Factbites
 Where results make sense
About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   PR   |   Contact us  

Topic: Harry Sullivan


Related Topics

In the News (Sun 3 Jun 12)

  
  Harry Sullivan's War
Harry remains unaware that, while he was unconscious, Shire administered a dose of sodium pentothal to him and he revealed all he knew about his forthcoming work at Yarra...
Harry is determined to solve the mystery, but his solicitor advises him to pay more attention to his defense; not only has he been linked to the theft of the ampoules, but to the Van Gogh Appreciation Society, a front for the European Anarchist Revolution and its leader, known terrorist Zbigniew Brodsky.
Harry makes a full report to the Admiralty and is advised to leave the rest of the operation in their hands, but he follows a hunch and attends the annual general meeting of the Van Gogh Appreciation Society at the Eiffel Tower.
www.drwhoguide.com /comp02.htm   (1426 words)

  
 Welcome to Philos - Psychoanalysis Section
Sullivan began his career working with a schizophernic population, under Emil Kraepelin, a man who is considered the father of psychiatry, as well as the father of modern psychological diagnosis (Influencing our own DSM IV).
Sullivan noted that once our self system was in place that it was extraordinarlly resistant to change, due to the use of selective inattention, we can escape experience that is incongrous with the main circle of anxiety reducing operations.
Sullivan sought to foster new interpersonal experiences for the patient in therapy that would shatter the mold of his ancient security operations and remove the misperceiving globalized assumptions that led to sour self fulfilling prophecies in their lives.
www.candleinthedark.com /sullivan.html   (4361 words)

  
  Sullivan notes
According to Sullivan's hypothesis all that the infant "knows" are momentary states, the distinction of before and after being a later acquirement.
Her marvelous biography of Sullivan provides essential background for core aspects of his theorizing, as in the case of his mother's hospitalization for depression (Chapter 5: "The Disappearance of Harry's Mother") when he was small.
Sullivan's own mysterious "schizophrenic" episode during college is recounted in Chapter 19, "The Disappearance of Harry," and Perry links this late adolescent exprience with Sullivan's remarkable gift for understanding schizophrenic psychosis in later life.
www.haverford.edu /psych/ddavis/sullivan.html   (1280 words)

  
 Harry Stack Sullivan, Major, United States Army
Harry Stack Sullivan, born on February 21, 1892, in the farming community of Norwich, New York, was the only surviving child of a poor Irish farmer.
Sullivan spent his life working with patients, psychiatrists, and social psychologists to prove that people are influenced mostly by their relationships with others.
Sullivan died of cardiovascular disease in Paris in 1949.
www.arlingtoncemetery.net /hssullivan.htm   (1868 words)

  
 Anxiety In Action: Sullivan's Interpersonal Psychiatry as a Supplement to Vygotskian Psychology   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-20)
Sullivan counterposes a pre-linguistic embodied sense of situation and memory with the dissembling, misleading character of unfortunate language development, suggesting that an orientation to events that is free of the labyrinthine confusions of language may still be accessible to people whose language processes are most involuted.
Sullivan, like Vygotsky, was interdisciplinary in orientation, seeing along with his close friends the anthropologist Edward Sapir and political scientist Harold Lasswell, the possibility of an integrated social science built around the development of personality within culture.
Sullivan, however, allows for the interference of security operations to warp the processes of reflective choice making, to provide for indirect or even dysfunctional terms for reflecting on one's needs and desires, and to create distances between one's public expressions and one's inner sentiments.
www.education.ucsb.edu /~bazerman/sullivan.htm   (5157 words)

  
 ISIPT -International Society for Interpersonal Psychotherapy - Harry Stack Sullivan   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-20)
Harry Stack Sullivan was trained under Adolf Meyer at a time of profound Freudian influence on American Psychiatry.
Sullivan based his theories upon his own observations and evolved at type of "Interpersonal therapy" in which the 'human relationship' could reach the most disturbed patients.
Sullivan described the concept of "Dynamisms" which were behavioral changes occurring as "energic transformations" under natural (non-telic) processes.
www.interpersonalpsychotherapy.org /sullivan.htm   (322 words)

