answers.yahoo.com/question/...LJCkDsy6IX
If you were going to write an unabridged textbook on psychology, what would titles for the main chapters be?
all real answers will look like tables of contents
Additional Details
2 weeks ago
en.wikibooks.org/wiki/introductio...
members.aol.com/psychquery/pttoc....
www.sagepub.co.uk/textbooksprodto...
6 answers
This question is no longer open for answering. Here's your chance to cast a vote if you haven't already.
Search the Web to research your answer.
Email Question
Answers
Answerer 1
Report Abuse
1. Balderdash
2. Broohaha
3. Ballyhoo
4. Gobbeldygook
I don't have time to list all of them.
0 Votes 0%
Answerer 2
Report Abuse
First chapter would be titled "My imaginary friend says that you have serious issues!" That's because anyone who wants to write a book like that has "serious" issues.
0 Votes 0%
Answerer 3
Report Abuse
about them
about women
about men
about me
how to act
how not to act
what is good for you is what you need not what you want
what is bad for you is want but, not what you need
i accept responsibility for me
how to live a good life
thanks,
SS
1 Vote 33%
Answerer 4
Report Abuse
psycholgy-----roots and umderstanding life
1 Vote 33%
Answerer 5
Report Abuse
1)madness-- illnesses. origins and theories of how power/authority is used to keep people in check.
2)people and society- how people use their minds to create the society we and they live in by media and images, propaganda, ect.
3)perception and drugs-before and after studoes and examples on how the mind reacts under cartain stimulants, and how differently the perception is fater. answer asll the w's on drugs, why we do it, how, ect.
4) Sexuality- well you know.
i would be brief and general. talking aout two items verusu one gices more reinforcement on one item. (i.e. drugs AND perception)
good question.
0 Votes 0%
Answerer 6
Report Abuse
Social values and cultures
Psychology of our children
Social acceptance and rejection
Con artist's perception of psychology
Mind control/brain washing
posted by:
|
|
Unsubscribed |
-
Unsu...
Re: Psychology
Fri, July 7, 2006 - 6:57 PMen.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psychological
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portal:Psychology
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Applied_psychology
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Behaviorism
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biol...psychology
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clin...psychology
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cogn...psychology
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deve...psychology
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Educ...psychology
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evol...psychology
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gestalt_psychology
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Huma...psychology
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psycholinguistics
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pers...psychology
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psychophysics
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_psychology
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List...ogy_topics -
-
Unsu...
Re: Psychology
Mon, July 17, 2006 - 5:24 PMPSYCHOLOGY;
A. Table of Contents
B. Foreward
C. Prologue
D. Introduction
1. The Nueron
2. Brain Regions
3. Internal Dialogue(s)
4. Instinct
5. Social Influences
6. Brain Chemistry
7. Brain regions and Mind
8. Ego Psychology
9. Id Psychology
10. Mammalian Psychology
11. Reptilian Psychology
12. Social Psychology
13. Paradigm Psychology
14. Emotional Psychology
15. Child Psychology
16. Adult Psychology
17. Parental Psychology
18. Pack Psychology
19. Personal Space Management
20. Behavior output Psychology
21. Reflexive Psychology
22. Muggle Psychology
23. Mage Psychology
24. Totalitarian/Fascist/Corporate/Republican Psychology
25. Herd Psychology
26. Logic, Reason,...Geek Psychology
27.Index of Brain Areas
28. Topological Index
29. Glossary -
-
Unsu...
Re: Psychology
Mon, July 17, 2006 - 8:08 PM -
-
Re: Psychology
Fri, May 4, 2007 - 1:39 AMPSYCHOLOGY General
1.Psychology is the study of the human mind. Most specifically the psyche, most generally All of human behavior.
2. The human Brain is composed of between 40 and 70 different organs, depending upon
how you define differences. These are called brodmanns brain areas. Each brain area
is responsible for specific types of brain processes and mental functions.
3. The human mind has four main operational conditions, they are beta brainwave states, alpha brainwave states, delta brainwave states, and theta brainwave states. Each of these might be further subdivided into waking or sleeping states of consciousness.
4. Beta brainwave states are those in which the dominant area of the brain is the frontal lobes. Alpha brainwave states are those in which the dominant area of the brain is the Mammalian brain or Occipital lobes, and Delta brainwaves states are those where the brain is dominated by the Reptilian Brain or brain stem. Theta brain wave states are
a second waking condition in which the body is healed, or, in which the normal flow of
dominance from top of brain to bottom of brain is reversed, and the bottom of the brain
loads information into the top, which is then experienced as dreams.
5. We have instincts which compel us to seek out gratification of our needs. All behavior is motivated by a conscious or unconscious belief that said behavior will get some need met.
6. Psychology involves first an instinct, which compels a thought process, and then a planning or strategizing session in which the individual uses their maps of reality and belief systems as well as learned knowledge and social conditioning to arrive at an end
product of doing something to get what you want. Schema are maps of reality which we
use as tools to meet our needs .Social Conditioning and personal experience and learning
play vital roles in helping the mind to think up tactics to meet needs.
7. Criminal behavior is behavior which that person believes will get their needs met. Punishment was well demonstrated to have little or no effect on learning curve. What is required for a person to change their behavior is a functional tactic that does work to get their needs met.
8. Groupthink is a social phenomenon of psychology where a group uses false
consensus process to end up behaving stupidly as a group. Groupthink occurs when
people cave into social pressures, where propaganda replaces knowledge or facts, and where group identity is created out of participation in group delusions, lies, codependency, or criminality. Groupthink is how a mob drifts to the lowest common denominator, and why a mob is potentially vicious, evil, and sociopathic. Group
authority ameliorates and dissolves personal conscience, and by having their emotions
manipulated and their social identity threatened, people give up their own better judgment and accept the judgment of the most psychopathic member of the group.
9. Pack Psychology is the psychology exhibited primarily by mammals in small groups
in which 3 primary roles are assumed by social participants. The roles are Alpha- the leader, Beta- the followers, and Delta- the orbiters. In human society that translates in a super-simplified way into bullies, cliques, and nerds.
10. Problem solving psychology must contend against groupthink and pack psychology in the arena of opinion. Problem solving psychology is emotionally neutral and uses the mind and logic to look at all aspects of a problem and try to come up with a viable problem solving process. Problem solving psychology is the worst enemy of both
Rightist and Leftist Dogmatists. True problem solving psychology comes from the place of the radical middle. It takes in all sides and all viewpoints, and it gives each its fair dues
And attention in creating a problem solving process that works from the big picture down through into the nano details.
Psychology;
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psychology
psychology.about.com/
www.psychology.org/
psychology.wikia.com/wiki/Main_Page
www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1E1...lgy.html
www.socialpsychology.org/
Brodmanns brain areas and etc;
www.umich.edu/~cogneuro/j...rodmann.html
spot.colorado.edu/~dubin/ta...dmann.html
www.whale.to/b/brain.html
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brodmann_area
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List...uman_brain
thebrain.mcgill.ca/flash/ca...ne05.html
www.csuchico.edu/~pmccaff/...unit4.html
faculty.washington.edu/chudler/qa2.html
brainwaves;
www.brainwaves.com/brain.html
pages.prodigy.net/unohu/brainwaves.htm
brain.web-us.com/brainwavesfunction.htm
www.crossroadsinstitute.org/eeg.html
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brainwaves
-
-
-
