Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Science - Ecopsychology

e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 3     41-60 of 97    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Ecopsychology:     more books (23)
  1. Ecopsychology: Restoring the Earth, Healing the Mind
  2. Sight and Sensibility : The Ecopsychology of Perception by Laura Sewall, 1999-10-04
  3. The Voice of the Earth: An Exploration of Ecopsychology by Theodore Roszak, 2001-12-01
  4. Radical Ecopsychology: Psychology in the Service of Life (Suny Series in Radical Social and Political Theory) by Andy Fisher, 2002-02-21
  5. Ecopsychology by Vladimir Antonov, 2008-09-27
  6. The Web of Life Imperative: Regenerative Ecopsychology Techniques that Help People Think in Balance with Natural Systems by Ed.D Michael J. Cohen, 2003-06-16
  7. Out of the Shadow: Ecopsychology, Story, and Encounters with the Land (Under the Sign of Nature: Explorations in Ecocriticism) by Rinda West, 2007-11-01
  8. Ecopsychology as Ultimate Force Psychology by Jorge Conesa Ph.D. Sevilla, 2006-10-25
  9. Environmental Psychology: Wayfinding, Human Factors, Cognitive Ergonomics, Ecopsychology, Behavioral Geography, Ecological Psychology, Socio-architecture, ... Ecology, Architecture, Behavioural Sciences.
  10. Cultural Ecopsychology: Displacement and The Urban African American Community by Jeanine M. Canty, 2000-01-01
  11. Out of the Shadow: Ecopsychology, Story, and Encounters with the Land.(Book review): An article from: MELUS by Tom J. Hillard, 2009-06-22
  12. THE VOICE OF THE EARTH An Exploration of Ecopsychology by Theodore Roszak, 1993
  13. Sight &_Sensibility :: The Ecopsychology of Perception by Lsurs Sewsl, 1999
  14. Stewards of Spirit: Awakening in the Light of Rachel's Ballads by Gianetta Ellis, 2007-05-08

41. Ecopsychology - Books - Sierra Club
ecopsychology Restoring the Earth, Healing the Mind. Edited Mary E.Gomes teaches ecopsychology at Sonoma State University. Allen
http://www.sierraclub.org/books/catalog/0871564068.asp
Select an Issue Clean Water Energy Global Population Human Rights Protect National Forests Responsible Trade Stop Sprawl Stop Global Warming Wildlands Campaign More Issues Select a Place Alabama Alaska Arizona Arkansas California Canada Colorado Connecticut Delaware District of Columbia Florida Georgia Hawaii Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska Nevada New Hampshire New Jersey New Mexico New York North Carolina North Dakota Ohio Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode Island South Carolina South Dakota Tennessee Texas Utah Vermont Virginia Washington West Virginia Wisconsin Wyoming
Store
Main Books Main ... Special Buys Books for Kids Picture Books Middle Readers Young Adults Submission Guidelines
Ecopsychology
Restoring the Earth, Healing the Mind Edited by Theodore Roszak, Mary E. Gomes, and Allen D. Kanner
ISBN: 0871564068
352 pages
Price: $16.95 paperback This pathfinding collection shows how the health of the planet is inextricably linked to the psychological health of humanity, individually and collectively. As such, it is sure to become a definitive work for the burgeoning ecopsychology movement, which is both a new beginning for environmentalism and a revolution in modern psychology. Collected here are writings from the premier psychotherapists, thinkers, and eco-activists working in the field, including:
  • James Hillman, world-renowned Jungian analyst, relating the "one core issue for all psychology" - the nature and limits of human identity - to the condition of the planet

