Second Thoughts is a collection of papers on Schizophrenia, Linking and Thinking, and is a commentary upon them in the light of later work. Originally composed between 1950 and 1962, it derives its title from the lengthy critical commentary which Bion attached to these case histories in the year of publication, 1967, and represents the evolutionary change of position marked in his three previous books and brought to further refinement in the present work.
J. O. Prochaska, J. Norcross, & C. DiClemente. (1994). Changing for Good: A Revolutionary Six-Stage Program for ... S. C. Hayes, V. M. Follette, & M. M. Linehan (Eds.). (2004). Mindfulness and Acceptance: Expanding the Cognitive- ...
Lawson, K., Crouter, A., and McHale, S. 2015. “Links Between Family Gender Socialization Experiences in Childhood and Gendered Occupational Attainment in Young Adulthood.” Journal of Vocational Behavior 90:26–35. Lax, E. 1992.
Once a leading practitioner of Recovered Memory Therapy, Dr. Paul Simpson concludes that he had been "horrifically wrong", and that the movement has contributed to untold suffering in families where there have been false accusations of ...
What distortions emerge through repetition? How do we determine what's worth rereading and what is the role of such repetition in our lives? What are the gains and losses? This work investigates the rereading of texts from various genres.
But as with all heuristics , the momentum heuristic is imperfect ; the same basic sense that helps us navigate the environment can be misapplied to our social world . Our brain takes ideas like momentum and trajectory and applies them ...
Studies that compare the performance of low, medium, and highability tracks show that tracking benefits only the highability groups (Condron 2008; Huang 2009; Kelly and Carbonaro 2012; Lleras and Rangel 2009). Thus, critics of tracking ...
Apart from my mother's widowed elder cousin and a nephew from my father's side, there was nobody my family was all that ... colleagues of both my father and mother and a whole host of casual acquaintances who made up our social world.
Having met at Ithaca University as graduate students, the millennial year of 2000 soon approaching, Sydney Steinberg and Corinna Kipnis consider each other their exclusive significant other.
The book features specific examples of sceptical problems and also includes two entirely new essays. It will appeal to pyschologists as well philosophers.
Through anecdote and observation, the author portrays life in 1980s America, discusses how it has changed in recent years, and indicates how such changes have affected the values of America's youth