Karen Horney

1999-10-01 Thread Michael Sylvester
is her name really pronounced Horn-eye? is this just a form of sublimation from the implications of horny? Michael Sylvester Daytona Beach,Florida

Re: Karen Horney

1999-10-01 Thread David Wasieleski, Ph.D.
This is a new low in immaturity for this list. At 08:21 AM 10/1/99 -0400, Michael Sylvester wrote: is her name really pronounced Horn-eye? is this just a form of sublimation from the implications of horny? Michael Sylvester Daytona Beach,Florida David Wasieleski, Ph.D. Assistant

Re: Chronic Pain Addiction

1999-10-01 Thread Annette Taylor
On Thu, 30 Sep 1999, Beth Benoit wrote: I think this discussion fails to take into account a very real problem that seems especially severe for older people: They're given prescriptions for potentially addicting medications by physicians who are tired of being "bothered" by patients who

Fair Use

1999-10-01 Thread QuantyM
If you have supplemental material from a text that you assigned in one class, are you allowed to use it in a class with a different text? What if you are no longer using the text? Michael Quanty Psychology Professor CBMTS Project Director Thomas Nelson Community College P.O. Box 9407 Hampton,

Re: culture and separation-individuation?

1999-10-01 Thread Jim Clark
Hi On Thu, 30 Sep 1999, Gary Peterson wrote: I have been talking (in and out of class) about personality development and, particularly, Mahler's idea of separation-individuation which emphasizes the child's growing sense of autonomy as someone in-relation-to-yet-separate-from others. I

Re: Chronic Pain Addiction

1999-10-01 Thread Paul Brandon
At 9:41 PM -0400 9/30/99, Beth Benoit wrote: I think this discussion fails to take into account a very real problem that seems especially severe for older people: They're given prescriptions for potentially addicting medications by physicians who are tired of being "bothered" by patients

Re: culture and separation-individuation?

1999-10-01 Thread Michael Ofsowitz
Do any tipsters have sources to consult for a broader cultural perspective on the child's effort toward autonomy? Any cultural critiques of popular attachment or separation-individuation ideas, or infusion of other cultural perspectives on so-called "object-relations" views of child personality?

Re: Behavior genetics query (clarification)

1999-10-01 Thread John W. Kulig
Tipsters: I was on the right track on my last post, but, I may have said some things wrong. Let me try again. "Additive" refers to things like height (and maybe IQ) where the more genes for height you have, the taller you are. "Nonadditive" refers to cases like Mendelian recessive-dominant at a

Re: Karen Horney

1999-10-01 Thread David Wasieleski, Ph.D.
ok, ok, I officially apologize to the list (although all reactions to my comment came personally), to Michael, and to anyone who was offended by my thoughtless remark. Lord knows I have no right to call anyone immature, and the LAST thing I want is for yet another "what is appropriate for the

What's in a name?

1999-10-01 Thread RICKER
I must admit to a certain amount of adolescent enjoyment of certain names in the history of psychology and other sciences. The one name that I have difficulty mentioning without giggling like a schoolboy is Grantly Dick-Read. Feeling ashamed of myself, Jeff Ricker (the garbage-picker)

two intro psych questions I can't answer

1999-10-01 Thread Annette Taylor
I know this was discussed a while back but (1) my browser makes looking for stuff in tips archives EXTREMELY time consuming when it was 2 or 3 years ago and I would have to browse date by date from my browser :-( (2) I wasn't teaching intro at the time so didn't pay attention: (1) Why is

Re: Fair Use

1999-10-01 Thread Annette Taylor
I have always taken the tack that once I am given the ancillaries they are mine to do with as I wish, including continuing to use some of them after I switch texts--for whatever myriad of reasons I have to switch. They were only given to me because I did adopt their text and in some sense,

Re: Chronic Pain Addiction

1999-10-01 Thread Paul Brandon
Opiates (natural and synthetic) were what I had in mind. At 11:14 AM -0400 10/1/99, Beth Benoit wrote: PAUL K. BRANDON wrote: I believe that most of the addiction problem is _not_ with pain medication, but with tranquilizers and sedatives in their varoius forms. I agree that it's certainly

Re: Chronic Pain Addiction

1999-10-01 Thread Michael J. Kane
Beth Benoit wrote: Iagree that it's certainly doubtful that people become addicted to aspirin and ibuprofen. I'd say it's not so doubtful. See the following quote from The State, a newspaper in SC, Summer 1993: "While taking the occasional aspirin for a headache can be good medicine,

Re: two intro psych questions I can't answer

1999-10-01 Thread Michael J. Kane
Annette Taylor wrote: (1) Why is that a red light is often used in dark light situations-- how does it affect the adaptation of rods to low light? Mike's simplistic answer: Rods are most sensitive to the blue- green end of the visible spectrum, not the red end, so red lights do not bleach rods.

