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Search results for: psycholog* in all categories
701 results found.
71 pages of results. 631. Sothic Dating: A "Surrealjoinder" (Forum) [Journals] [Kronos]
... level, the way two dimensionality is transcended by a cube or a sphere. Events not bound by our normal notion of time and space would include quantum events - which are not points on the world line'. "However, this type of response does not adequately meet Mr. Mongold's objections. In his interview in the February 1979 Psychology Today, Karl Pribram elaborated on the relationship between a hologram and reality more meaningfully. ". .. . That is, the physical universe and our brains have in common an order of reality that is similar in organization to holograms.... Don't misunderstand. The world of appearances is certainly a real world. But it ...
632. Worlds in Collision in Macmillan's Catalogues [Journals] [Kronos]
... 21 The Morehead Planetarium Univ. of North Carolina Prof. D. B. McLaughlin, 5/20 The Observatory University of Michigan Prof. Harlow Shapley, 1/18 Harvard College Observatory Mr. K. Aa. Strand, 2/10 Dearborn Observatory Northwestern University Dr. William R. Wilson, 4/30 Dept. of Psychology University of Washington Mr. Raymond T. Stamm, 4/21 Devitt's Camp Allenwood, PA Curiously, considering the footnote in Stargazers (p . 153) about the letter writing campaign at the University of Chicago, none of the above is identified with that university while only one is from Chicago. Also, it is ironic that ...
633. News from the Internet [Journals] [SIS Workshop]
... to agree with them that semiotics can include the study of all these and more, people will probably assume that semiotics is about visual signs'. [. .] Semiotics represents a range of studies in art, literature, anthropology and the mass media rather than an independent academic discipline. Those involved in semiotics include linguists, philosophers, psychologists, sociologists, anthropologists, literary, aesthetic and media theorists, psychoanalysts and educationalists. Beyond the most basic definition, there is considerable variation amongst leading semioticians as to what semiotics involves. It is not only concerned with (intentional) communication but also with our ascription of significance to anything in the world. Semiotics has changed over time ...
634. The Cornell Lecture: Sagan on A Wednesday [Journals] [Velikovskian]
... said in the Bible. Nor does Velikovsky call scientists "stuffy" or "unreliable"; to do so would be, among other things, to insult the many scientists who are Velikovsky's supporters. What Velikovsky says is that the uniformitarian theories now accepted by the scientific establishment have an unsound foundation: the reasons for their acceptance are more psychological than logical or evidentiary. And while the Velikovsky theory does have a sweeping and interdisciplinary character, that is hardly enough to account for the enduring and growing interest in the Velikovsky theory. That interest is due to the fact that the Velikovsky theory has received massive confirmation. It alone has passed the "Test of Time," while ...
635. An Integrated Model for an Earthwide Event at 2300 BC. Part I: The Archaeological Evidence [Journals] [SIS Review]
... which I ascribe to earthquake activity. Earthquakes in turn are caused by crustal stresses whose rate of build-up is limited by the viscosity of the Earth's interior. I also discuss cultural discontinuities and migrations. A local cultural discontinuity may happen fairly suddenly relative to a specific site destruction; however, major movements of people require a build-up of economic, psychological and cultural factors that also have some degree of "viscosity". The bottom line is that the event that caused the destruction and cultural changes may have happened some time earlier. Another qualification, almost a corollary to the first statement, is that there is no intent on my part to argue that all site destructions or cultural changes ...
636. Transcript of the Evening Session of the A.A.A.S. Symposium [Articles]
... Something was left for you to solve. I didn't offer you all solutions. Something was left for you to solve. Something for the next generation, too. But, nevertheless, already this explanation entered so many fields and returned with confirmation from so every field, that I believe there is a reason for scientific community to discontinue its psychological, well, resistance, which we in analysis call resistance, and start reading the book, contemplating the quantity of material, and say: historically proven; now, how can it happen physically? Professor Michelson gives the example. He is a shining example. He could be wrong on the last point, speaking about that this ...
637. Dr Immanuel Velikovsky TRIBUTES [Journals] [SIS Review]
... all who knew him and will remain an inspiration throughout our lives. Rest in peace good Doctor. The work goes on. Artur Isenberg EDITOR, KIDMA - ISRAEL JOURNAL OF DEVELOPMENT Immanuel Velikovsky applied his interdisciplinary intellect to a wide sweep of problems in the spheres of astronomy, geology, physics, chemistry, history, archaeology, anthropology and psychology. However startling his hypotheses and conclusions, they were shaped with the apparatus and methodology of the scholar: his sources were cited, fully and fairly, enabling his critics and readers to verify each item; and the rationale of each of his analyses was displayed step to step, no less fully and fairly. Quite explicitly, Velikovsky ...
638. Oberg's Unscientific Method [Journals] [Velikovskian]
... criticise, Oberg has lost sight of basics. My personal life should never be discussed, in any regard, in his "scholarly" criticism, because my private life is absolutely not of Oberg's concern. Nor do I wish to hear about what his insinuation about my personal life really meant. One does not have to be a trained psychologist to recognise the anger that lies behind the words of one who introduces any personal insinuations into his or her so-called professional criticism. This shows a lack of understanding of the proper and appropriate boundaries between people, where one has neither authority nor right to use personal opinions and judgments to undermine another's professional standing. By employing such inappropriate comments ...
639. Thoth Vol IV, No 13: Aug 31, 2000 [Journals] [Thoth]
... fundamental". Presumably, the other sciences ultimately can be "reduced" to the collisions of "elementary particles" with which physics deals. Any theory in any other science, no matter how reasonable it may be in light of its own domain of evidence, must receive the imprimatur of physics to be taken seriously. The idea that psychology, say, could provide a critique of physical theories is considered absurd. But this is what the nature of the human cognitive apparatus allows. Its mechanism of classifying neural impulses treats the evidence and theories of physics exactly the same as it does those of every other science. "Gestalts" can be the "fundamental" objects of ...
640. sTARBABY [Journals] [Velikovskian]
... retrospect, it is obvious that his reason was that all of them dissented from the KZA party line on Gauquelin. The only paper of mine which Kurtz published was also the only one that did not discuss Gauquelin; it was on ESP (July-August 1976 Humanist); thus, in Kurtz's Humanist, this astronomer was allowed to discuss matters psychological- but not astronomical! 5. I don't even know how many Councilors saw it after publication until questions were raised about its honesty. For example, although I was on the Humanist mailist list, no copy came to my address. 6. The following May, I was startled to see an identical attack by Eric Tarkington in Phenomena ...
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