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Una relación turbulenta donde la admiración y la envidia se entrecruza hasta que una de las dos sale derrotada.
First part of “La Fábrica” Years ago, In Puente Viejo, a terrible tragedy happened in a factory which has marked the future of seven teenagers. Given up for adoption, scattered in different homes and with no memory of their past, a doctor is searching to have them reunited before they turn eighteen, when they will undergo a terrible transformation of which they know nothing. Discover the legend of the man without fingers who is the link between these seven teenagers.
El miedo a morir puede volver a cualquier persona en un ser mezquino.
First part of The Orphanage Tristan has been suffering from hallucinations since before he was four years old. Ghosts live around him and whisper to him that he must kill someone. At the age of nine, after threatening one of his classmates, his adoptive parents decide to put him in a psychiatric clinic in the hope that the boy will recover, but he has more and more visions, until one of them reveals the name of an orphanage and he decides to investigate what relation this place has with the apparitions he has been suffering for as long as he can remember.
Las almas en pena solo vuelven por dos motivos. Procura no equivocarte en la decisión que tomes.
Continuation of The Orphanage, Sariel's Children. Tristan arrives at the village where the orphanage where his ghosts seem to guide him is located. There, with the help of a girl, he will begin to discover all of the history that lies behind the crumbling walls of the orphanage.
Un hombre se ve asediado por la presencia de un muerto y por más que lo intenta no es capaz de quitárselo de encima.
The aim of this unique book is to provide an overview of recent advances bridging the gap between psychiatry and neuroscience, allowing a fruitful dialogue between both sciences. The emerging interactions and mutual contributions between neuroscience and psychiatry are here recognized. This book is designed to identify the borders, trends and implications in both fields today. Comprehensive and developed by a renowned group of experts from both fields, the book is divided into four parts: Epistemological Considerations About the Study of Normal and Abnormal Human Behaviors; From Basic Neurosciences to Human Brain; Neurosciences, Learning, Teaching and the Role of Social Environment; and Explaining Human Pathological Behaviors: From Brain Disorders to Psychopathology. A unique and invaluable addition to the literature in psychiatry and neuroscience, Psychiatry and Neuroscience Update – Vol. II: A Translational Approach offers an important and clearer understanding of the relationship between these two disciplines. This book is directed to students, professionals and researchers of medicine, psychology, psychopedagogy and nursery./div
This book aims to provide the reader a neuroscientific understanding surrounding a very simple question: how do we learn not to fear? Exploring answers to this question is very important for two reasons. First, learning about the neural mechanisms of fear extinction is of relevance to everyone’s life - it is such a basic yet relevant question to our daily experiences. Therefore, understanding brain mechanisms of fear and its regulation is essential from a basic neuroscience point of view. Second, excessive fear and the inability to regulate its expression is one of the hallmarks of fear-, anxiety-, trauma-, and stressor-related psychopathologies. And as such, learning about how fear is acq...
This book explores the impact of developments in pharmaceutical medicine in the twentieth century on a Christian ethical evaluation of transhumanism and future "hi-tech" medical enhancement technologies. It suggests that the Christian ethical assessment of proposed future radical transhumanist biomedical technologies should be conducted in the light of responses to past medical advances. Two specific case studies are featured, focusing on the oral contraceptive pill and on Prozac and selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) antidepressants. Whilst future biomedical technologies may have therapeutic benefits for the relief of disease and contribute to improving human health and welfare, the book considers the implications for society and their acceptability as therapies from a Christian perspective. Stressing the inadequacy of natural law alone, the author proposes an ethical framework for assessing novel biomedical technologies according to the effects on personal autonomy, embodiment and bodily life, and on the imago Dei.