Re: Adolescent Boot Camp

1999-10-01 Thread dobosh
This was on the SPSSI list a couple of weeks ago: - Original Message - From: robin gaiason (by way of [EMAIL PROTECTED] (SPSSICentral Office)) [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Wednesday, September 29, 1999 5:29 PM Subject: Youth gulags - U.S. and Canada There exist in

Re: two intro psych questions I can't answer

1999-10-01 Thread Jim Dougan
(2) Why is the particular symptom that comes from motion sickness's root of a mismatch between visual and vestibular symptoms one related to the gut primarily, i.e., nausea and vomiting? A speculative guess. The nausea/vomiting response is a general response to poisoning. The

classical conditioning question

1999-10-01 Thread Hetzel, Roderick
I have a question about classical conditioning. Does the length of time of the acquisition trials impact the rate of extinction or spontaneous recovery? That is, if there a difference in extinction or spontaneous recovery between two stimuli that have been repeatedly paired for three decades

Re: shoe size and negative r

1999-10-01 Thread John Serafin
-- From: "Kenneth M. Steele" [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: shoe size and negative r Date: Fri, Oct 1, 1999, 3:29 PM I am looking for suggestions for a measure I can take in class that would show a negative correlation with shoe size. Any suggestions?

Re: Chronic Pain Addiction

1999-10-01 Thread Beth Benoit
Title: Re: Chronic Pain Addiction I don't see how a rebound effect can be considered addiction. Beth Benoit University of Massachusetts Lowell Beth Benoit wrote: Iagree that it's certainly doubtful that people become addicted to aspirin and ibuprofen. On Fri, 01 Oct 1999 14:12:30

Re: Chronic Pain Addiction

1999-10-01 Thread Beth Benoit
Title: Re: Chronic Pain Addiction I'm not surprised that doctors would hesitate to prescribe morphine (AND other addicting medications?) for arthritis pain - no matter how severe the case is. I hope this doesn't sound heartless, but arthritis is a tricky disease. It bears reminding that

Re: shoe size and negative r

1999-10-01 Thread Annette Taylor
I would think that as children get older and their shoe size goes up they would also mature more, so that some measure of inhibitory control could show a decrease in behavior, for example, number of times a child talks out of turn in class. Sorry but I can't come up with an adult idea. It's

Re: Karen Horney

1999-10-01 Thread Tim Shearon
No, Michael. It is just the way her name is pronounced. is this just a form of sublimation from the implications of horny? Michael Sylvester Daytona Beach,Florida ___ Timothy O. Shearon, PhD Albertson College of Idaho Department of

Re: two intro psych questions I can't answer

1999-10-01 Thread DAVID KREINER
Annette Taylor asked: (1)Why is that a red light is often used in dark light situations-- how does it affect the adaptation of rods to low light? The rods are not very sensitive to long-wavelength light, so they do not adapt to it much. (This fact about rods also explains the Purkinje

RE: two intro psych questions I can't answer

1999-10-01 Thread Gary Klatsky
In the past the Navy used red light for adapting sailors to night vision. A submarine using a periscope or surfacing in the night would be highly visible if the lights were on. The luminance levels produced by red light are low and the visual system reacts as if it were a darkened environment. In

Re: Chronic Pain Addiction

1999-10-01 Thread Kenneth M. Steele
On Fri, 01 Oct 1999 14:12:30 -0400 "Michael J. Kane" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Beth Benoit wrote: Iagree that it's certainly doubtful that people become addicted to aspirin and ibuprofen. I'd say it's not so doubtful. See the following quote from The State, a newspaper in SC,

Re: classical conditioning question

1999-10-01 Thread Nina Tarner
The length of time of acquisition would definitely have an effect on extinction, specifically because of the exposure time. Nina $$$ Nina L. Tarner$ http://www-personal.ksu.edu/~ninat

Re: Chronic Pain Addiction

1999-10-01 Thread Rick Froman
Beth Benoit writes on 1 Oct 99,: Like Annette's husband, I learned growing up that any pain and health problems are very serious and should be accorded _great_ attention. My twin sister and I rejected this attitude, while our younger sister seems to be following our mother's path of