907 resultados para Escape (Psychology) -- Book reviews
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"Portions of the book have already appeared in various periodicals."--Pref.
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Wanting: fold. form (?) in pocket.
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Cover title: Mental philosophy. Mr. Pearl's book on the mind.
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The British Journal of Psychology publishes articles which make major contributions across the range of psychology, particularly where the work has the following characteristics: articles or groups of articles dealing with topics which are of interest to researchers from more than one specialism or section of psychology, or which address topics or issues at the interface between different specialisms or sections of psychology; articles or groups of articles which take different or contrasting methodological or theoretical approaches to a single topic; articles or groups of articles dealing with novel areas, theories or methodologies; integrative reviews, particularly where the review offers new analysis (e.g. meta-analysis), new theory or new implications for practice; articles or groups of articles dealing with the history of psychology; interdisciplinary work, where the contribution from, or to, psychological theory or practice is clear.
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"Portions of the book have already appeared in various periodicals."--Pref.
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Rare Book Room copy 1: Bookplate: Henry Eastman Lower.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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The other escaping prisoners were L. B. Smith, 4th Mich. cav.; W. Siutherland, 16th U. S. inf.; W. C. Trippe, 16th U. S. inf.; J. F. Wood, 26th Ohio inf.; R. G. Taylor, 2d Mass. cav.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Includes bibliographical references and index.
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This article reviews some contributions of the Jungian analytic tradition to indigenous ethnopsychiatric thought in Australia. The authors review Jung's writings on Aboriginal culture, then describe some of their own fieldwork findings. Acknowledging that the contemporary post-Jungian tradition is pluralist, they propose a notion of 'Jungian sensibility.' They discuss some of the ways in which the Jungian sensibility might contribute positively to Aboriginal mental health, with especial reference to theories of subjectivity, and note that some Aboriginal people find the Jungian world-view very compatible with the Aboriginal one.