Skip to main content

Posts

Showing posts from May 24, 2009
PALLADIUM The essential features Palladium patients are having tremendous emotional insecurity with strong emotions that cannot be expressed, and in this way creating a blockade, a deep inner conflict that needs constant support on the part of those around and especially those whom they are intemately connected, all this is coupled wiyth a tremeddous unexpressed egoism. They actually think all the time that they are worth more than the others think about them, and it does not matter how much praise thay may others use for them it is neverr enough. An insatiable hunger for flattery, not only praise but really flatter. It is impressive how much they crave it and how little they openly admit and ask for it. They will sit in the company of many people and if nobody pays attention to them for sometimes they have a strong sense that they are neglected. On the contrary if they feel that they are appreciated they keep very alive and excitable during the contact with the others, and they spend

tempraments

Four Temperaments This article is about the modern psychological theory of temperament. For "four humors" in Greco-Roman medicine, see humorism . 4 humours (choleric, melancholic, sanguine and phlegmatic) Simple emoticons of the four temperaments (clockwise from top right: Choleric, melancholic, sanguine, phlegmatic). Four Temperaments is a theory of psychology that stems from the ancient medical concept of four humors, or "humours" in UK English. History and development Temperament theory has its roots in the ancient four humors theory of the Greek doctor Hippocrates (460-370 BC), who believed certain human moods, emotions and behaviors were caused by body fluids (called "humors"): blood , yellow bile , black bile , and phlegm . Next, Galen (131-200 AD) developed the first typology of temperament in his dissertation De temperamentis, and searched for physiological reasons for different behaviors in humans. In The Canon of Medicine, Avi