Adaptation to LifeHarvard University Press, 1998 M08 11 - 416 páginas Between 1939 and 1942, one of America's leading universities recruited 268 of its healthiest and most promising undergraduates to participate in a revolutionary new study of the human life cycle. The originators of the program, which came to be known as the Grant Study, felt that medical research was too heavily weighted in the direction of disease, and their intent was to chart the ways in which a group of promising individuals coped with their lives over the course of many years. |
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... fantasy. Casper Smythe, M.D. ——University health service physician with two divorces and a not always satisfactory sexual adjustment. Adaptive style: repression and passive aggression. George Byron, Esq. —Government AID lawyer who had ...
... fantasy. William Mitty—Lonely astronomer who joined the Oxford movement as a young man. Adaptive style: fantasy. Robert Hood —Promiscuous alcoholic who almost became a child batterer and instead became a celibate student of TM. Adaptive ...
... fantasy to displacement. Godfrey Minot Camille, MD. —A dependent, hypochondriacal, and suicidal medical student who through prolonged medical and psychiatric treatment became an independent and giving physician and father. Adaptive ...
... fantasy, not in action. In reality, he gave up surgery lest he hurt someone, and as a government physician he worked as little as possible. Even his wish to reform the world in the model of the John Birch Society was confined to a fantasy ...
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Contenido
Basic Styles of Adaptation | 73 |
Development Consequences of Adaptation | 193 |
Concluions | 327 |
References Cited | 376 |
A Glossary of Defenses | 383 |
The Interview Schedule | 387 |
The Rating Scales | 389 |