|
Showing 1 - 8 of
8 matches in All Departments
China and India already rank among the world's largest economies,
and each is moving rapidly towards the centre stage of the global
economy. In this process different priorities have been placed on
economic reforms in the past two decades--China taking a more
outward strategy and India, until recently, a more inward one. Can
they continue to rank among the fastest expanding economies? This
volumes addresses the issue, highlighting what has worked and what
more needs to be done to ensure sustained rapid economic growth and
poverty reduction. Addressing the two countries' recent experiences
with growth and reform, this book provides important insight for
other developing economies.
China and India already rank among the world's largest economies,
and each is moving rapidly towards the centre stage of the global
economy. In this process different priorities have been placed on
economic reforms in the past two decades - China taking a more
outward strategy and India, until recently, a more inward one. Can
they continue to rank among the fastest expanding economies? This
volume addresses the issue, highlighting what has worked and what
more needs to be done to ensure sustained rapid economic growth and
poverty reduction. Addressing the two countries' recent experiences
with growth and reform, this book provides important insight for
other developing economies.
Primary intimacy is the innate capacity to fall in love and stay in
love. Infants seek it with their parents. Lovers seek it. Parents
feel it for their children. During infancy, it can be defined as
positive "primary intersubjectivity" (Trevarthen, 1979), during
which infant and parent engage in mutual mindreading and establish
a blissful mutual understanding of one another. Legerstee (2005)
distinguished between optimal and dysfunctional forms of primary
intersubjectivity. Optimal primary intersubjectivity is primary
intimacy and true bliss. Dysfunctional intersubjectivity develops
into insecure attachment (Ainsworth et al, 1978) and the inability
to establish and maintain primary intimacy in adult relationships.
In adults, primary intimacy is called "limerence" (Tennov, 1979)
and is mistakenly viewed by some as an "addiction" (Alcoholics
Anonymous) or a sexual instinct (Freud). Properly understood,
primary intimacy is the foundation of real love and friendship and
will eventually provide the basis of a new social order.
This book is about the insights you need to become a more loving
person. Two types of insight are needed. Psychological insights
come from the careful explication of cognitive processes such as
intersubjectivity. Personal insights are uncovered through a
process of focusing redefined in cognitive terms. While many
insights need to be acquired through hard work, many are mapped out
in this book. I have created a blog (interactive website or weblog)
to learn about your insights, to answer questions, to reply to
criticisms, and to report new insights. The website address is
www.MyInsights.ca and my email address is [email protected]. I
want to hear about your insights. Please consider this website to
be a means of sharing your insights with everyone. When you use
this blog, you are, in effect, saying, "These are my insights,"
hence the name of the blog. Let there be no doubt that your
insights are important to everyone, not only because of their
intellectual content, but because they will inspire others to seek
their own needed insights and they provide scientific evidence
about the kinds of insights that we needed and about how they are
discovered.
|
|