  
 The Matrix of Personality: A Whiteheadian Corroboration of Harry Stack Sullivan’s Interpersonal Theo
Sullivan classified the self-system as secondary "in that it does not have any particular zone of interaction, any particular physiological apparatus, behind it; but literally uses all zones of interaction and all physiological apparatus which is integrative and meaningful from the interpersonal standpoint" (ITP 164).
Sullivan’s sympathetic view of Whitehead’s model might be suggested by his frequent use of the term "prehension" to explain how an organism reacts to the data of its past (see ITP 28n, 76-77, 141).
While a full exposition of Sullivan’s developmental stages lies well beyond the scope of the present essay, it would be beneficial here, in concluding this precis of Sullivan’s theory, to stress that the fundamental process of normal interpersonal development continues into the late twenties and possibly into one’s early thirties.
www.religion-online.org /showarticle.asp?title=2799   (5294 words)

  
 Psychiatric News Main Frame
Sullivan completed high school and received a scholarship to Cornell University but dropped out in his second semester in 1909 because of failing grades.
Sullivan was influenced by these men and others in his conviction about the importance of social sciences for psychiatry.
Sullivan became part of the psychoanalytic movement but was increasingly disenchanted with Freudian theory.
www.psych.org /pnews/98-05-15/hx.html   (716 words)

  
 Lark's Psychology Pages -2
Sullivan believed that the goals or motivations for human behaviour could be segregated in two major processes of needs fulfillment which begin at infancy.
A key distinction between the Sullivan's non-significant and dissociated repertoires is that disassociated material cannot be easily be incorporated in the self concept because such behaviours have been "first-hand experienced" as relatively destructive to the fulfillment of the two major needs.
I would extend Sullivan's model to note that the disassociated material cannot totally be discarded, but is filed away within a self construct, or secondary database or truth table labeled as "behaviours which are destructive, and not me, or self" or in a sadder case, "behaviours which are only to be manifested by the bad-me".
www.geocities.com /Athens/2921/psych002.html   (2174 words)

  
 Harry Sullivan
Harry was about to attack the alien when the Doctor stopped him, and the two found Sarah Jane, who was also a captive, and freed her.
Harry was horrified as Styre apparently killed the Doctor while he and Sarah Jane escaped, but the Sontaran’s blast had only struck a metal plate the Doctor had left in his pocket from the Ark. The Doctor instructed Harry to sneak aboard Styre’s ship while he distracted him, and re-arrange some tech.
Harry and Sarah were tortured by Davros to force the Doctor to reveal all of Dalek future history, so that he could program his creations with this knowledge and allow them to avoid their future defeats.
www.internationalhero.co.uk /h/harysull.htm   (1755 words)

  
 Harry Stack Sullivan - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Herbert "Harry" Stack Sullivan (February 21, 1892, Norwich, New York - January 14, 1949, Paris, France) was an American psychiatrist whose work in psychoanalysis was based on direct and verifiable observation (versus the more abstract conceptions of the unconscious mind favored by Sigmund Freud and his disciples).
Sullivan was a child of Irish immigrants and allegedly grew up in an anti-Catholic town.
Along with Clara Thompson, Karen Horney, Erich Fromm, Erik H. Erikson, and Frieda Fromm-Reichmann, Sullivan laid the groundwork for understanding the individual based on the network of relationships in which he or she is enmeshed.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Harry_Stack_Sullivan   (678 words)

  
 From A to 7Q - Harry Sullivan   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-20)
Harry is a lieutenant in the navy and a surgeon by trade.
Harry is extremely generous and full of concern for others, probably as a result of his medical training.
Harry has brown hair and hazel eyes; he usually wears his naval uniform, blue jacket and trousers with a cravat and sometimes a hat, although he does sometimes get the opportunity to change into something different.
iaith.tapetrade.net /doctorwho/harry.html   (428 words)

  
 Harry Stack-Sullivan in Personality Synopsis at ALLPSYCH Online
Harry Stack-Sullivan was trained in psychoanalysis in the United States, but soon drifted from the specific psychoanalytic beliefs while retaining much of the core concepts of Freud.
Sullivan, however, saw anxiety as existing only as a result of social interactions.
Another similarity between Sullivan's theory and that of Freud's is the belief that childhood experiences determine, to a large degree, the adult personality.
allpsych.com /personalitysynopsis/stack_sullivan.html   (812 words)

  
 glbtq >> social sciences >> Sullivan, Harry Stack
Harry Stack Sullivan was born on February 21, 1892 in Norwich, New York as the only child of farmers and the nephew of a lesbian aunt.
Sullivan held that everyone possessed an emotional and sexual interest in both sexes, although behavior and the primary involvement usually center in one direction.
Although Sullivan thought adult homosexuals suffered from faulty personality development, he did not see homosexuality as an illness and separated himself from most of his professional peers by advocating that gay men and lesbians should be accepted as is.
www.glbtq.com /social-sciences/sullivan_hs.html   (883 words)

