Philosophy Thursday: Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz

leibniz

Click Here to Read:  Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz on Wikipedia.

Click Here to Read: Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz on the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy website.

Click Here to Read: Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz (1646-1716) on the Philosophy Pages website.

Click Here to Read: Leibniz’s Philosophy of Mind on the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy website. Continue reading Philosophy Thursday: Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz

The Brain Reacts to Psychotherapy

psychotherapy_1

“The human brain responds to depression. Patients typically show hyperactivity particularly in the amygdala,the striatum and other limbic regions,” Svenja Taubner (Department of Psychology) explains. Together with colleagues from the universities of Lübeck, Innsbruck, Heidelberg, Ulm, Bremen, Bochum and Delmenhorst,Taubner has been working on a study that investigates the changes that take place in brain functioning. She elaborates further: “Using Continue reading The Brain Reacts to Psychotherapy

Myths of the Mighty Women from Karnac Books

lil'MythsCoverforBlog

Those attending the Boston IPA Conference: Please join us for a toast at the COWAP book launch for our book and other COWAP books: July, 25: Sat: from 12:45-1:45 Seaport Hotel.

Click Here to Read:  Myths of Mighty Women: Their Application in Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy edited by Arlene Kramer Richards and Lucille Spira on the Karnac Books website.

Click Here to Read: Front and Back Covers to Myths of Mighty Woman.

Writer’s Wednesday: Delmore Schwartz

DelmoreSchwartz

Click Here to Read: Delmore Schwartz on Wikipdia.

Click Here to Read:  Growing Pains: Delmore Schwartz, Forgotten Genius: The writer Delmore Schwartz is largely forgotten today, but he once captured the anxieties and hopes of the Jewish intellectuals of the 1930s and stunned his generation with his poems and short stories By Morris Dickstein on the Tablet Website on August 11, 2011.

Click Here to Read:  Delmore Schwartz Poems on the Poem Hunter.com website. Continue reading Writer’s Wednesday: Delmore Schwartz