This book--first published in 1958, and designed for courses on
abnormal psychology and psychiatry--is intended to supplement the
usual textbook material in abnormal psychology. Papers have been
selected to introduce the student to the active and complex
enterprise of investigation and hypothesis in this wide field.
Conflicting evidence and allegiances, riddles and ingenuity, are
displayed in order to stimulate an appreciation of the task of
discovery in behavioral science.
Five general areas are represented in the selections: (i) the
problem of the effects of early experience on psychological
development; (2) psychosomatic disorders and neurosis; (3)
schizophrenic psychosis; (4) somatic factors in psychopathology;
and (5) the social context and its effects on the phenomena of
behavior. Against a background of systematic study, the graduate or
undergraduate student will find in the forty-six papers included
here an instructive sampling of the periodical literature.
Says Robert W. White in his introduction to the book: "There is
no longer an air that the problem of schizophrenia, or of neurosis,
or of psychosomatic disorder is going to be solved by a stroke of
insight and a simple theory. Where once it was hoped to unlock the
secret of a disorder, we now know that we must creep up slowly upon
its many secrets and that we must use to the utmost the help
provided by scientific method. In this new climate the present book
is an indispensable teaching aid."
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