You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.
Using the work of Wittgenstein, John Heaton challenges the notion of theoretical expertise on the mind, arguing for a new understanding of therapy as an attempt by patients to express themselves in an effort to see and say what has not been said or seen, and accept that the world is not as fixed as they are constituting it.
The book intend to offer a detailed account of the radical transformation of marriage and the family, and of some of the implications for the family law of the interim Constitution.
None
In the last 15 years there has been a change in direction in our understanding of Wittgenstein; the 'resolute' reading of him places great emphasis on his therapeutic intent and argues that the aim of Wittgenstein's thought is to show how language functions. This book argues that this is highly relevant to understanding psychotherapy.
A short collection of poems that explore the beauty, tragedy and art behind birth, life, and death.
Dandelion is a collection of poetry by J. B. Heaton, in which he braids the symbolism of dandelions with together with narrative tales of growing up in rural America. He examines what it feels like to live in many different types of worlds without truly belonging to one.
While scholars traditionally have considered land to be one of the great issues in Irish history, towns, by contrast, have frequently been regarded as the creation of intrusive colonial elites and therefore not fully representative of Irish culture and identity. Even today, despite the recent reinvigoration of Irish historical writing, Irish urban history remains largely neglected by scholars. Very few works have explored the causes and consequences of the widespread urban improvement that occurred throughout the country during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Here for the first time the traditional historical concerns for landownership and agrarian society are combined with an analy...