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John Gach Books, Inc. 10514 Marriottsville Road (Rear Building) PO Box 267 Randallstown, Maryland 21133 |
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Contains Mitscherlich's "Fathers and Fatherhood in our Time," Chertok's "Psychosomatic Aspects of Childbirth," Boss' "Phenomenological Approach to Schizophrenia" & 19 other papers.
Contains Wyrsch's "Psychopathologie I: Bedeutung und Aufgabe. Ich und Person.Bewußtsein, Antrieb und Gefühl"; Paul Matussek's "Psychopathologie II: Wahrnehmung, Halluzination und Wahn"; López-Ibor's "Psychosomatische Forschung"; Johannes C. Brengelmann's "Psychologische Methodik und Psychiatrie"; Pierre Pichot's "Les tests psychologiques en psychiatrie"; Eysenck's "Funktion und Anwendung der Statistik in der Psychiatrie"; Gustav Bally's "Grundfragen der Psychoanalyse und verwandter Richtungen"; Fritz Meerwein's "Die Technik der psychoanalytischen Behandlung und der Gruppenpsychotherapie"; Wolfgang Kretschmer's "Indikation und Methodik der Psychotherapie (ausgenommen Psychoanalyse)"; Max Müller's "Grundlagen und Methodik der somatischen Behandlungsverfahren in der Psychiatrie. Einleitung" and "Insulinbehandlung"; Hugo Solms's "Die Krampfbehandlung"; Frédéric Cornu's "Psychopharmakotherapie"; Hans Heimann's "Psychochirurgie"; Henry Ey's "Esquisse d'une conception organo-dynamique de la structure, de la nosographie et de l'étiopathogénie des maladies mentales"; Jürg Zutt's "Über verstehende Anthropologie. Versuch einer anthropologischen Grundlegung der psychaitrischen Erfahrung"; Roland Kuhn's "Daseinsanalyse und Psychiatrie"; Maurice Natanson's "Philosophische Grundfragen der Psychiatrie I: Philosophie und Psychiatrie"; Erwin Straus's "Philosophische Grundfragen der Psychiatrie II: Psychiatrie und Philosophie."
Boss's first book other than his 1929 doctoral dissertation.
Norman Catalog 336 (this copy). Essentially volume 2 of Psychologie vom empirischen Stankpunkt."[I]n the present work … Brentano described the intuitive, phenomenoligcal process by which acts of consciousness are classified. Brentano's teachings were responsible for the emergence of both Gestalt psychology and the phenomenology of Edmund Husserl" [Norman Catalog].
Contains two letters to Husserl.
No copy located in OCLC. Contains H. Brunschweiler's "Observations cliniques sur les troubles de la sensibilité dans 12 cas de blessures pariétales de guerre"; Veraguth's "Zur Experimentalpsychologie der Sensibilitätsstörungen Hirnverletzter," "Zur Motilitätsuntersuchung nach Verletzung peripherer Nerven," and "Ueber die elektrische Behandlung von Lähmungen nach peripherer Nervenverletzung"; H. Reese's ""Ueber Geschoßseitendruckwirkungen auf das Rückenmark"; and Ludwig Binswanger's "Ueber Kommotionspsychosen" (an early pre-phenomenological paper by the founder of phenomenological psychiatry).
Translated from the author's unpublished manuscript and first published in English.
OCLC records only two copies in Mexican libraries. A comparative study of infancy and childhood both in animals and man by the great Dutch phenomenological psychologist. Illustrated with photographic plates of both young humans and animals.
Largely devoted to Dostoevsky.
12 selections, all of great importance, including the first appearance in English of Meinong's "The Theory of Objects" and Husserl's "Phenomenology and Anthropology" as well as Brentano's "The Distinction Between Mental and Physical Phenomena," "Presentation and Judgment Form 'Two Distinct Fundamental Classes'," and "Genuine and Fictitious Objects"; plus Husserl's "Phenomenology"; Prichard's "Appearances and Reality"; E. B. Holt et al.'s "Introduction to the New Realism"; Samuel Alexander's "The Basis of Realism"; Bertrand Russell's "The Ultimate Constitutents of Matter"; Lovejoy's "A Temporalistic Realism"; and G. E. Moore's "A Defence of Common Sense."
Contains the first appearance in Ehglish of Heidegger's "Hebel - Friend of the House" as well as König's "Some Observations on the Formal Character of the Difference between Thing and Property"; Prauss's "Frege's Contribution to the Theory of Knowledge"; Baumgartner's "Towards the Foundation of a Transcendental Theory of History"; Marquard's "Happiness in Unhappiness: On the Theory of Indirect Happiness between Theodicy and Philosophy of History" plus 5 other papers and 5 reviews and review articles including Kockelmans's review of Theunissen's Sein und Schein and Gadamer's of Mittelstrass's Neuzeit und Aufklärung.
Contains Newton P. Stallknecht's "Philosophy and Civilization"; Eugene P. Wigner's "Epistemology of Quantum Mechanics—Its Apprisal and Demands"; Michael Polanyi's "The Creative Imagination"; Donald L. Weismann's "The Collage as Model"; C. F. A. Pantin's "Organism and Environment"; Helmuth Plessner's "'A Newton of a Blade of Grass'?"; M. R. A. Chance's "Man in Biology"; Erwin W. Strauss' "Embodiment and Excarnation"; Sigmund Koch's "Value Properties: Their Significance for Psychology, Axiology, and Science."
The central part of the text is that published by Hegel in the third edition of the Phänomenologie des Geistes (Encyclopaedia of the Philosophical Sciences), augmented by notes taken of Hegel's 1925 lectures by Karl Gustav von Griesheim (1798-1854) and H. von Kehler (both German army officers). Introduction in English; the main text has both German and English on facing pages.
Presents 22 important European papers by 18 authors, all but three untranslated into English. Contains Kraepelin's "Comparative Psychiatry" (1904, a pioneer work in transcultural psychiatry) and "Patterns of Mental Disorder" (1920); Kurt Schneider's "Exogenous Psychoses" (1909) and "How Far should all Psychogenic Illness be regarded as Hysterical? (1911); Ganser's "A Peculiar Hysterical State (1898, the original description of Ganser's Syndrome); Jaspers' "Causal and 'Meaningful' Connexions between Life History and Psychosis" (1913); Strömgren's "Psychogenic Psychoses" (1968); Gaupp's "The Scientific Significance of the Case of Ernst Wagner" (1914) and "The Illness and Death of the Paranoid Mass Murderer, Schoolmaster Wagner: A Case History" (1938); Kretschmer's "The Senstitive Delusion of Reference"; (1927); Birnbaum's "The Making of a Psychosis" (1923); Klaus Conrad's "Gestalt Analysis in Psychiatry" (1952); Sjöbring's "Mental Constitution and Mental Illness" (1919); Kleist's "Cycloid, Paranoid, and Epileptoid Psychoses and the Problem of Degenerative Psychoses" (1928); Rolf Gjessing's "Disturbances of Somatic Functions in Catatonia with Periodic Course and Their Compensation" (1938); Jules Cotard's "Nihilistic Delusions" (1882); Baruk's "Delusions of Passion" (1959); Dupré's "Coenestopathic States" (1913); Henri Ey et al's "Acute Delusional Psychoses (Bouffées délirantes)" (1960); Paul Nayrac's "Mental Automatism" (1927). Kalinowsky's foreword appears only in the American edition.
Husserl's last completed and authorized German book in which he attempts to ground the laws of logic in transcendental phenomenology.
Five lectures delivered in Göttingen in 1907, April 26th to May 2nd, which introduced the main themes of Husserl's later phenomenology, in effect a bridge from the Logische Untersuchungen to the Ideen.
Also contains Alexander Pfänder's "Zur Psychologie der Gesinnungen."
The foundation text for modern phenomenology.
One of the classics of 20th century psychiatry. Elaborating on ideas first broached in his 1910 paper on paranoia, Jaspers here introduced a number of diagnostic criteria that changed how psychiatrists view patients. Jaspers introduced the biographical method, which stresses assembling detailed biographical information about patients as well as noting how patients themselves feel about their symptoms. At least as important was his emphasis on diagnosing psychotic symptoms by their form rather than their content. Jaspers applied his method to both hallucinations and delusions, dividing the latter into primary, which appear without apparent cause and are incomprehensible in terms of normal mental functioning, and secondary, which are shaped by the person's life events and current mental state. Jaspers regarded primary delusions as meaningless and not understandable, a view later hotly contested.
Jaspers' inaugural lecture at the University of Basel, first published in Die Wandlung Vol. 3 No. 8, pp. 721-733. Translated into English by Ralph Manheim as Philosophy and Science in Partisan Review 16:9.
Translations also by Kockelmans.
A critique from the standpoint of anti-intuitionist rationalism.
11 papers including Ricoueur's "Phänomenologie des Wollens und the Ordinary Language Approach"; Plessner's "Trieb und Leidenschaft"; Métraux on Husserl & Geiger; G. Küng on Ingarden.
Translation of a condensed version of Phenomenologie de Husserl (1955), originally published in 1958 by Fordham University Press.
An influential book that introduced European phenomenological psychiatry to an American audience.
- Contains Rollo May's "The Origins and Significance of the Existential Movement in Psychology" and "Contributions of Existential Psychotherapy";
- Ellenberger's "A Clinical Introduction to Psychiatric Phenomenology and Existential Analysis";
- Minkowski's "Findings in a Case of Schizophrenic Depression";
- Erwin Straus's "Aesthesiology and Hallucinations";
- von Gebsattel's "The World of the Compulsive";
- Binswanger's "The Existential Analysis School of Thought", "Insanity as Life-Historical Phenomenon", and "The Case of Ellen West";
- and Roland Kuhn's "The Attempted Murder of a Prostitute."
Much influenced by Külpe, Messer attempted to marry act and content, the two dominant trends in psychology into a single explanatory system. The psychology of act or intention derived from Brentano, while the psychology of content or experimental psychology derived from Wundt. See Boring 1950 pp.448-51.
An important Bergsonian interpretation of schizophrenia. The Polish-born Minkowski went on to co-found with Henri Ey "L'Evolution psychiatrique" and to author "Le Temps Vecu" - one of the few psychiatric works of philosophical importance.
Not in OCLC or the Deutsche Bibliothek. Essentially an application of Franz Brentano's ideas to pedagogy. Mohr, about whom we have been able to find out nothing, also discusses Stumpf, Lotze (extensively), and Wundt. We have tentatively assumed that the author is the German pedagogue and poet whose dates we give. No matter which Mohr wrote this, it is a rare early discussion of Brentano's relevance to education.
Contributions by Schutz, Gurwitsch, Straus, Spiegelberg, etc.
A distinguished historian and university president's argument for medical humanism, giving a quite readable account of the history of science and scientific method as it eventually applied to medicine. Appendix one reprints Schwartz & Wiggins' "Science, Humanism, and the Nature of Medical Practice: A Phenomenological View" with George Engels' commentary on their paper.
Sections on Fechner, Wundt & Mueller.
Contains an excellent annotated bibliography.
Papers in French, English, German. Contains his son, J. C. M. Brentano's, account of what happened to his father's manuscripts.
With an 8 page preface by Heidegger, printed in both German and Engish.
Contains Royce "The Present Situation in Theoretical Psychology"; Rozeboom "The Art of Metaschience, or, What Should a Psychological Theory Be?"; Galanger "On the Nature of Laws in Psychology"; Bartley "Psychology as a Biological Science"; von Bertalanffy "General System Theory and Psychology"; Lawrence K. Frank "Organized Complexities"; Robert Macleod "Psychological Phenomenology: A Propaedeutic to a Scientific Psychology"; Tennessen "The Serio-Comic Encounter of Clinical Psychology and Existential Philosophy".
Contains: (Band I) "Zur Rehabilitierung der Tugend"; "Das Ressentiment im Aufbau der Moralen"; Zum Phänomen des Tragischen"; "Zur Idee des Menschen"; (Band II): "Die Idole der Selbsterkenntnis"; Versuche einer Philosophie des Lebens"; "Die Psychologie der sogennanten Rentenhysterie und der rechte Kampf gegen das Übel"; "Zum Sinn der Frauenbewegung"; "Der Bourgeois"; "Der Bourgeois und die religiösen Mächte"; "Die Zukunft des Kapitalismus."
An unaltered reprint of the first edition with an added 20 page new foreword.
Grinstein #29484.
Friend of Husserl and critic of Tönnies and Weber, Schmalenbach was a neglected pioneer phenomenological sociologist.
With a 9-page introduction by the editors. Contains three sections: "Die archaisch-primitive Welt in der Schizophrenie"; "Phänomenologische und existential-analytische Untersuchungen" (7 papers); and "Schriften zur Psychotherapie Schizophrener" (5 papers).
Three essays first published in German in 1963 as individual chapters in Psychiatrie der Gegenwart.
Based on a close study of the patients admitted to the University of Heidelberg Psychiatric Clinic for melancholia. As Eng notes in his introduction, the findings apply only to cases of monopolar endogenous psychotic depression.
Thévenaz was a Swiss philosopher, phenomenologist, and historian of philosophy.
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