796 resultados para Sick Psychology


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Part of illustrative material is folded.

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Includes bibliographies and index.

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Includes bibliographies and index.

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Open letter addressed: "To the friends of homœopathy in Great Britain" and signed by George Wyatt Truscott, Bart. and 11 other names, and David MacNish, Secretary to the Provisional Committee.

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Thesis (Ph. D.)--Clark university, 1893.

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Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2016-06

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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.

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A group of students from the Aboriginal Centre for the Performing Arts participated in a mental skills training program that focused on goal setting, self-confidence development, and team building. There were 13 two-hour sessions held over a 20-week period. The participants, cultural issues, and the basic structure of the program are described. The author's observations regarding competition, displays of affection, collective values, and the importance of family and nature are provided. The participants qualitatively evaluated the program. Conclusions related to group process, program structure, and diversity are presented. These conclusions should be of value in terms of shaping future group mental skills training programs.