Hypnosis The Myths, The Truth and The Techniques

Hypnosis The Myths, The Truth and The Techniques

Author: Dean Amory

Publisher: Lulu.com

Published: 2014-11-30

Total Pages: 316

ISBN-13: 1312713224

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This great practical guide on hypnosis explains in a comprehensive way how to learn and practice hypnosis. Using the proven methods included in this book, will allow you to hypnotize friends and strangers. If you are a professional therapist, they will also enable you to help others with hypnotherapy. As the techniques set forth here lead to real in depth hypnosis, the book is less recommended for performing stage hypnosis. Included are: structure of the hypnosis proces, ready to use word for word induction and deepening scripts, practical approach to suggestions, anchoring and post hypnotic suggestions, detailed examples of hypnotic language pattern, etc... Hypnosis is a skill, which means that reading about it, is only just the beginning: putting the techniques into practice is a necessary step to get true results. The description of the techniques is conceived in such a way that you can easily create your own flash cards to guide you through this wonderful experience.


The Myth Of Stress

The Myth Of Stress

Author: Andrew J. Bernstein

Publisher: Hachette UK

Published: 2010-06-03

Total Pages: 269

ISBN-13: 0748118063

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Andrew J Bernstein reveals the truth about stress - where it really comes from, why we've misunderstood it, and a new, more effective way to eliminate it at its source. He argues that the issues that stress people out differ, but that the basic dynamics of stress do not. Yet these have been misunderstood for more than half a century. As a result, almost everyone is confused about where stress actually comes from, with disastrous consequences affecting our health, happiness and our ability to handle change. In this book, he argues that stress is not a physical process with a psychological component, as previously believed, but a psychological process with a physical component. In other words, stress doesn't come from what is going on in your life - it comes from your thoughts about what is going on in your life. Your job isn't stressful,for example, it's your thoughts about your job that are stressful and so on. All stress is an inside job, a result of subconscious assumptions. By using the specially developed techniques in this book and by addressing stress at its source, there is nothing you can't transform.


Eudora Welty

Eudora Welty

Author: Peggy Whitman Prenshaw

Publisher: Univ. Press of Mississippi

Published: 1983-06

Total Pages: 280

ISBN-13: 9781604733969

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Eudora Welty: Thirteen Essays edited by Peggy W. Prenshaw This collection of essays about the writings of Eudora Welty, a southern writer in the grand tradition of American literature, reflects the range of Welty criticism. Themes, forms, and stylistic features in her work are given careful consideration by some of the most notable of Welty scholars: Chester E. Eisinger, John A. Allen, J. A. Bryant, Jr., John Edward Hardy, Albert J. Devlin, Warren French, Julia L. Demmin and Daniel Curley, Daniele Pitavy-Souques, Robert B. Heilman, Seymour L. Gross, Barbara McKenzie, Michael Kreyling, and Ruth M. Vande Kieft. The essays included in this volume were selected from the 1979 publication Eudora Welty: Critical Essays also edited by Peggy W. Prenshaw. Eudora Welty: Thirteen Essays retains the breadth of subject and approach that marked the earlier volume. Dr. Peggy W. Prenshaw is currently the Millsaps College Humanities Scholar in Residence. She recently retired from the Fred C. Frey Chair in Southern Studies at Louisiana State University. She has published widely on southern women writers, including Eudora Welty and Elizabeth Spencer.


The Body of Myth

The Body of Myth

Author: J. Nigro Sansonese

Publisher: Inner Traditions / Bear & Co

Published: 1994

Total Pages: 392

ISBN-13: 9780892814091

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Long ago the ancestors of the Greeks, Romans, and Hindus were one people living on the Eurasian steppes. At the core of their religion was the "shamanic trance," a natural state but one in which consciousness achieves a profound level of inner awareness. Over the course of millennia, the Indo-Europeans divided and migrated into Europe and the Indian subcontinent. The knowledge of shamanic trance retreated from everyday awareness and was carried on in the form of myths and distilled into spiritual practices--most notably in the Indian tradition of yoga. J. Nigro Sansonese compares the myths of Greece as well as those of the Judeo-Christian tradition with the yogic practices of India and concludes that myths are esoteric descriptions of what occurs within the human body, especially the human nervous system, during trance. In this light, the myths provide a detailed map of the shamanic state of consciousness that is our natural heritage. This book carries on from the works of Carl Jung and Joseph Campbell to show how the portrayal of consciousness embodied in myth can be extended to a reappraisal of the laws of physics; before they are descriptions of the world, these laws--like myths--are descriptions of the human nervous system.


