The neurosis of man : an introduction to a science of human behaviour
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The neurosis of man : an introduction to a science of human behaviour
(International library of psychology, 95 . General psychology ; 1)
Routledge, 1999
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Note
First published in 1949 by Routledge and kegan Paul -- t.p. verso
Description and Table of Contents
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ISBN 9780415210133
Description
Written in 1949, this study is an effort to apply the methods of science to a study of the basic causes of human conflict. Using a research from over thirty years and addressed to the layman as well as the scientist it reports findings and formulations that emerged from investigations into man's inter-rational behaviour. Describing the inception and development of objective methods for evaluating and controlling human conflict. This study is based on the history of the author's and Clarence Shield's association with the The Lifwynn Foundation and work on the history of phylobiology. It discusses the investigations around: what man is overtly is not what man is basically; that the externals of man are not man and exploring human relations as psychosocial and not biological. Looking at the issue basic to human motivation and behaviour, the problem of self, the investigation comes to the conclusion that phylobiology is the application of scientific method to the field of human relations and this report presents an account of the enquiry into disorders of human behaviour.
Table of Contents
Part I International Man or The Symptomathology of Human Behaviour- a phyloanalysis, Part II Organismic Man or The Biolog of Human Behavoiur- a phylosynthesis
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: set ISBN 9780415211291
Description
This set provides an eclectic mix of areas within psychology, with many volumes covering a broad range of subjects in themselves. Areas covered include creative imagination, art and the unconscious, dreams, the mind in sleep, the nature of laughter, common sense and consciousness, nervous disorders, the nature of love and hate, as well as investigations into areas now considered more obscure, such as telepathy and clairvoyance. Titles such as The ABC of Psychology (1929), The Psychologist at Work (1937) and Readings in General Psychology (1959) provide an excellent overview of psychology as it has developed over the years. This set also includes classic works such as Man for Himself by Erich Fromm and Emotion by James Hillman.
by "Nielsen BookData"