#dude theft wars chad# is one of the most powerful and elusive characters you can unlock. Known for his strength and speed, Chad enhances your ability to cause chaos in the game. To unlock Chad, explore the mountainous area to find a hidden base. Inside, you'll discover a keypad that requires a specific...
Israelis have an especially close bond with their military, but Oct. 7 shook their trust to the core. Read More...
Time is running out to prevent the mass displacement of Palestinians in Gaza from becoming permanent. Read More...
FP learns why a war that isn’t on yet might matter more than one that’s been raging for years, in a chat with Elbridge Colby. Read More...
Britannia once ruled the waves. As the Houthis threaten global shipping, U.K. naval power is reprising its old role. Read More...
The West’s focus on negotiations is worsening the country’s humanitarian crisis. Read More...
As Israel’s war against Hamas rages on, Palestinian women bear the heaviest burden. Read More...
Pretoria accuses the Israeli government of genocide before the ICJ in The Hague. Read More...
Anti-government forces’ campaign against cyberscams has benefited Beijing, even as it keeps up ties with the ruling junta. Read More...
From October 12 to 13, 2017 the Friedrich-Meinecke-Institut at the Free University of Berlin is hosting a conference on “Nerves and War. Psychological Experiences of Mobilization and Suffering in Germany, 1900-1933.” Organized by Gundula Gahlen...
A quick roundup of new articles for your summer reading pleasure: Behavioral Scientist “Psychologists Go to War,” by John Greenwood. No abstract. Discusses psychologists’ involvement in WWI and the broader effects of this work. “All...
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Advances in the History of Psychology
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Advances in the History of Psychology
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07-03-2017
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Filed under: General, Journals, psychophysics, psychiatry, Kitty Genovese, mental health, asylums, war, bystander effect, big data, testing, stratification
The December 2016 issue of History of Psychiatry is now online. Articles in this issue explore psychiatric classification in the DSM, Italian colonial psychiatry, the phrenological studies of skulls, and more. Full titles, authors, and abstracts follow...
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Advances in the History of Psychology
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Advances in the History of Psychology
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11-13-2016
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Filed under: General, Journals, DSM, Brazil, skulls, Italy, war, phrenology, classification, delusion, agoraphobia, Africa, anxiety, mania, Pinel, Libya, neurology, colonial psychiatry, Esquirol
The July/August issue of the American Psychological Association‘s Monitor on Psychology is now online. This issue’s Time Capsule section features an article on psychologist E. G. Boring’s popular 1943 book Psychology for the Fighting...