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Citizen's Guide to Ecology

Does the Government Cover up UFO's?

Excellent Book for the Wards

An excellent resource for the practicing physician

cluestring and clasification

Great book with good examplesThe author has put much time and effort into helping clinicians really understand at a deep and broad level the phenomenology of their clients' experiences when they present for therapy. He uses a very helpful case conceptualization diagram--his own--to assist each reader in highlighting the key features of a case and uses this to generate hypotheses as to where to go clinically with such a client.
I especially appreciated some parts of the book that dealt with mindfulness [now a hot area in cognitive therapy, less so when this book came out] and its possible use in CT. Also good were descriptions of and rationales for various techniques to use that emanate from a solid understanding of each client.
The book gives nice examples throughout, so it is not dry as some therapy books can be. It is well-organized, well-researched, and written in an accessible style.
I feel that any clinician reading this will better understand the nature of the disorders mentioned (e.g., depression, panic, ocd, gad, and several others). S/he will also draw useful ideas as to how to intervene most effectively, even with challenging cases and their respective problems.
The author wisely provides dialogue drawn from therapy sessions so that the reader is able to be like a fly on the wall as the ideas in the book are implemented in real therapy sessions by a talented clinician.
I have used this book as a text in a graduate course and the students found it very helpful in deepening their grasp of CT. I believe seasoned professionals would still learn much from the material here and the clear ways that these helpful ideas are presented.
I recommend it very highly.


request informationThank you: Keith


Classic ChestertonChesterton was never afraid to poke fun at his own self or reputation, and in one of the first and funniest essays in the collection, titled " If I Was a Preacher," he remarks that a Utopia would be a place where he would be gagged and rendered speechless. He moves on in subsequent columns to confront the ideas of the era: the rise of Darwinism and scientism, the emergence of psychology and sociology as serious science, gender politics, prohibition, etc. Among the personalities he remarks on are H.L. Mencken, Clarence Darrow, Abraham Lincoln, T.S. Eliot, and Albert Einstein. Chesterton is especially entertaining when writing about modernism, and the myopia of a society which considered itself superior just because it was modern. There are a dozen or so essays on that alone. They make interesting reading because they are so applicable to the 21st century world, too.
For example: in a column here from August 1931, GKC satirizes the "modern" logic that says that marriage vows went out with Victorian dresses; he reasons that Socratic ideals must have gone out with long tunics, or that Spinoza's mathematics no longer made sense when he took off his shirt. Even those long familiar with Chesterton will find provocative and surprising reading here.


Great quick refresher , with short to-the-point examples

Excellent introduction to CDA for cluster analysis etc.
The author seems to come right out of the pages and invite the reader into his thoughts. You'll find yourself immersed in the subject, and talking back with questions, which seem to answer themselves as you go on to subsquent pages.
I didn't become an expert in the subject by reading this book, but I certainly did gain a greater respect for it, as well as for the author. Read it!!