Defending Science--within Reason

Defending Science--within Reason

Author: Susan Haack

Publisher:

Published: 2007-01

Total Pages: 411

ISBN-13: 9781591024583

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Sweeping in scope, penetrating in analysis, and generously illustrated with examples from the history of science, this new and original approach to familiar questions about scientific evidence and method tackles vital questions about science and its place in society. Avoiding the twin pitfalls of scientism and cynicism, noted philosopher Susan Haack argues that, fallible and flawed as they are, the natural sciences have been among the most successful of human enterprises-valuable not only for the vast, interlocking body of knowledge they have discovered, and not only for the technological advances that have improved our lives, but as a manifestation of the human talent for inquiry at its imperfect but sometimes remarkable best. This wide-ranging, trenchant, and illuminating book explores the complexities of scientific evidence, and the multifarious ways in which the sciences have refined and amplified the methods of everyday empirical inquiry; articulates the ways in which the social sciences are like the natural sciences, and the ways in which they are different; disentangles the confusions of radical rhetoricians and cynical sociologists of science; exposes the evasions of apologists for religious resistance to scientific advances; weighs the benefits and the dangers of technology; tracks the efforts of the legal system to make the best use of scientific testimony; and tackles predictions of the eventual culmination, or annihilation, of the scientific enterprise. Writing with verve and wry humor, in a witty, direct, and accessible style, Haack takes readers beyond the "Science Wars" to a balanced understanding of the value, and the limitations, of the scientific enterprise.


Myths, Stories, and Organizations

Myths, Stories, and Organizations

Author: Yiannis Gabriel

Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA

Published: 2004

Total Pages: 263

ISBN-13: 0199264473

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The book is an edited collection of fourteen chapters, each one of which takes as its starting point a myth, a legend, a story or a fable, and explores its contemporary relevance for a world of globalization, organizations, and consumerism. The book offers a set of probing, original and critical inquiries into the nature of human experience knowledge and truth, the nature of leadership, power and heroic achievement, postmodernity and its discontents, and emotion, identity and the nature of human relations in organizations. Different chapters deal, among pother things, with the nature of leadership in the face of terrorism, friendship, women's position in organizations, the struggle for identity, the curse of insatiable consumption and the ways the hero and heroine are constructed in our times.


Teaching Lévi-Strauss

Teaching Lévi-Strauss

Author: Hans H. Penner

Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA

Published: 1998

Total Pages: 340

ISBN-13: 9780788504907

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Claude L ́evi-Strauss's mid-twentieth-century work in structural anthropology revolutionized the study of myth, kinship, and totemism, with lasting effects in cultural studies generally and especially in religious studies. This book provides an introduction to this revolution through generous excerpts of some of L ́evi-Strauss's most important writing on religion. Reactions and responses, both positive and negative, to the revolution are also included, along with some of L ́evi-Strauss's replies to his critics. A general introduction by volume editor Hans Penner provides a framework for understanding the historical development and contemporary meaning of structuralism for religious studies. This volume provides an unparalleled resource for teaching about structuralism.


Literature and Religious Experience

Literature and Religious Experience

Author: Matthew J. Smith

Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing

Published: 2022-01-13

Total Pages: 313

ISBN-13: 1350193933

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This book challenges the status quo of studies in literature and religion by returning to “experience” as a bridge between theory and practice. Essays focus on keywords of religious experience and demonstrate their applications in drama, fiction, and poetry. Each chapter explores the broad significance of its keyword as a category of psychological and social behavior and tracks its unique articulation by individual authors, including Conrad, Beecher Stowe and Melville. Together, the chapters construct a critical foundation for studying literature not only from the perspectives of theology and historicism but from the ways that literary experience reflects, reinforces, and sometimes challenges religious experience.


Myth and Method

Myth and Method

Author: Laurie L. Patton

Publisher: University of Virginia Press

Published: 1996

Total Pages: 436

ISBN-13: 9780813916576

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In confronting these tension, they provide an outline of the most troubling questions in the field and offer a variety of responses to them.


The End of the World

The End of the World

Author: Ernesto de Martino

Publisher: University of Chicago Press

Published: 2023

Total Pages: 393

ISBN-13: 0226820572

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The first English translation of a classic work of twentieth-century anthropology and philosophy. A philosopher, historian of religions, and anthropologist, Ernesto de Martino (1908-65) produced a body of work that prefigured many ideas and concerns that would later come to animate anthropology. In his writing, we can see the roots of ethnopsychiatry and medical anthropology, discussions of reflexivity and the role of the ethnographer, considerations of social inequality and hegemony from a Gramscian perspective, and an anticipation of the discipline's "existential turn." We also find an attentiveness to hope and possibility, despite the gloomy title of his posthumously published book La Fine del Mondo, or The End of the World. Examining apocalypse as an individual as well as a cultural phenomenon, treating subjects both classic and contemporary and both European and non-Western, ranging across ethnography, history, literature, psychiatry, and philosophy, de Martino probes how we relate to our world and how we might be better subjects and thinkers within it. This new translation offers English-language readers their first chance to engage with de Martino's masterwork, which continues to seem prescient in the face of the frictions of globalization and environmental devastation.