1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
340
341
342
343
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
351
352
353
354
355
356
357
358
359
360
361
362
363
364
365
366
367
368
369
370
371
372
373
374
375
376
377
378
379
380
381
382
383
384
385
386
387
388
389
390
391
392
393
394
395
396
397
398
399
400
401
402
403
404
405
406
407
408
409
410
411
412
413
414
415
416
417
418
419
420
421
422
423
424
425
426
427
428
429
430
431
432
433
434
435
436
437
438
439
440
441
442
443
444
445
446
447
448
449
450
451
452
453
454
455
456
457
458
459
460
461
462
463
464
465
466
467
468
469
470
471
472
473
474
475
476
477
478
479
480
481
482
483
484
485
486
487
488
489
490
491
492
493
494
495
496
497
498
499
500
501
502
503
504
505
506
507
508
509
510
511
512
513
514
515
516
517
518
519
520
521
522
523
524
525
526
527
528
529
530
531
532
533
534
535
536
|
Chapter 1:
\defbknote{1.1}{
Leuner, H.
\et{Present State of Psycholytic Therapy and Its Possibilities} in
\jt{The Use of LSD in Psychotherapy and Alcoholism}
H. Abramson (ed.)
Bobbs Merrill, New York, 1967.}
\defbknote{1.2}{
Becker, H.
\et{History, Culture, and Subjective Experience: an exploration of the social bases of drug induced experiences,} in
\jt{Journal of Health and Social Behavior}
(1969)}
\defbknote{1.3}{
Cheek, F.
\et{Exploratory Study of Drugs and Interaction,} in
\jt{Archives of General Psychiatry}
9:566--574, 1963}
\defbknote{1.4}{
Mechaneck, R., Feldstein, S., Dahlberg, C. and Jaffe, J.
\et{Experimental Investigation of LSD as a Psychotherapeutic Adjunct.}
Paper read at 1967 AOA meeting.}
{1.5}{
Linton, H. and Lang, R.,
\et{Subjective Reactions to LSD-25,}
\jt{Archives of General Psychiatry}
6:352--368 1962.}
{1.6}{
Blum, R., \e{et al.}
\bt{Utopiates}
Atherton Press, New York, 1964.}
{1.7}{Cohen, S. Personal communication.}
{1.8}{
Masters, E. and Huston, J.
\bt{The Varieties of Psychedelic Experience}.
Holt, Rinehart and Winston, New York, 1966.}
{1.9}{Gioscia, V.
\et{Adolescence, Addiction, and Achrony} in
\jt{Personality and Social Life}
R. Endleman (ed.)\ednote{May actually be Charles H. Page.}
Random House, New York, 1967. Also reprinted in appendix.}
{1.10}{
Laing, R. D.
\bt{The Politics of Experience}
Penguin Books, New York, 1967.}
% chapter 2
{2.1}{Gioscia, V., \et{Adolescence, Addition, and Achrony,} see \refbknote{1.9}}
{2.2}{Gioscia, V.
\et{Glue Sniffing: Exploratory Hypotheses on the Psychosocial Dynamics of Respiratory Introjection}
in proceedings of a conference on \e{Inhalation of Glue Fumes and Other Substance Abuse Practices Among Adolescents}, Office of Juvenile Delinquency and Youth Development, U. S. Dept. of Health, Education and Welfare, Washington, D. C., 1967. Also reprinted in appendix.}
{2.3}{Gioscia, V.
