Quotes by Psychological Needs Every President reconstructs the Presidency to meet his own psychological needs. Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr. psychological-needs presidency president I never even graduated college. I never finished learning, as it were, and I have a psychological need to be in a learning environment at all times. Biz Stone psychological-needs environment college People with a psychological need to believe in marvels are no more prejudiced and gullible than people with a psychological need not to believe in marvels. Charles Fort psychological-needs believe people the psychological need to believe that others take you as seriously as you take yourself. There is nothing particularly wrong with it, as psychological needs go, but yet of course we should always remember that a deep need for anything from other people makes us easy pickings. David Foster Wallace psychological-needs believe people True salvation is freedom from negativity, and above all from past and future as a psychological need. Eckhart Tolle psychological-needs freedom past To be free of time is to be free of the psychological need of past for your identity and future for your fulfillment Eckhart Tolle psychological-needs identity past Religions fulfill deep-seated psychological needs for people, and if you don't get it from a specific religious doctrine, you'll get it from the kind of films I like to make. A film like The Terminator is consciously meant to give a sense of empowerment to the individual. James Cameron psychological-needs religious people The work all comes from a psychological need. See the images that I make... It's really a psychological need. I'm just jerked around by it. I'm pulled by it. Larry Clark psychological-needs psychological needs Diamonds are intrinsically worthless, except for the deep psychological need they fill. Nicky Oppenheimer psychological-needs worthless diamond Freud, Jung thought, had been a great discoverer of facts about the mind, but far too inclined to leave the solid ground of "critical reason and common sense." Freud for his part criticized Jung for being gullible about occult phenomena and infatuated with Oriental religions; he viewed with sardonic and unmitigated skepticism Jung's defense of religious feelings as an integral element in mental health. For Freud, religion was a psychological need projected onto culture, the child's feeling of helplessness surviving in adults, to be analyzed rather than admired. Peter Gay psychological-needs religious children The tension between the call to the desert and to the market place arises not from the greater presence of God in one or the other but from our varying psychological needs to apprehend him in different ways. Sheila Cassidy psychological-needs desert different