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What is self-government? How has it been related to mental health?
In recent years Foucauldian analyses of the history of psychiatry
have dominated the answers to these questions. Through an
examination of the twentieth-century mental hygiene movement in
Britain that uses previously unavailable archives and little-used
primary literature, this book provides a counter-argument.
Ironically taking as its template Michel Foucault's early
interpretation of moral treatment and its status as a defining
moment in the trajectory of modern psychiatry, this book places the
mental hygiene movement within the broad sweep of modern British
psychiatric history. It unfolds the combined psychological and
political understandings of self-government that have informed
important elements of psychiatry and become associated in
particular with the promotion of mental health. From moral
treatment, to theories informing nineteenth-century social
casework, to the emergence and development of the mental hygiene
movement, to its replacement by a consumer oriented and rights
based movement, this book traces how conceptualisations of
self-government and mental health have been transmitted and
gradually transformed.
Through an examination that uses previously unavailable archives
and little-used primary literature, this book places the
twentieth-century mental hygiene movement within the broad sweep of
modern British psychiatry, offering its own reinterpretation of
important elements of this history.
This scarce antiquarian book is a selection from Kessinger
Publishing's Legacy Reprint Series. Due to its age, it may contain
imperfections such as marks, notations, marginalia and flawed
pages. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we
have made it available as part of our commitment to protecting,
preserving, and promoting the world's literature. Kessinger
Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of rare and
hard-to-find books with something of interest for everyone!
This book is an introduction to the Schwinger action principle in
quantum mechanics and quantum field theory, with applications to a
variety of different models including Bose-Einstein condensation,
the Casimir effect and trapped Fermi gases. The book begins with a
brief review of the action principle in classical mechanics and
classical field theory. It then moves on to quantum field theory,
focusing on the effective action method. This is introduced as
simply as possible by using the zero-point energy of the simple
harmonic oscillator as the starting point. The book concludes with
a more complete definition of the effective action, and
demonstrates how the provisional definition used earlier is the
first term in the systematic loop expansion. The renormalization of
interacting scalar field theory is presented to two-loop order.
This book will interest graduate students and researchers in
theoretical physics who are familiar with quantum mechanics.
This book is an introduction to the Schwinger action principle in
quantum mechanics and quantum field theory, with applications to a
variety of different models including Bose-Einstein condensation,
the Casimir effect, and trapped Fermi gases. The book begins with a
brief review of the action principle in classical mechanics and
classical field theory. It then moves on to quantum field theory,
focussing on the effective action method. This is introduced as
simply as possible by using the zero-point energy of the simple
harmonic oscillator as the starting point. The book concludes with
a more complete definition of the effective action, and
demonstrates how the provisional definition used earlier is the
first term in the systematic loop expansion. The renormalization of
interacting scalar field theory is presented to two-loop order.
This book will interest graduate students and researchers in
theoretical physics who are familiar with quantum mechanics.
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