\et{Psychological and Sociological Proneness to Drug Use in Young People.}
Paper presented to Amherst College Symposium \e{The Drug Scene,} 1967.}
{2.4}{Gioscia, V. \et{LSD Subcultures: Acidoxy Versus Orthodoxy} See Chapter 1, this volume.}
{2.5}{Marcuse, H., \bt{Eros and Civilization} Beacon Press, Boston, 1955.}
{2.6}{Marcuse, H., \bt{One Dimensional Man} Tavistock Publications London, 1967.}
{3.1}{Gioscia, V. \et{LSD Subcultures: Acidoxy Versus Orthodoxy} See Chapter 1, this volume.}
{3.2}{Gioscia, V. \et{Groovin' on time} See Chapter 2, this volume.}
{3.3}{Gioscia, V. \et{On Dialectical Time} See Metalog, this volume.}
{3.4}{\et{Status Report \#1} of The Village Project, a social agency for alienated youth sponsored by Jewish Family Service of New York. September, 1968 (mimeo).}
{3.5}{Kenniston, K.,
\et{Heads and Seekers: Drugs on Campus, Counter Cultures in American Society}
\jt{American Scholar}, vol. 28, no. 1:97--112, 1969.}
{3.6}{\jt{Mayday}, January 20, 1969, \#14.}
{3.7}{Gioscia, V., \et{On Social Time.} See Metalog, this volume.}
{3.8}{Gioscia, V., \et{Adolescence, Addiction, and Achrony,} op. cit.}
{3.9}{Dunaif, C. and Gioscia, V., \et{Violence and Family Process.}
Report to the National Crime Commission, in archives of
President's Commission on Law Enforcement and the Administration of Justice, Washington, 1966.}
{3.10}{Gioscia, V., \et{Sources of Violence in Contemporary America.}
Paper presented to Farmingdale Public Library Association,
October, 1968 (mimeo).}
{3.11}{Kurland, A. and Unger, S., \et{The Present Status and Future
Direction of Psychedelic LSD Research with Special Reference
to the Spring Grove Studies,} January, 1969 (mimeo).}
{3.12}{Whitrow, G. J., \bt{The Natural Philosophy of Time}. Harper
(Torchbook), New York, 1963.}
{3.13}{Hegel, G. W. F., \bt{Logik}, 2 volumes.}
{3.14}{Gioscia, V., \et{Plato's Image of Time.} Ann Arbor, University
Microfilms, 1963.}
{3.15}{James. W., \bt{Varieties of Religious Experience}, various editions.}
{3.16}{Bateson, G., Jackson, Weakland, D., Hally, J., \et{Toward a Theory
of Schizophrenia.} Reprint from Behavioral Science, vol. 1. no.
4:251--264, 1956.}
{3.17}{Laing, R. D., \bt{The Politics of Experience}. Penguin Books,
London, 1966.}
{3.18}{Feuer, L., \et{What is Alienation? The Career of a Concept} in
\bt{Sociology on Trial}, M. Stein and A. Vidich (eds.), Prentice-Hall,
New York, 1963.}
Chapter 4:
{4.1}{Gioscia, V., \et{Groovin' on Time.} See Chapter 2, this volume.}
{4.2}{Gioscia, V., \et{On Social Time.} See Metalog, this volume.}
{4.3}{Whitehead, A. N., \bt{Science in the Modern World}. New American
Library (Various editions).}
{4.4}{Gioscia, V., \et{Groovin' on Time.} See Chapter 2, this volume.}
{4.5}{McCluhan, M. and Fiore, Q., \bt{The Global Village}. McGraw-Hill,
New York, 1968.}
{4.6}{Roszak, T., \bt{The Making of a Counter-Culture}. Doubleday, New
York, 1969.}
{4.7}{Gioscia, V., \et{Time, Pathos, and Synchrony.} See Chapter 3, this
volume.}
{4.8}{Marcuse, H., \bt{Negations}. Beacon Press, Boston, 1968.}
{4.9}{Ryan, P., \et{Cable Television and the Schools,} in \bt{Birth, Death
and Cybernation}. Gordon and Breach, New York, 1972.}
{4.10}{\jt{New York Times}, January 6, 1969.}
{4.11}{With the cooperation of Frank Gillette and others who then
constituted The Raindance Corporation.}
{4.12}{Ragosine, V., \et{Magnetic Recording,} \jt{Scientific American}, November, 1969. See also \jt{Dow Digest}, July, 1969 for a description of Precision Instrument's \dq{Unicorn System.}}
{4.13}{The \jt{New York Times} recently contained the news that the
Republic of India was installing just such a system to foster
literacy in some 10,000 villages. (This project has since been
\dq{cancelled.})
{4.14}{Pribram, K., \et{The Neurophysiology of Remembering,} \jt{Scientific American}, January, 1969.}
{4.15}{New York Times, circa September, 1969.}
{4.16}{Time Magazine, July 18, 1969.}
{4.17}{I am indebted to Dr. Warren Brodey for a stimulating discussion
of his \dq{play} (as opposed to \dq{work}) at the Environmental
Ecology Laboratory in Boston, and for his presentation at
\dq{Grand Rounds} at The Roosevelt Hospital under the auspices
of The Center for the Study of Social Change, on October 23,
1969.}
{4.18}{\dq{Chronetics} is the field which investigates temporal processes.
