|
Showing 1 - 6 of
6 matches in All Departments
'The third in a series explicating the criminal mind, this volume
summarizes observations, interpretations, and conclusions derived
from a study of 121 criminal men who used drugs and/or alcohol to
excess. Originally set in writing by Yochelson before his death in
1976, the materials were edited and updated by Samenow for
publication. Systematic, probing and repeated interviews were used
as the vehicle for gathering information on common mental themes
among men apprehended and sentenced for criminal acts.... Yochelson
and Samenow attribute crime to a series of early irresponsible
choices that predate drug use among drug-using criminals.
Personality and personal choice variables are conceptualized as
critical in initialing and maintaining use. In what is called an
indiscriminate search for excitement, drug-using criminals are
characterized as expanding their criminal repertoire while excusing
their actions by rationalizations sometimes invented by
sociologists, psychologists, and psychiatrists. Although these
ideas are of considerable interest, the real value of the text lies
in its intriguing presentation of drug-user thinking. Specifically,
three chapters are well worth reading. The description of mental
activities associated with such constructs as 'the high,' 'the
nod,' and 'the rush' are probably on target for many drug users,
whether criminal or not. The chapter explaining drugs as
facilitators offers several notions worthy of systematic inquiry,
as does the one devoted to principles for encouragement of behavior
change. Of perhaps greatest benefit to most readers are caveats
regarding management of drug users in what may be seen as a
cognitive-behavioral framework. Yochelson and Samenow contend that
drug-using criminal men represent the architects of their criminal
life-styles and that it is they themselves who can correct
irresponsible thoughts and behaviors through application of logic
over emotion.' DContemporary Psychology A Jason Aroson Book
The Criminal Personality presents a detailed description of
criminal thinking and action patterns and convincingly argues that
these patterns cannot be explained by sociologic or psychologic
explanations alone. A Jason Aronson Book
This is the second of a three volume landmark study of the criminal
mind. This book describes an intensive therapeutic approach
designed to completely change the criminals way of thinking. The
authors reject traditional treatment approaches as reinforcing of
the criminals sense of being a victim of society. Rather Yochelson
and Samenow stress that the criminal must make a choice to give up
criminal thinking and learn morality. A Jason Aronson Book
This is the second of a three volume landmark study of the criminal
mind. This book describes an intensive therapeutic approach
designed to completely change the criminals way of thinking. The
authors reject traditional treatment approaches as reinforcing of
the criminals sense of being a victim of society. Rather Yochelson
and Samenow stress that the criminal must make a choice to give up
criminal thinking and learn morality. A Jason Aronson Book
"The third in a series explicating the criminal mind, this volume
summarizes observations, interpretations, and conclusions derived
from a study of 121 criminal men who used drugs and/or alcohol to
excess. Originally set in writing by Yochelson before his death in
1976, the materials were edited and updated by Samenow for
publication. Systematic, probing and repeated interviews were used
as the vehicle for gathering information on common mental themes
among men apprehended and sentenced for criminal acts.... Yochelson
and Samenow attribute crime to a series of early irresponsible
choices that predate drug use among drug-using criminals.
Personality and personal choice variables are conceptualized as
critical in initialing and maintaining use. In what is called an
indiscriminate search for excitement, drug-using criminals are
characterized as expanding their criminal repertoire while excusing
their actions by rationalizations sometimes invented by
sociologists, psychologists, and psychiatrists. Although these
ideas are of considerable interest, the real value of the text lies
in its intriguing presentation of drug-user thinking. Specifically,
three chapters are well worth reading. The description of mental
activities associated with such constructs as 'the high, ' 'the
nod, ' and 'the rush' are probably on target for many drug users,
whether criminal or not. The chapter explaining drugs as
facilitators offers several notions worthy of systematic inquiry,
as does the one devoted to principles for encouragement of behavior
change. Of perhaps greatest benefit to most readers are caveats
regarding management of drug users in what may be seen as a
cognitive-behavioral framework. Yochelson and Samenow contend that
drug-using criminal men represent the architects of their criminal
life-styles and that it is they themselves who can correct
irresponsible thoughts and behaviors through application of logic
over emotion." Contemporary Psychology A Jason Aroson Book"
Long-held myths defining the sources of and cures for crime are
shattered in this ground-breaking book--and a chilling profile of
today's criminal emerges.
|
You may like...
Dune: Part 2
Timothee Chalamet, Zendaya, …
DVD
R215
Discovery Miles 2 150
Morgan
Kate Mara, Jennifer Jason Leigh, …
Blu-ray disc
(1)
R67
Discovery Miles 670
|