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The Family Emotional System: An Integrative Concept for Theory,
Science, and Practice presents an ongoing dialogue among
scientists, family investigators, and clinicians related to a
natural systems view of the family and human behavior that has been
occurring over several decades. The concept of the family as an
emotional system, as defined in Bowen theory, is presented as the
principal integrative concept underlying this dialogue and an
effort to move toward a science of human behavior. As a natural
system, the family forms the immediate and most important context
for individual development, and may be the most central and
important environment shaping brain development across the lifetime
of the individual. This book explains how the family system can
serve as an integrative framework within which specific factual
discoveries and hypotheses from many areas of science can be
brought together and understood as various manifestations of a
coherent whole. The Family Emotional System provides understanding
of what is entailed in conceptualizing the family as an emotional
system, a sense of the breadth and depth of knowledge the sciences
are contributing to this effort, and examples of how this
theoretical framework contributes to family research and practice.
The richness and excitement occurring in the ongoing dialogue
between scientists and Bowen family systems practitioners and
researchers is captured along with the promise it holds for the
study of human behavior.
The Family Emotional System: An Integrative Concept for Theory,
Science, and Practice presents an ongoing dialogue among
scientists, family investigators, and clinicians related to a
natural systems view of the family and human behavior that has been
occurring over several decades. The concept of the family as an
emotional system, as defined in Bowen theory, is presented as the
principal integrative concept underlying this dialogue and an
effort to move toward a science of human behavior. As a natural
system, the family forms the immediate and most important context
for individual development, and may be the most central and
important environment shaping brain development across the lifetime
of the individual. This book explains how the family system can
serve as an integrative framework within which specific factual
discoveries and hypotheses from many areas of science can be
brought together and understood as various manifestations of a
coherent whole. The Family Emotional System provides understanding
of what is entailed in conceptualizing the family as an emotional
system, a sense of the breadth and depth of knowledge the sciences
are contributing to this effort, and examples of how this
theoretical framework contributes to family research and practice.
The richness and excitement occurring in the ongoing dialogue
between scientists and Bowen family systems practitioners and
researchers is captured along with the promise it holds for the
study of human behavior.
The fierce image of the Third Reich has been diffused during the
past two decades as fresh research on the social history of the
Nazi years has revealed the variety and complexity of the
relationships between the Nazi regime and the German people.
"Nazism" "and German Society, 1933-1945" addresses issues such as
racism and sexism, active participation, passive resistance and the
far from clear-cut distinctions between victims and perpetrators.
David Crew's introduction sets out the methodological and
theoretical issues with great clarity.
Contributors: David Crew, Omer Bartov, Alf Ludtke, Gisela Bock,
Adelheid von Saldern, Klaus-Michael Mallmann and Gerhard Paul, Ian
Kershaw, Ulrich Herbert, Detlev J.K. Peukert, and Christopher R.
Browning
The image of the Third Reich as a monolithic state presiding over the brainwashed, fanatical masses, retains a tenacious grip on the general public's imagination. However, a growing body of research on the social history of the Nazi years has revealed the variety and complexity of the relationships between the Nazi regime and the German people. This volume makes this new research accessible to undergraduate and graduate students alike.
PUBLISHED BY RA PRESS. "The writing of David Crews in Wander-Thrush
is as evocative as a Hudson River School painting that uses words
instead of oil and canvas. These essays are a history lesson, a
naturalist's field journal and an elegiac personal tribute to the
Adirondack Park, one of the world's great natural treasures.
Wander-Thrush is poetry in narrative form, which will help even
people who have never been to the Adirondacks imagine this wild,
hardscrabble and unforgettable terrain of mountains, bogs and
birdsong." -Darryl McGrath, author of Flight Paths: A Field Journal
of Hope, Heartbreak, and Miracles with New York's Bird People
Published by RA Press. "Study and mystery guide the lover in these
poems, enriching both the journalism and the literature of the
Adirondacks, one of the best kept, equally care-worn, secrets of
the Eastern half of the nation's natural history. Crews' sharp
tempos match the walking-rhythms and dissonances of his climbs,
spliced against lyric microseconds of surprise, and faith in the
visual. His is a country of scars, of winds strong enough to erase
a [rock]face and the memory of it." - Judith Vollmer author of THE
WATER BOOKS
This is the first volume to integrate information on ways in which
the nervous and endocrine systems interact to mediate crucial
aspects of reptile behavior. Although the authors pay particular
attention to reproductive behavior, from initial recognition and
evaluation of potential partners to decisions about reproduction,
they also deal with other survival behaviors.
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