42. Scott Taylor's Research In Ecopsychology
Scott Taylor's Research in ecopsychology. An Exploration of Wilderness EffectsA Phenomenological Inquiry. Chapter One ecopsychology and Nature Reconnection.
http://www.c-zone.net/taylors/
Scott Taylor's Research in Ecopsychology An Exploration of Wilderness Effects: A Phenomenological Inquiry By Scott Taylor taylors@c-zone.net Abstract: Introduction Chapter One Chapter Two Chapter Three ... Appendices A, B, C and Bibliography Further Writings in Humanistic and Ecopsychology A Brief History of the Perennial Question: Western Views on the Natural World Sedge Grass: The Roots of Pomoan Identity About the Author (Scott Taylor) Related Links Link to Eagle Mountain Institute Web Site Link to International Community for Ecopsychology http://www.askalana.com/ I ntroduction T of a world. There seems to me to be a dearth of qualitative, phenomenologically based studies in this area, which would attempt to reveal, in a non-biased way, without possible results skewing hypotheses, the significance of the type of psychological and possible spiritual processes and changes that have been reported and can take place during extended wilderness stays. I believe the relative absence of presuppositions involving hypotheses will enable themes to emerge from the twelve interviews I have conducted as part of this study. These themes then will have come more or less directly from my co-researcher’s (interviewee's) experiences of wilderness. Staying true to the spirit of phenomenological inquiry and watching themes emerge organically, so to speak, is both inspiring and encouraging. What this and other similar studies have found could open the doors for further research in this area. One point of this study is just that; to further open, for heuristic purposes, phenomenological inquiry and qualitative research in this area by helping to formulate more ideas and questions regarding the nature of wilderness experience and its implications. It is my hope that this will facilitate the honoring, on a wider scale, of these processes and experiences and take a step toward a deeper understanding of interrelationship and the profoundly symbiotic nature of our existence with our beloved and endangered earth.

43. Cultural Ecopsychology
Cultural ecopsychology Issues of Displacement and the Urban AfricanCommunity Greetings! This site shares sections of my thesis
http://www.prescott.edu/users/jcanty/
Cultural Ecopsychology: Issues of Displacement and the Urban African Community Greetings! This site shares sections of my thesis completed in August 2000 as part of the requirements for my MA in Cultural Ecopsychology from Prescott College. Many of the ideas present are not comprehensive of my beliefs and the context of application. However this work was divinely inspired and, I feel, is important to share. Thank you for taking the time to read this and feel free to contact me with any comments. Jeanine M. Canty Acknowledgements About the Author Introduction ... Definition of Key Terms last updated:

44. Cultural Ecopsychology: Literature Review
Cultural ecopsychology Issues of Displacement and the Urban African CommunityLiterature Review. My field of study is Cultural ecopsychology and Education.
http://www.prescott.edu/users/jcanty/Literature Review.htm
Cultural Ecopsychology: Issues of Displacement and the Urban African Community Literature Review You can end up thousands of miles away from your birthplace, and if you are involved in a healing ritual that is meant to work, you have to invoke the spirits that are at the place where you were born in addition to those who are natives of the place you are in...If you embrace this concept, you will find that human mobility does not remove a person’s original connection to the birthplace (Somé, 1998, p. 39). Personal Statement As an African American woman who neither lives in a city, nor in a Black community, it is important for me to identify why I am addressing the issue of displacement for urban African Americans. I must acknowledge that I come from an economically secure family and have lived a somewhat privileged life. I feel that the quote above speaks to my connection to this issue. Although I have lived primarily in suburban and rural areas throughout my life, I am a third generation New Yorker. I was born in the inner city of Bronx, New York, while both of my parents were born in Harlem, New York. While conducting the research for this paper, I realized that the story of my own family paralleled the trends that occurred for many African American families. Both my paternal grandparents migrated to the city from the South between the two world wars under difficult circumstances and together raised a family under harsh conditions which (on the less positive side) included economic poverty, addiction, and depression. The story of my maternal grandparents is less known, but I do know that both were descendants from the Carribean, and that my great grandmother migrated to New York prior to World War I from Jamaica. My ancestors, like many African Americans, were challenged to both meet their basic survival needs and recreate their cultural identity in a foreign environment which held few economic opportunities for Blacks and whose structure represented the heart of an industrialized, western society.

45. Ecopsychology
ecopsychology.com presents. ecopsychology.COM. The site is owned by ElizabethBowdenSmith. email ebowdensmith@batnet.com Our ISP WombatNet
http://www.ecopsychology.com/
Ecopsychology.com presents
ECOPSYCHOLOGY.COM
The site is owned by Elizabeth Bowden-Smith
email: ebowdensmith@batnet.com Our ISP: WombatNet

46. Overview Of Ecopsychology
OVERVIEW OF ecopsychology. JOHN DAVIS, Ph.D. INTRODUCTION. ecopsychology is developingrapidly as a field of study, and it has no single definition yet.
http://www.naropa.edu/faculty/johndavis/ep/ecopsy.html
OVERVIEW OF ECOPSYCHOLOGY JOHN DAVIS , Ph.D.
This page is part of a site for the Environmental Psychology course I teach. ON THIS PAGE
DEFINITIONS

