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This volume constitutes the proceedings of the third biennial
conference of the International Society for Theoretical Psychology,
held in Arnhem, the Netherlands, April 17-21, 1989. Fifty-six
papers were presented during the four days of the conference,
including an invited address by Professor A. D. de Groot, and seven
papers composing two plenary sessions, four on the con tribution of
history to theory, and three on theoretical alternatives for contem
porary psychology. Of these, 46 papers are presented in the
proceedings; all of which suffered editorial changes and, with the
exception of the invited ad dress, were required to meet a 15 page
restriction on length. The editors gratefully acknowledge John
Mills, Leendert Mos, and Hank Starn for their invaluable editorial
assistance. The papers included here are presented without
discussants' commen taries. (Over 125 psychologists participated at
the conference.) While the papers are representative of the scope
of topics covered at the conference, the hours of formal and
informal discussions must, unfortunately, be left to the reader's
imagination. We encourage the reader to attend one of our next
conferences, planned biennially, and alternately, in North America
(1991) and Europe (1993)."
Some phenomena in medicine and psychology remain unexplained by
current theory. Chronic fatigue syndrome, repetitive strain injury
and irritable bowel syndrome, for example, are all diseases or
syndromes that cannot be explained in terms of a physiological
abnormality. In this intriguing book, Michael E. Hyland proposes
that there is a currently unrecognised type of illness which he
calls 'dysregulatory disease'. Hyland shows how such diseases
develop and how the communication and art of medicine, good nursing
care, complementary medicine and psychotherapy can all act to
reduce the dysregulation that leads to dysregulatory disease. The
Origins of Health and Disease is a fascinating book that develops a
novel theory for understanding health and disease, and demonstrates
how this theory is supported by existing data, and how it explains
currently unexplained phenomena. Hyland also shows how his theory
leads to new testable predictions that, in turn, will lead to
further scientific advancement and development.
Some phenomena in medicine and psychology remain unexplained by
current theory. Chronic fatigue syndrome, repetitive strain injury
and irritable bowel syndrome, for example, are all diseases or
syndromes that cannot be explained in terms of a physiological
abnormality. In this intriguing book, Michael E. Hyland proposes
that there is a currently unrecognised type of illness which he
calls 'dysregulatory disease'. Hyland shows how such diseases
develop and how the communication and art of medicine, good nursing
care, complementary medicine and psychotherapy can all act to
reduce the dysregulation that leads to dysregulatory disease. The
Origins of Health and Disease is a fascinating book that develops a
novel theory for understanding health and disease, and demonstrates
how this theory is supported by existing data, and how it explains
currently unexplained phenomena. Hyland also shows how his theory
leads to new testable predictions that, in turn, will lead to
further scientific advancement and development.
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