Results 111 to 120 of about 9,627 (156)
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Sanity and madness

International Journal of Psychoanalysis, 2006
The author sets out a schema with some underlying principles aimed at illuminating the nature of madness, how it sabotages our freedom and the deepest reasons why patients want to be sane. He claims that this is not possible without revising Freud's pleasure principle and determinism and replacing it with desire for freedom as the dominant motivating ...
Neville Symington
exaly   +3 more sources

Space and sanity

Archives of Psychiatric Nursing, 1994
The political and ideological basis for the organization of space within psychiatric institutions is rarely made explicit, yet space shapes the behavior of both inmates and staff. This article describes the traditional 19th century English asylum and its counterpart in Jacksonian America, as madness-maintaining institutions designed to incarcerate ...
S, Goren, R, Orion
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Software And Sanity

Information Systems Management, 1996
Can a consultant overcome the forces of human nature and get executives, programmers, and users to work together to produce software that makes everyone happy?
exaly   +2 more sources

Carcinogenesis and sanity

Food and Cosmetics Toxicology, 1968
Abstract The evaluation of food from the viewpoint of possible carcinogenic hazard should include a search for ways of reducing the existing human cancer burden. The possibility that carcinogens may be present in natural foods, or find their way into foods as a result of traditional methods of processing, can no longer be ignored.
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Visions of Sanity

2014
How can we begin to understand the sanity/madness polarity and its closely related twin, mental health/mental illness? It is a subject that has confounded the mental health disciplines, although they haven’t advertised the fact. (It is ironic that the issue is foreshadowed by the subject area’s very name.) A simple approach, and one that therefore is ...
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Discovering the Mediterranean Sanity:

This chapter explores how Ezra Pound and Ernest Hemingway discovered in both Spain and Italy a world in which nature and culture coalesce. Reflecting on a range of works by both writers after a lifetime of reading them, Massimo Bacigalupo contends that, with similar enthusiasm, they both celebrate the Mediterranean world in their writings as an object ...
openaire   +1 more source

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