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Forensic psychiatry --- Insanity --- Jurisprudence --- 343.9 --- -Insanity --- -Criminal insanity --- Insanity (Jurisprudence) --- Lunacy (Law) --- Mental illness --- Mentally ill --- Capacity and disability --- Insanity defense --- Medical jurisprudence --- Psychiatry --- Mentally ill offenders --- Criminologie --(algemeen) --- Law and legislation --- Legal status, laws, etc. --- -Criminologie --(algemeen) --- 343.9 Criminologie --(algemeen) --- -Forensic psychiatry --- Criminal insanity --- Insanity (Law) --- Forensic psychiatry - United States --- Insanity - Jurisprudence
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Criminal psychology. --- Psychologie criminelle --- 343.9 --- Criminal psychology --- Psychology, Pathological --- Abnormal psychology --- Diseases, Mental --- Mental diseases --- Mental disorders --- Pathological psychology --- Psychology, Abnormal --- Psychopathology --- Neurology --- Brain --- Mental health --- Psychiatry --- Psychoanalysis --- Criminal psychiatry --- Criminals --- Psychology, Criminal --- Criminal anthropology --- Psychology --- 343.9 Criminologie --(algemeen) --- Criminologie --(algemeen) --- Diseases
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"To understand the ramifications of present-day psychiatry, a knowledge of its history is pertinent; to understand the more chaotic field of mental healing, it is essential to know its history. This work is an effort to supply this requirement for those who have come upon psychotherapy in the full flower of its modem growth. The present inquiry into the genetic history of psychotherapy started eighteen years ago with a publisher's request that a brief book be written on the "differences between Freud, Jung and Adler." Clear cut as the assignment appeared to be, it soon became evident that analysis of the broad historical-social base of mental healing, transcending study of these schools of analytic psychotherapy, was required to complete the task. An earlier effort in this direction resulted in publication of The Mind of Man, which appeared in 1937. The present volume is an extension--a rethinking and a rewriting of that work"--Foreword. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2014 APA, all rights reserved).
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"The ultimate nature of psychotherapy, its inner structure and the details of its functioning, is one of psychiatry's most interesting problems. Although much has been written on theories of the action of psychotherapy, agreement has not been universal on the exact nature of this complicated transaction. The analysis of the meaning of psychotherapy presented in this volume differs from the usual clinical one in that it proceeds on the basis of a logical analysis. The writer is aware of his temerity in approaching the emotional relation of psychotherapy in a way that is primarily ratiocinative. This approach was stimulated in the writer by an acquaintance with the polyglot of therapeutic methods which forms the history of psychotherapy and by acquaintance with therapists of many backgrounds, attitudes and types of training and methods of operation. As a Lumper, the present writer will try in this book to distill a "universal" out of the myriad worlds of psychotherapeutic method. For this, he has only himself to blame, and for the thesis presented, he naturally assumes sole responsibility. Several of the chapters were read in the form of papers at psychiatric meetings, notably that of the American Psychiatric Association, Chicago, 1957; the Santa Clara-Monterey Psychiatric Society, San Jose, California, 1957; and the joint meeting of the Northern and Central California Psychiatric Societies, Yosemite, California, 1960"--
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Murder. --- Criminal psychology. --- Psychiatry. --- Meurtre --- Psychologie criminelle --- Psychiatrie
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