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- Written specifically with sufferers and carers in mind, to help
them understand and apply the basic concepts of cognitive therapy
for psychosis. - Illustrates what it is like to have common
psychosis and how people's lives can be restored using therapy. -
Increases understanding of how the psychosis started, and the
factors that worsen symptoms or increase the likelihood of relapse.
- Helps the sufferer learn how to control symptoms and delay or
prevent relapse. - Includes features and exercises to help
sufferers explore their own beliefs and feelings to reflect on the
way they cope. - Helps carers know what to say and what to do. -
Provides a resource for mental health professionals working with
patients, to introduce the approach, support ongoing therapy and
make the most efficient use of appointment time.
Robert Best and his younger brother Frank were born into privileged
middle-class Birmingham in the 1890s, where their father owned one
of the UK's most successful lighting factories, supplying
fashionable fittings to offices, hotels, restaurants and opera
houses all over the word. Sent to the most enlightened new school
of its day - Bedales - the boys not early enjoyed the freedom to
explore their own interests but also absorbed the inspirational
moral thinking of the school's founder and headmaster, J.H. Badley.
"From Bedales to the Boche" charts their history at the school
during its early years, and shows what Badley's idea of a
progressive education consisted of. It also shows how the boys
honed their ambitions to become music-hall entertainers, writing
and performing their own material at home and at school, and
eventually showing it to London impresarios. Their plans for the
stage were interrupted, however, by their father's insistence that
they study design at another progressive institution, the art
school in Duesseldorf headed until 1907 by Peter Behrens. Best's
account of his year there, and of Frank's the following year,
provides an amusing interlude ahead of the First World War. When
war broke out, the brothers enlisted at once into the Army Service
Corps (ASC), which took them to the battlefields of northern France
and to Dublin in 1916 to help quell the Easter Rising. Their
passion, however, going back to their experiments with flight while
at Bedales, was for the newly formed Royal Flying Corps, which they
entered in late 1916, joining the Corps' new school and embarking
on a training programme that Best describes in fascinating detail.
After six months of training, the brothers were sent to France
where the life expectancy of a pilot was about 4 months. Frank
lasted five weeks; his plane was shot down, his body never found.
In respect of his death, "From Bedales to the Boche" is rich in
pathos. Best ends by showing how he and his parents responded to
Frank's loss, and how he tried to rediscover and make sense of
Germany after the war was over.
Alcoholism, as opposed to the safe consumption of alcohol, remains
a major public health issue. In this accessible book, Robert Dudley
presents an intriguing evolutionary interpretation to explain the
persistence of alcohol-related problems. Providing a deep-time,
interdisciplinary perspective on today's patterns of alcohol
consumption and abuse, Dudley traces the link between the
fruit-eating behavior of arboreal primates and the evolution of the
sensory skills required to identify ripe and fermented fruits that
contain sugar and low levels of alcohol. In addition to introducing
this new theory of the relationship of humans to alcohol, the book
discusses the supporting research, implications of the hypothesis,
and the medical and social impacts of alcoholism. The Drunken
Monkey is designed for interested readers, scholars, and students
in comparative and evolutionary biology, biological anthropology,
medicine, and public health.
From the rain forests of Borneo to the tenements of Manhattan,
winged insects are a conspicuous and abundant feature of life on
earth. Here, Robert Dudley presents the first comprehensive
explanation of how insects fly. The author relates the biomechanics
of flight to insect ecology and evolution in a major new work of
synthesis.
The book begins with an overview of insect flight biomechanics.
Dudley explains insect morphology, wing motions, aerodynamics,
flight energetics, and flight metabolism within a modern
phylogenetic setting. Drawing on biomechanical principles, he
describes and evaluates flight behavior and the limits to flight
performance. The author then takes the next step by developing
evolutionary explanations of insect flight. He analyzes the origins
of flight in insects, the roles of natural and sexual selection in
determining how insects fly, and the relationship between flight
and insect size, pollination, predation, dispersal, and migration.
Dudley ranges widely--from basic aerodynamics to muscle physiology
and swarming behavior--but his focus is the explanation of
functional design from evolutionary and ecological
perspectives.
The importance of flight in the lives of insects has long been
recognized but never systematically evaluated. This book addresses
that shortcoming. Robert Dudley provides an introduction to insect
flight that will be welcomed by students and researchers in
biomechanics, entomology, evolution, ecology, and behavior.
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Memoirs (Hardcover)
Robert Dudley of Leicester; Drake
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R889
Discovery Miles 8 890
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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