For a fuller description, see \et{On Social Time,} Metalog, this
volume.}
{4.19}{e.g. Bateson, G., \et{Cybernetic Explanation,} The American
Behavioral Scientist, vol. 10, no. 8, April 1967.}
% chapter 5
{5.1}{Keniston, K., \et{Notes on Young Radicals,} \jt{Change,} vol. 1, no.
6:25 et seq., 1969.}
{5.2}{Grimshaw, A. D., \et{Sociolinguistics and the Sociologist,} \jt{American Sociologist,} vol. 4, no. 4:312 et seq., 1969.}
{5.3}{Kluckhohn, C., Murray, H. and Schneider, \bt{Culture and Personality}. Knopf, New York, 1953.}
{5.4}{Gioscia, V., \et{LSD Subcultures: Acidoxy Versus Orthodoxy.}}
{5.5}{Simmons, J. and Winograd, B., \bt{It's Happening.} Mark-Laird
Publications, Santa Barbara, California, 1966.}
{5.6}{Shands, H., \bt{Semiotic Approaches to Psychiatry}. Mouton, The
Hague, 1970. See also Shands, H., \bt{War with Words}, Mouton,
The Hague, 1971.}
{5.7}{Gioscia, V., \et{The Coming Synthesis: Chronetics and Cybernetics.} Paper presented to the International Convocation entitled \dq{The Revolution in Values---The Response of the Healer},
sponsored by the American Academy of Religion and Psychiatry, November 14, 1969. See Metalog, this volume.}
{5.8}{McLuhan, M., \bt{The Global Village.} McGraw-Hill, New York, 1968.}
{5.9}{Gioscia, V., \et{Groovin' on Time.}}
{5.10}{McLuhan, op. cit.}
{5.11}{Gioscia, V., \et{Time, Pathos and Synchrony.} Paper presented to the Annual Convention of the American Orthopsychiatric Association, April, 1969. See Chapter 3, this volume.}
{5.12}{Rabkin, R., \et{Do You See Things That Aren't There?} in \bt{Origin
and Mechanisms of Hallucinations}, W. Keup, ed. Plenum Press,
New York-London, 1970. pp. 115--124.}
{5.13}{Wittgenstein, L. \bt{Tractatus logico-philosophicus}}
{5.14}{Gioscia, V., \et{Groovin' on Time.}}
{5.15}{The imprinting literature is extensive; see especially Tinbergen
and\slash or Lorenz.}
{5.16}{Scheflen, A. E., \et{On the Structuring of Human Communication,} \jt{American Behavioral Scientist,} 10:8--12, 1967. Scheflen,
A. E., \et{Human Communication, Behavioral Programs and their
Integration in Interaction,} \jt{Behavioral Science,} 13:44--55, 1968.
Scheflen, A. E., \bt{How Behavior Means}, Gordon and Breach, New
York, 1972. See also Birdwhistle, R., \bt{Introduction to Kinesics},
University of Kentucky Press, Louisville, 1955.}
{5.17}{McClean, P. D., \et{The Paranoid Streak in Man,} in \bt{Beyond
Reductionism}. Hutchinson \& Co.}
{5.18}{Mead, M. \bt{Culture and Commitment}, Doubleday, 1970.}
% ch. 6
{6.1}{Whitehead, A. N., \bt{Modes of Thought}. 1938, p. 129.}
{6.2}{Mead, M., \bt{Culture and Commitment}. 1970, p. 64, op. cit.}
{6.3}{Fuller, Buckminster, \bt{Utopia or Oblivion}. 1970, p. 310, Bantam.}
{6.4}{Fuller, Buckminster, op. cit., epilogue.}
%ch. 9
{9.1}{Whitrow, G. J., \bt{The Natural Philosophy of Time}. Harper, New
York, 1963.}
{9.2}{Hegel, G. W. F., \bt{Lectures on the History of Philosophy}, E. S.