  
 Sullivan Harry Stack: Free Encyclopedia Articles at Questia.com Online Library
He was, along with his teacher William Alanson White, responsible for the extension of Freudian psychoanalysis to the treatment of patients with severe mental disorders, particularly schizophrenia.
Harry Stack Sullivan Harry Stack Sullivan (1892-1949) has been described as the most original figure...supporting the tenets of Sullivans interpersonal psychotherapy.
Sullivan, Harry Stack (1953), The Interpersonal Theory of Psychiatry, New York: W.W. Norton.
www.questia.com /library/encyclopedia/sullivan_harry_stack.jsp   (1212 words)

  
 Arkansas News Bureau - Sullivan overlooked in big man talk   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-20)
That tag pigeonholed Rashard Sullivan as a guy who could run and jump, but was not a basketball player.
Sullivan had 6 points against both Illinois and Gardner-Webb and he's shooting.625 from the field, but he's not going to take more than three or four shots per game and can be an asset if he continues to average only 3.6 points per game.
Even though Sullivan did not get a single rebound in 12 minutes against Eastern Michigan and the same amount of time against Tulsa, he is averaging 4.4 rebounds per game.
www.arkansasnews.com /archive/2004/12/15/HarryKing/312186.html   (707 words)

  
 Harry Stack Sullivan
Sullivan called his approach an interpersonal theory of psychiatry because he believed psychiatry is the study of what goes on between people.
Sullivan describes one additional infant state, the non-me, which is felt as the unknown, the uncanny, the unintegrated because it is dreadful and repressed.
When Sullivan speaks of “personality”, I’m going to call this “self.” And when he speaks of “self,” I’m going to call this the “conditioned self,” which is similar to the Gurdjieffian and enneagramatic notion of ego or personality.
www.enneagramspectrum.com /articles/harrystacksullivan.htm   (2238 words)

  
 Don Jackson Official Web site
Prior to joining the Bateson project, Jackson spent four years, from 1947 through mid-1951, studying with Sullivan and his multidisciplinary team at Chestnut Lodge in Rockville, Maryland, and at the Washington School of Psychiatry.
Sullivan acknowledged having been influenced by a number of people; in the fields of neurology and psychiatry, Sigmund Freud, Adolf Meyer, William Alanson White, while his primary philosophical/ intellectual antecedents included George Herbert Mead, Charles Horton Cooley, and physicist P. Bridgman.
In turn, Jackson's grasp of the implications of Sullivan's Interpersonal Theory had an enormous impact on the direction of research conducted by Bateson's team in general, on the thinking of Haley and Weakland in particular, and in the development of the Interactional Approach.
www.mri.org /dondjackson/rooted.htm   (237 words)

  
 Sullivan
Sullivan was a child of Irish immigrants from the potato famine, in fact, an only child of parents who had twice miscarried.  He grew up poor in an anti-Catholic town, and troubled by a vast social difference between his parents' families.  Somehow he got through his own childhood troubles and into the field of psychiatry.
Furthermore, at the end of his life, Sullivan somehow turned again to the Church.  I do not know the details of this, only that he managed (very carefully) to arrange for a Catholic funeral, which was boycotted by many or most of his psychiatric colleagues.
It is partly, but not only, in view of this final act that we are justified in looking at his entire career as a movement through the minefield of psychiatry towards the truths of the Church, to which he was introduced in childhood. 
hedgeschool.homestead.com /sullivan.html   (424 words)

  
 Harry Sullivan - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Harry Sullivan is a fictional character from the British science-fiction television series Doctor Who and was a companion of the Fourth Doctor.
Harry was born on 13/6/49 Sullivan was a doctor in the Royal Navy, who was attached as medical officer to the United Nations Intelligence Taskforce, the military organisation to which the Doctor acted as the scientific advisor.
Sullivan was first mentioned (though not seen) in Planet of the Spiders, when the Brigadier thought that the Third Doctor had gone into a coma.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Harry_Sullivan   (1056 words)

  
 Who's Doctor Who? - The Companions 4
Along with Harry Sullivan, she accompanied The Fourth Doctor on a number of adventures, including his mission to Skaro at the time of the creation of the Daleks, and his first meeting in several years with the Cybermen (Revenge of the Cybermen).
Harry Sullivan was a Surgeon-Lieutenant in the Royal Navy who joined UNIT as medical officer during The Third Doctor's era.
Harry joined the TARDIS crew accidentally when he entered the ship with The Doctor and Sarah and touched one of the controls.
www.whosdw.com /compan4.html   (1724 words)

  
 Harry Sullivan - SCIFIPEDIA
Surgeon Lieutenant Harry Sullivan is a character who appeared regularly in season 12 and part of season 13 of the long-running show Doctor Who.
Harry's travels with the Doctor began in the season 12 opener, "Robot." A physician attached to UNIT (United Nations Intelligence Taskforce), Harry was assigned to look after the Doctor, who was behaving erratically after his recent regeneration.
As played by actor Ian Marter, Harry was exceedingly brave and unfailingly polite, although his clumsiness sometimes got him into trouble and his old fashioned views did not always please plucky feminist Sarah Jane Smith.
scifipedia.scifi.com /index.php?title=Harry_Sullivan&redirect=no   (178 words)

  
 Who's Doctor Who? - The Fourth Doctor 2
Harry escapes from the pit, and Sarah meets Roth, who tells her about a robot which has been capturing his friends.
The Doctor and Harry are captured by Kaled troops, while Sarah is taken prisoner by their enemy, the Thals.
Harry is taken to the spacecraft of the aliens, a race of shape-shifters called Zygons, who've used the area as a base while awaiting the arrival of a fleet which will make Earth suitable for their species.
www.whosdw.com /doctor4a.html   (2847 words)

  
 Sullivan: Schizophrenia   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-20)
The patient progressed, through a phase of drowsy preoccupation from which the demand implied in my presence aroused him, to an obscure statment which might be translated: 'I have a tension which I think should be connected with my heterosexual love object.
Sullivan suggests that the regressive potential of urethral sensations, confusion with sexual arousal, "often take incipiently schizophrenic patients to the medical man." Sullivan 's following discussion of schizophrenia suggests that
Sullivan describes language as a vehicle for obtaining what one wants and needs in the way of interpersonal security via consunsually validated speech.
www.haverford.edu /psych/ddavis/sullivan.sx.html   (567 words)

  
 [No title]
I did this mostly because Justin Richards' two Harry Sullivan novels (System Shock and Millennium Shock) have finally made it to the top of my to-read pile, and I thought it would be a pleasant precursor before plunging into those books.
Harry Sullivan, off his portrayal of the TV, was a likeable, bumbling, traditional sort of bloke.
Harry's military connections are the reasons he gets involved, but his bumbling nature is a sharp contrast to the power struggles that carry on around him.
pagefillers.com /dwrg/harsw.htm   (1787 words)

  
 Commentary Magazine - Psychiatrist of America: The Life of Harry Stack Sullivan   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-20)
Harry Stack Sullivan is one of the most important and least known social scientists of this century.
...His mother, described by Sullivan as "a complaining semi-invalid with chronic resentment at the humble family situation," was convinced that she had married beneath herself...
...Harry's life, to the extent he was permitted to have one, was lived in books...
www.commentarymagazine.com /Summaries/V74I2P84-1.htm   (1772 words)

  
 HARRY STACK SULLIVAN (1892-1949)
Although a psychiatrist by medical training, many social workers have seen Sullivan as more oriented toward our way of thinking because he understood that intrapsychic processes could not be separated from the social environment and current living conditions of his clients.
  Sullivan understood that to think otherwise was erroneous and therapeutically disastrous.
Sullivan's concept of what therapy was about is summarized as follows:
www.mtsu.edu /~socwork/frost/soc/thera/SULLIVAN.htm   (202 words)

Try your search on: Qwika (all wikis)

Factbites
  About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   Press   |   Contact us  
Copyright © 2005-2007 www.factbites.com Usage implies agreement with terms.