Photo Album by David Blank Photo albums each hold up to 300 4x6 photographs with memo writing area on each page Archival, photo acid, lignin and PVC free
James Fadiman is an American psychologist and writer. He is acknowledged for his extensive work in the field of psychedelic research. Fadiman received a Bachelor of Social Relations from Harvard University and a Master's degree and Ph.D in Psychology from Stanford University. While in Paris in 1961, his friend and former Harvard undergraduate adviser, Ram Dass, introduced him to psychedelics. Currently a Senior Research Fellow at Sophia University, Palo Alto, California Microdose researcher and advocate.
I'm reading this for my Personality Psychology class. It explains the various theories very concisely. Having had to deal with mega textbooks, I can wholeheartedly appreciate this. Right now I'm studying Freud, Jung, Adler and Horney for an exam next week. Good stuff man!
No body told me this book until I'm doing postgrad, I'm excited to share how handy this book! It's compact and pragmatic, much more adding East Psychology (Transpersonal psychology and religions such as Buddhism, Hinduism, and Islam). My teacher even used their structure for the class. the quotation is what intrigued me the most, both Frager and Fadiman sure have a strong suit at picking words!
Creo que más que Teorías de la personalidad, debería tener incluido en el título la palabra "historia". Para mí fue más un resumen histórico que una lectura a fondo sobre las teorías per se.
20250428 ◊ Textbook for Psych 7: Theories of Personality, a prerequisite class for my grad school program. I found it to be well written, engaging, and accessible.
This was the textbook used in my PSYC 233 (Personality) class. Between taking 2 introductory psych courses, psych 30 in high school, and reading The Psychology Book, almost the first half of the textbook was nothing new. I was actually surprised that this class didn't go into any further detail than the introductory course, being a higher level course with a more focused subject matter. Skinner, Maslow, Bandura, and a few others were new, though. My teacher uses this textbook primarily for two reasons. The first is that the last 3 chapters and a small portion of chapter 12 are "transpersonal" psychology, or non-Western. It focuses on Yoga, Buddhism, and Sufi. It gives a glimpse into non-American (and non-European) views of the world. She also uses them because throughout each chapter are little exercises you can do that are supposed to help you look deeper into yourself while also helping you understand the content that you just read. You have to choose 3 to do, one from each third of the book. The content itself is easy enough to understand, though having to read a whole chapter at once was pretty dry at times. I was just disappointed with the lack of new content or more in depth content with psychologists we know very well, particularly Freud and Jung.