Results 21 to 30 of about 17,707 (239)

‘Mere Amateurs’? Elementary Teachers and the Making of Scientific Authority in the British Child Study Movement

open access: yesHistory, EarlyView.
Abstract This article offers new perspectives on the relationship between elementary teaching, scientific expertise and the professionalization of the human sciences. Previous scholarship has demonstrated the ready existence of ‘amateur’ science societies in the nineteenth century where cross‐class exchanges were common.
Julia Gustavsson
wiley   +1 more source

Silent Cells: The Secret Drugging of Captive America by Anthony Ryan Hatch (review)

open access: yesBulletin of The History of Medicine, 2020
The Farm] had been born at home’” (p. 83). Why were the nurses so intrigued, if home birth was common? Coming Home persuasively puts Gaskin’s “Spiritual Midwifery” in dialogue with Stanislav Grof’s work on LSD and transpersonal psychology (pp.
C. Sufrin
semanticscholar   +1 more source

What is it like to be an infant?

open access: yesBritish Journal of Psychotherapy, EarlyView.
Abstract In the philosophy of mind literature, consciousness is commonly defined not in terms of its physical correlates but rather its subjective character – the ‘something that it is like to be' an organism. In this conceptual article, this formulation is applied to the study of neonate subjectivity, giving rise to the question: what is it like to be
Matthew Goldreich
wiley   +1 more source

Psychoanalysis, Nazism and "Jewish science" [PDF]

open access: yes, 2003
In this paper the author offers a partial examination of the troubled history of psychoanalysis in Germany during the Nazi period. Of particular interest is the impact on psychoanalysis of its 'Jewish origins'--something denigrated by the Nazis but ...
Frosh, Stephen
core   +1 more source

Freud, Orzeszkowa i zimowe epifanie

open access: yesTeksty Drugie, 2016
Review: Melancholia i poznanie: ‘Autobiografie’ Elizy Orzeszkowej [Melancholia and Understanding: Eliza Orzeszkowa’s ‘Autobiographies’], ed.
Małgorzata Czermińska
doaj  

Michel Henry between Krisis and Critique. Philosophy in the age of Barbarism [PDF]

open access: yes, 2016
Michel Henry was, fundamentally, neither a thinker of the Krisis, nor a philosopher of \u201ccritical\u201d thought. In his Barbarism, however, and his two volumes on Marx, Henry criticized forcefully the culture of his time and place.
C. Canullo
core  

Kant's Dialectic of Enlightenment

open access: yesEuropean Journal of Philosophy, EarlyView.
Abstract Kant's moral thought emphasizes both our ability to make adequate, immediate moral judgment, as well as our deep‐seated forms of self‐entrapment. Strikingly, these forms of self‐entrapment are not simply the result of reason being overpowered by forces external to it, but arise out of reason itself, as pathological versions of otherwise ...
Laurenz Ramsauer
wiley   +1 more source

Beyond "the Relationship between the Individual and Society": broadening and deepening relational thinking in group analysis [PDF]

open access: yes, 2013
The question of ‘the relationship between the individual and society’ has troubled group analysis since its inception. This paper offers a reading of Foulkes that highlights the emergent, yet evanescent, psychosocial ontology in his writings, and argues ...
Benjamin J.   +24 more
core   +1 more source

F IS FOR FALCON: THE TRUE STORY OF THE ‘NOVELLE’

open access: yesGerman Life and Letters, EarlyView.
ABSTRACT This article takes a closer look at the Boccaccio story upon which Paul Heyse based his famous ‘Falken‐Theorie’ of the ‘Novelle’. The essay then links Boccaccio to a general account of storytelling as an aid to survival amid the hostility of nature and human circumstances.
Michael Minden
wiley   +1 more source

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