Haldane (ed. and transl.), 3 vol. Humanities Press, New York,
1955.}
{9.3}{Durkheim, E., \bt{Suicide}, J. A. Spaulding and G. Simpson (eds. and
transl.). Free Press, Glencoe, 1951.}
{9.4}{Freud, S., \et{Civilization and its Discontents,} Standard Edition, \bt{The Complete Psychological Works of Sigmund Freud}, J. Strachey (ed. and transl.), vol. XXI. Hogarth Press, London, 1964.}
{9.5}{Marcuse, H., \bt{Eros and Civilization}. Vintage Books, New York, 1962.}
{9.6}{Brown, N. O., \bt{Life Against Death}. Vintage Books, New York, 1959.}
{9.7}{Indeed the impact of these words was to fashion better, not less socialization.}
{9.8}{Whitehead, A. N., \bt{Science in the Modern World}. Macmillan, New York, 1926.}
{9.9}{The following section is a modified version of a paper entitled
\et{Typology Construction} delivered at the Eastern Sociological
Society, Boston, 1963.}
{9.10}{Whitehead, A. N. \bt{Process and Reality}. Social Science Publishers,
New York, 1929. Cf. espec. chapter 2.}
{9.11}{Heidegger, M., \bt{Being and Time}, J. Macquarrie and E. Robinson
(transl. from the 7\tss{th} edition of \bt{Sein and Zeit}). SCM Press,
London, 1962.}
{9.12}{De Benedetti, S., \et{The Mossbauer Effect,} \jt{Scientific American,}
April, 1960, p. 72 et seq.}
{9.13}{Like the Eskimo who has many words for snow, we seem to
need literally hundreds of phrases with the word "time" in them
to capture the varieties of temporal experience. Professor
Murray and I discovered, to our mutual surprise, that we were
each making a compilation of such phrases (personal communication, 1965).}
{9.14}{Kiang Kang-Hu, \et{How Time and Space Appear to Chinese
Poets,} chapter 2 in \bt{On Chinese Studies}. Commercial Press,
Shanghai, China, 1934. (I am grateful to my former colleague
Prof. B. Solomon for this reference.)}
{9.15}{See for example: V. Gioscia, \bt{Plato's Image of Time: An Essay
in Philosophical Sociology}, Fordham University, 1962, unpub.
Ph.D. dissertation. (Reproduced in appendix.) G. J. Whitrow, op. cit. R. Maclver, \bt{The
Challenge of the Passing Years: My Encounter with Time},
Simon and Schuster, New York, 1962. G. Gurvitch, \bt{The
Spectrum of Social Time}, Reidel Co., Stuttgart, 1963. Coser and
Coser, \et{Time Perspective and Social Structure,} in Gouldner,
\bt{Modern Sociology}, Harcourt Brace, New York, 1963, pp.
638--646. H. Meyerhoff, \bt{Time in Literature}, University of
California Press, Berkeley, 1955. M. Heidegger, ed., \bt{The Phenomenology of Internal Time-Consciousness}, J. Churchill,
transl., Martinus Nijhoff, The Hague, 1964. See also, M. Wallace,
\et{Temporal Experience,} \jt{Psychological Bulletin}, vol. 57, no.