AN EXTENSION: ECOPSYCHOLOGY AND TRANSPERSONAL PSYCHOLOGY

A DIFFERENT KIND OF DEFINITION

TWO QUOTES
...
RECOMMENDED READING
INTRODUCTION Ecopsychology is developing rapidly as a field of study, and it has no single definition yet. The term is used in different ways by several different practitioners and researchers. My aim here is to summarize what I see as the main themes or contributions of Ecopsychology. By the way, when I say these are insights, I do not mean to imply that they are unique or original to Ecopsychology. Our ancestors who lived close to the Earth as well as indigenous people around the world today have a bead on these understandings. Among the origins of this field are the following:
  • Theodore Roszak was one of the first to develop this term and write about it for a general audience. His books
  • 47. Naropa University - Ecopsychology Certificate Program For Grad Students
    Naropa's ecopsychology certificate program for grad students integratesthe fields of ecology and psychology. Naropa University, ecopsychology.
    http://www.naropa.edu/ecopsychology/
    Ecopsychology
    Search Engine best viewed
    with Internet Explorer or
    Ecopsychology Certificate Programs for Graduate Degree
    Students and Post Graduate Degree Professionals
    Ecopsychology Professional Non-Credit Trainings
    Ecotherapy: Nature Guided Healing
    December 6-8, 2002 Dear Prospective Student: Thank you for your interest in the Ecopsychology Certificate Program at Naropa University. We are pleased to receive your inquiry and are happy to share with you information regarding this program. Ecopsychology is an emerging field that explores the interrelationship between humans and the natural world. This field seeks to awaken us to the illusion that a separation exists between self and nature. It suggests that by rediscovering our connection with all things, we can begin the process of psychological and ecological healing. Areas of interest to Ecopsychologists include effective environmental education and action, ecotherapy, the promotion of sustainability, the healing and initiatory influences of encounters with wilderness and nearby nature, and the sacred dimensions of human-nature relationships.

    48. ECOPSYCHOLOGY
    Back to Deep Ecology Index. ecopsychology. THERAPY ON THE TITANIC. ecopsychologyTHE BIRTH OF A NEW PROFESSION BY THEODORE ROSZAK.
    http://www.rainforestinfo.org.au/deep-eco/ecopsych.htm
    Back to Deep Ecology Index ECOPSYCHOLOGY
    THERAPY ON THE TITANIC
    ECOPSYCHOLOGY: THE BIRTH OF A NEW PROFESSION BY THEODORE ROSZAK THE VOICE OF THE EARTH BY THEODORE ROSZAK REVIEWED BY RALPH METZNER ECOPSYCHOLOGY - JOHN SEED ALASTAIR McINTOSH is a founding trustee of the Isle of Eigg Trust for land restitution and a fellow of the now-independent academic network, the Centre for Human Ecology. THE ANXIETY OF CLEARINGS by Paul Carter GOOD NEWS, BAD NEWS by Ruth Rosenhek Back to Deep Ecology Index

    49. PAPER DELIVERED BY JOHN SEED TO THE ECOPSYCHOLOGY SYMPOSIUM AT
    PAPER DELIVERED BY JOHN SEED TO THE ecopsychology SYMPOSIUM AT THE AUSTRALIAN PSYCHOLOGICALSOCIETY'S 28TH ANNUAL CONFERENCE, GOLD COAST, QUEENSLAND, AUSTRALIA
    http://www.rainforestinfo.org.au/deep-eco/seed.htm
    PAPER DELIVERED BY JOHN SEED TO THE ECOPSYCHOLOGY SYMPOSIUM AT THE AUSTRALIAN PSYCHOLOGICAL SOCIETY'S 28TH ANNUAL CONFERENCE, GOLD COAST, QUEENSLAND, AUSTRALIA, 2/10/94 SHORTER VERSION I take "ecopsychology" to mean psychology in service to the Earth. ECO, PSYCHE, LOGOS: Knowing that the Earth is home to our soul. In spite of the modern delusion of alienation, of separation from the living Earth, we are NOT aliens, we belong here. The human psych too is Earth-born, th e result of 4000 million years of continuous evolution and the complex, exquisite biology from which psyche emerged inevitably remains the matrix, the grounding of any sane psychology. We have all heard the news:Dr. