Man has never faced a more severe ordeal in his history than he faces today, and some do not think that we are aiming at the danger of the atomic bomb and the hydrogen bomb and their accessories, but we mean what is more serious than the weapons of destruction and lethality that have begun to threaten him, which is the ordeal of belief, the ordeal of the soul from the danger of materialistic philosophies that have become dominant, creeping in, and occupying a new position every day.
L’auteure développe dans ce livre une présentation de la Psychanalyse Rêve Éveillé telle qu’elle la pratique depuis plus de vingt ans, en examinant tour à tour les atouts inhérents à cette pratique.
First published in 1948, Modern Child Psychology intends to give a summarised account of the most important work on child psychology back in the 1940s.
Bringing order to the chaos of modern brand marketing, the second edition of Brand Love Is Not Enough combines an intuitive model of how consumers relate to brands, with an up-to-the-moment analysis of how brands are both victims and players in today's raging culture wars.
How the entertainment narrative of upward mobility distorts the harsh economic realities in AmericaIn an age of growing wealth disparities, politicians on both sides of the aisle are sounding the alarm about the fading American Dream.
This book guides policing students through the areas of Criminology and crime prevention required for their course and help them apply this knowledge into their work.
Linked to the Early Career Framework, this book provides an understanding of cognitive load theory and its application to teaching for all those training or new to the job.
This book presents the proceedings of the NeuroIS Retreat 2024, June 9 - 11, Vienna, Austria, reporting on topics at the intersection of information systems (IS) research, neurophysiology and the brain sciences.
An accessible introduction to children, media, and technology that centers questions of access, diversity, equity, and inclusion to provide a timely and much-needed text for communication and media studies students and scholars.
The Star-Crossed Renaissance (1941) examines the attitude of the thinkers of Renaissance England toward astrology, Was Shakespeare, for example, a believer in astrology?