3:213--237, 1960, et al.}
{9.16}{Coser and Coser, \et{Time Perspective and Social Structure,} in
Gouldner, op. cit. for a good initial bibliography.}
{9.17}{Mann, T., \bt{The Holy Sinners}, H. T. Lowe-Porter (transl.). Knopf,
New York, 1951.}
{9.18}{I am indebted to Prof. B. Nelson of the New School for Social
Research for the observation that these eternalists qualify as cell
IV types. My view on this appears \e{infra.}}
{9.19}{Murray, H. and Kluckhohn, C. (eds.), \bt{Personality in Nature,
Society and Culture} (2\tss{nd} ed.), Knopf, New York, 1954; and
Erikson, E., \et{Identity and the Lifecycle,} Monograph, \jt{Psychological Issues}, vol. 1, no. 1, International Universities Press, New York, 1959.}
{9.20}{Shakespeare, W., \bt{Hamlet} (variously reprinted), Act I, Scene V,
11, 188--189:
\Q{"The time is out of joint; O cursed spite.\nl
That ever I was born to set it right!"}}
{9.21}{We hook up an accelerometer, as it were, to the Mertonian
paradigm. Cf. R. K. Merton, \bt{Social Theory and Social Structure}.
Free Press, Glencoe, 1955.}
{9.22}{See \et{The Pseudo-Successful Adult: A Case Study of the
Metachronic Orientation,} by V. Gioscia, paper delivered to the
17\tss{th} annual meeting of the New York Society of Clinical
Psychologists, New York, 1965.}
{9.23}See, however, the brilliant paper by P. Slater, \et{On Social
Regression,} \jt{American Sociological Review}, 28:339--364, 1963.}
{9.24}{Cf. V. Gioscia, \et{Groovin' on Time,} paper presented to the
Hahneman Medical College Conference on Psychedelic Drugs,
November, 1968. See Chapter 2, this volume.}
{9.25}{An advance toward a more empirical analysis of this question
has recently been made by my former colleague Herbert Danzger
in \et{Community Power Structure: Problems and Continuities,}
\jt{American Sociological Review}, 29:707--717, 1964.}
{9.26}{Eisenstadt, S., \bt{From Generation to Generation}. Free Press,
Glencoe, 1955. See also, A. Van Gennep, \bt{Rites de Passage}, M.
Vizedom and G. Caffee (transl.). University of Chicago Press,
Chicago, 1960.}
{9.27}{Gioscia, V., \et{Adolescence, Addiction and Achrony,} in \bt{Personality and Social Life}, R. Endleman (ed.). Random House, New York, 1965.}
{9.28}{Remarks elicited on the occasion of a colloquium which
Professor Lewis gave at Queens College of the City University of
New York on Oct. 30, 1964.}
{9.29}{Cohen, A., \bt{Delinquent Boys}. Free Press, Glencoe, 1955. See
also, R. J. Barndt and D. M. Johnson, \et{Time Orientation in
Delinquents,} \jt{Journal of Abnormal Social Psychology,}
51:343--345, 1955.}
{9.30}{This section is a slightly edited version of a paper presented to
the International Congress---Dialectics of Liberation, London,
July, 1967.}
{9.31}{Freud, S., \bt{New Introductory Lectures,} Standard Edition, op.
cit., vol. XXII, p. 14.}
{9.32}{Marcuse, H., op. cit., pp. 211--212.}
{9.33}{For a particularly instructive exigesis of Heidegger's view of
time, see, for example, William Barrett, \et{The Flow of Time,} in
R. M. Gale (ed.), \bt{The Philosophy of Time}. Doubleday Anchor,
New York, 1967.}
{9.34}{Marcuse, H., \bt{One Dimensional Man}. Tavistock, London, 1967.}
{9.35}{Cf. M. Natanson (ed.), \bt{Philosophy of the Social Sciences.}
Random House, New York, 1963.}
{9.36}{For a recent history of the varieties of phenomenological
philosophies, cf. H. Spiegelberg, (ed.), \bt{The Phenomenological
Movement}, 2 vols. Martinus Nijhoff, The Hague, 1968.}
{9.37}{See, for example, his chapter, \et{Time Perception in Children,} in
J. Fraser (ed.), \bt{The Voices of Time}. George Brazillier, New
York, 1966.}
{9.38}{See Bergson, \bt{Time and Free Will}. London, 1910.}
{9.39}{Fraisse, P. \bt{The Psychology of Time}. Harper, New York, 1963.}
{9.40}{Meerloo, \et{The Time Sense in Psychiatry,} in Fraser, op. cit., pp.
