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| | 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) |
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