“Insights from the Helping Professions” reflects distinctive thinking about the bases of human behavior, indicates how individuals and groups can change, and provides insights into the processes of professional experience reflected in the “Insights”series include perspectives within counseling, psychology, and psychiatry as well as two more traditional disciplines, anthropology and sociology, which have influenced professional practice in the helping professions. Considerations of human nature, the influences of gender, and the processes of socialization relevant to attaining peace are embedded throughout the “Insights” series.
Changing Persons
Albert Ellis – Substituting Rational Thinking for Irrational Thoughts – 1984
Carl Rogers: Facilitating Peace: Insights from Three Experiences – 1985
Carl Rogers: Mutual Understanding and Communication, 1985
Rollo May – Evil is a Problem For All of Us – 1984
Understanding the Context for Seeking Peace and the Human Condition
Jerome Frank – Remember Your Humanity and Forget the Rest – 1984
Judd Marmor – Psychiatric Aspects of the Prevention of Nuclear War – 1984
Morton Deutsch – The Malignant Social Process Between the United States and the Soviet Union
Ralph K. White – A Psychological Profile of U.S.-Soviet Relations – 1984
Defining the Problem, The Effects of Nuclear Weapons, Society’s Institutions and the Human Condition, Perspectives on the Road to Peace
Helen Caldicott – The Urgency of the Problem – 1984
Kenneth B Clark – Intelligence in the Service of Love and Kindness – 1984
Karl Menninger – Forsaking Vengeance and Retaliation – 1984
Virginia Satir
Robert Goulding – The Current World Belief Systems Do Not Support Peace – 1986
Mary Goulding – Government Needs to be Taken Out of the Hands of the People Who Lead – 1986
Roger Walsh – All of Us Will Make It Together or None of Us Will – 1987
Jack Geiger – Medical Implications of Nuclear War
Jack H. Geiger 2/2
B.F. Skinner – It Is Possible to Change the Ways People Treat Each Other – 1983