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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Irving E. AlexanderPublisher: Duke University Press Imprint: Duke University Press ISBN: 9780822310204ISBN 10: 0822310201 Pages: 294 Publication Date: 18 December 1989 Audience: College/higher education , General/trade , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviews[Personology] is fascinating reading... It sheds valuable new light on Freud, and Jung, and their relationship, and brilliantly explores a number of central issues in the life of Harry Stack Sullivan. Its outline of methodological guidelines in personality assessment and psychobiography in Chapter 1 is an outstanding summary of a lifetime of guides to clinical inference ... It does more than any book I know of in relating general principles of personality assessment to the study of individual lives and the field of psychobiography. -William McKinley Runyon A splendid book... It will be immediately recognized as a leading example of scholarship in this vein, unique in providing explicit guidelines on how to do it, and valuable examples of how it is done... [This work] stands alone in its close intensive look at three of the greatest originators, Freud, Jung, and Sullivan. -M. Brewster Smith [Personology] is fascinating reading. . . . It sheds valuable new light on Freud, and Jung, and their relationship, and brilliantly explores a number of central issues in the life of Harry Stack Sullivan. Its outline of methodological guidelines in personality assessment and psychobiography in Chapter 1 is an outstanding summary of a lifetime of guides to clinical inference . . . . It does more than any book I know of in relating general principles of personality assessment to the study of individual lives and the field of psychobiography. -William McKinley Runyon A splendid book. . . . It will be immediately recognized as a leading example of scholarship in this vein, unique in providing explicit guidelines on how to do it, and valuable examples of how it is done. . . . [This work] stands alone in its close intensive look at three of the greatest originators, Freud, Jung, and Sullivan. -M. Brewster Smith [ Personology ] is fascinating reading. . . . It sheds valuable new light on Freud, and Jung, and their relationship, and brilliantly explores a number of central issues in the life of Harry Stack Sullivan. Its outline of methodological guidelines in personality assessment and psychobiography in Chapter 1 is an outstanding summary of a lifetime of guides to clinical inference . . . . It does more than any book I know of in relating general principles of personality assessment to the study of individual lives and the field of psychobiography. --William McKinley Runyon A splendid book... It will be immediately recognized as a leading example of scholarship in this vein, unique in providing explicit guidelines on how to do it, and valuable examples of how it is done... [This work] stands alone in its close intensive look at three of the greatest originators, Freud, Jung, and Sullivan. -M. Brewster Smith [Personology] is fascinating reading... It sheds valuable new light on Freud, and Jung, and their relationship, and brilliantly explores a number of central issues in the life of Harry Stack Sullivan. Its outline of methodological guidelines in personality assessment and psychobiography in Chapter 1 is an outstanding summary of a lifetime of guides to clinical inference ... It does more than any book I know of in relating general principles of personality assessment to the study of individual lives and the field of psychobiography. -William McKinley Runyon “A splendid book. . . . It will be immediately recognized as a leading example of scholarship in this vein, unique in providing explicit guidelines on how to do it, and valuable examples of how it is done. . . . [This work] stands alone in its close intensive look at three of the greatest originators, Freud, Jung, and Sullivan.”—M. Brewster Smith “[Personology] is fascinating reading. . . . It sheds valuable new light on Freud, and Jung, and their relationship, and brilliantly explores a number of central issues in the life of Harry Stack Sullivan. Its outline of methodological guidelines in personality assessment and psychobiography in Chapter 1 is an outstanding summary of a lifetime of guides to clinical inference . . . . It does more than any book I know of in relating general principles of personality assessment to the study of individual lives and the field of psychobiography.”—William McKinley Runyon Author InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |