MediaWiki API result

This is the HTML representation of the JSON format. HTML is good for debugging, but is unsuitable for application use.

Specify the format parameter to change the output format. To see the non-HTML representation of the JSON format, set format=json.

See the complete documentation, or the API help for more information.

{
    "batchcomplete": "",
    "continue": {
        "gapcontinue": "Rehat_of_the_52_Hukams_of_Gobind",
        "continue": "gapcontinue||"
    },
    "query": {
        "pages": {
            "104": {
                "pageid": 104,
                "ns": 0,
                "title": "Reaction Formation",
                "revisions": [
                    {
                        "contentformat": "text/x-wiki",
                        "contentmodel": "wikitext",
                        "*": "Reaction formation is a type of defense mechanism in which a person acts in the exact opposite manner to his own disturbing or socially unacceptable thoughts or emotions; wherein people react strongly to their own unacknowledged desires by acting to suppress or even destroy those desires in others (all the while denying that they themselves have those desires). This behavior is often unconscious and appears exaggerated, perhaps in an effort to overcompensate for the embarrassment, guilt or repulsion the person feels regarding his private thoughts.\n\nBy using reaction formation, one\u2019s self-identity remains \u201csafe\u201d as the ego is kept in ignorance of the person\u2019s true motives. For example, a highly religious man with lustful urges toward women might react with exaggerated disgust upon seeing a woman in revealing clothes, or he may go into long lectures about modesty. Or a woman who harbors racist feelings may go out of her way to be overly kind to people of another race. Or a man who fears that he is falling in love with his new girlfriend begins to pick fights and lash out at her in anger.\n\nBehavior due to reaction formation is often extremely exaggerated, compulsive and inflexible. These behaviors don\u2019t vary due to changes in emotion as do natural behaviors. For example, a father who feels guilt at resenting his child may go above and beyond to express showy love to the child under all circumstances. These behaviors based on fake emotions are often easy to spot. Therapists often observe reaction formation in patients who claim to strongly believe in something and become vehemently angry at everyone who disagrees. \n\nA favorite example of Reaction Formation is Roy Cohn, a politically connected lawyer who was gay and died of Aids, but who viciously persecuted gays during the middle 20th century because he was too cowardly to accept himself as he was."
                    }
                ]
            },
            "105": {
                "pageid": 105,
                "ns": 0,
                "title": "Reality",
                "revisions": [
                    {
                        "contentformat": "text/x-wiki",
                        "contentmodel": "wikitext",
                        "*": "Reality is the\u00a0self consistent story that persists even when you aren't paying attention to it, that one experinces when one is awake. Unlike in [[Dreaming|dreams]] ."
                    }
                ]
            }
        }
    }
}