235 et seq.}
{9.41}{Cf., however, R. Wallis, \bt{Time: Fourth Dimension of the Mind},
Harcourt Brace and World, New York, 1968, for a cybernetic
treatment without this failing.}
{9.42}{Sartre, J. P., \bt{Search for a Method}. Knopf, New York, 1963.}
{9.43}{Gioscia, V. \bt{Plato's Image of Time}, op. cit.}
{9.44}{Cf. Popper, K., \bt{The Poverty of Historicism}.}
{9.45}{Private communication, cited in P. Laurie, \bt{Drugs---Medical,
Psychological and Social Facts}. Penguin Books, New York, 1967.}
{9.46}{Standard Edition, op. cit., vol. XIX, p. 235 et seq.}
{9.47}{Cf. Wallis, R., op cit.}
{9.48}{Portions of this section derive from the paper, \et{Time, Pathos,
and Synchrony.} See Chapter 3, this volume.}
{9.49}{Gioscia, V., \et{Groovin' on Time.} See Chapter 2, this volume.}
{9.50}{Kurland, A. and Unger S., \et{The Present Status and Future
Direction of Psychedelic LSD Research,} with special reference
to the Spring Grove Studies, January, 1969 (mimeo).}
{9.51}{Whitrow, op. cit., provides the best definition of this term. See
also Wallis, op: cit.}
{9.52}{James, W., \bt{The Varieties of Religious Experience}, various
editions.}
{9.53}{Bateson, G., Jackson, D., Haley, J. and Weekland, J., \et{Toward a
Theory of Schizophrenia,} \jt{Behavioral Science}, vol. 1, no.
4:251--264, 1956. See also \et{A Note on the Double Bind---1962} by the same authors in \jt{Family Process}, vol. 2, no. 1,
1963, and Watzlawick, P., \et{A Review of the Double Bind
Theory,} Family Process, vol. 2, no. 1, 1963.}
{9.64}{Laing, R., \bt{The Politics of Experience and The Bird of Paradise},
Penguin Books, London, 1967, and the other works by the man
whom \jt{Time} magazine calls \dq{The Metaphysician of Madness}
(issue of Feb. 7, 1969).}
{9.55}{My colleague Richard Rabkin has taken a significant step in this
direction, however, in his \et{Affect as a Social Process,} \jt{American
Journal of Psychiatry}, vol. 125, no. 6:85--91, 1968.}
{9.56}{Freud, S., \et{Group Psychology and the Analysis of the Ego,}
Standard Edition, op. cit., vol. XIX.}
{9.57}{Gioscia, V., \et{Perspective for Role Theory,} \jt{American Catholic
Sociological Review}, vol. 22, no. 2:142--150, 1961. See also,
Gioscia, V., \et{Types of Types} in \bt{Expanding Theory and Practice
in Family Therapy}, N. Ackerman et al. (eds.) Family Service
Association of America, New York, 1967. Both are reproduced in the appendix.}
{9.58}{See M. Marx (ed.), \bt{Theories in Contemporary Psychology},
Macmillan, New York, 1964, chapter 28: \et{Affect and Emotion,} H. Peters, espec. pp. 440--442. See also: P. H. Knapp,
\bt{Expression of the Emotions in Man}, International Universities
Press, New York, 1963.}
{9.59}{See, for example, the beginnings of such an investigation
employing the clinical method in N. Ackerman, \nt{Psychodynamics
of Family Life}, Basic Books, New York, 1958. But also see P.
