I continue to work on a project to understand the variation in behavior in living organisms to the presence and absence of resources and how a changing environment influences interactions between and among organisms and groups of organisms.
I am trying to gather information from the natural world to explore evidence of the same instinctive process.
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Monthly Archives: June 2014
some thoughts on emotional cutoff: and bridging emotional cutoff
These segments are from a slideshow I did for a webcast in March for the Rutgers Bowen theory trainees. I wanted to look at the material again this week, as my 24-year-old moved out two days ago to live with friends. The triangle of son, his.
PDF Version--Examining Differentiation from a Developmental Perspective-FINAL
let's see if this works.
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“It’s the Family, Stupid”
Posted by Andrea
Violence appears to be on the rise. People are asking for explanations. We are faced with a cluster of events - Sandy Hook, the Boston Bombings, the California killings, a California man arrested for a possible bombing attempt, followed by a rogue shooter in Norfolk Va., who did not even make the national news as.
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What is, what will be, and what should be the place of the family system variable in a science of human behavior?
Last week I spent three days attending the annual convention of the Association for Psychological Science, in San Francisco this year. It is a gathering of 4,300 psychologists and it is striking that there.
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No behavior is isolated.
Posted by Jim Edd
Every behavior has a systems context; there are no isolated behaviors.
Jim Edd Jones
The word ‘behavior’ has been a staple of psychology since early in the 20th century. How we think with that word has been imprinted by Pavlov’s classic experiments and then later by the John Watson and B.F. Skinner branches of behaviorism. .
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