalists alike that there developed an epistemological neurosis which Von Baer aptly termed “teleophobia.”