Slater, op. cit.}
{9.60}{We intend to spell out these relations more fully in a work now
in preparation.}
{9.61}{Hegel, G. W. F., \bt{Phenomenology of Mind}, Sir J. Baillie (transl.),
2\tss{nd} ed. rev. Macmillan, New York, 1949. See also Hegel's
\bt{Science of Logic}, 2 vol. Macmillan, New York, 1929.}
{9.62}{See L. Feuer, \et{Alienation---The Career of a Concept} in
\bt{Sociology on Trial}, M. Stein and A. Vidich (eds.), Prentice-Hall,
New York, 1963, pp. 127 et seg. See also P. Berger and S.
Pullberg, \et{Reification and the Sociological Critique of Consciousness,} in \jt{History and Theory}, vol. 4, no. 2:196 et seq., 1965.}
{9.63}{Cf. M. Eliade, \bt{Cosmos and History---The Myth of the Eternal
Return}. Harper, New York, 1954.}
{9.64}{This phrase is one of a number of translations of a fragment of
Anaximander. See, for example, \bt{The Greek Philosophers}, R.
Warner. Mentor, New York, 1958, p. 24.}
{9.65}{Choron, J., \bt{Death in Western Thought}. Collier Books, New
York, 1963.}
{9.66}{The New York Academy of Science recently convened an
Interdisciplinary Conference on time, in which the matter of
\dq{natural clocks} received nearly definitive treatment. See their
\et{Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Time,} Proceedings, \jt{Journal
of the American Academy of Science}, 1967.}
{9.67}{See, for example, H. F. Harlow, \et{The Heterosexual Affectional
System in Monkeys,} \jt{American Psychologist,} 17:1}
{9.68}{Moore, W., Man, \bt{Time and Society}. Wiley, New York, 1963.}
{9.69}{Gurvitch, G., \bt{The Spectrum of Social Time}, F. Reidel, Dordrecht, Holland, 1964, a work whose intelligibility is hidden
behind an almost impenetrably private vocabulary.}
{9.70}{Slater, P., \bt{Microcosm}. Wiley, New York 1966. Those who seek a
paradigm of excellence in their quest for understanding of group
affect will find it in Slater's work. See also his \bt{Pursuit of
Loneliness}, Beacon Press, Boston, 1970.}
{9.71}{Cf. Harley Shands, \et{Coping with Novelty,} \jt{Archives of General
Psychiatry}, vol. 20, no. 1:64--70, 1969.}
{9.72}{Sherif, M., \et{A Study of Some Social Factors in Perception,}
\jt{Archives of Psychology}, no. 187, 1935.}
{9.73}{See Laqueuer, H. P., Morong, E., and LaBurt, H., \et{Multiple
Therapy: Further Developments,} \jt{International Journal of
Social Psychiatry}, August, 1964.}
{9.74}{Nevertheless, we shall report on these observations eventually.}
{9.75}{Cornellison, F. and Arsenian, J., \et{A Study of Psychotic Patients
(exposure) to Self-Image Experience,} \jt{Psychiatric Quarterly}, 34:
1--8, 1960.}
{9.76}{Murray, H., \et{Studies of Stressful Interpersonal Disputations,}
\jt{American Psychologist}, 18: 28--36, 1963. See also, Nielson, G.,
\bt{Studies of Self-Confrontation}, Munksgaard, Copenhagen, 1962,
pp. 221 et seq.}
{9.77}{The relevance of these \dq{moving images} of the self to the
theories of Mead, Cooley, and their contemporary \dq{self-image}
protagonists remains to be elaborated.}
{9.78}{Although videotherapy technique has since come into its own,
the theory seems to be emerging far slower than the process. The
work of Albert Scheflen is likely soon to remedy this situation.
See however, Berger, M. M. (ed.), \bt{Videotape Techniques in
Psychiatric Training and Treatment}, Brunner\slash Mazel, New York,
1970.}
{9.79}{Eliot, T. S. (from \et{Burnt Norton}) in \bt{Four Quarters}, Harcourt,
Brace and World, New York, 1943, p. 4.}
{9.80}{Freud, S., \et{New Introductory Lectures,} Standard Edition, op.
cit., vol. XXII, p. 74.}
{9.81}{Galileo, \bt{Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems},
Stillman Drake (transl.), forward by Albert Einstein. University
of California Press, Berkeley, 1967.}
|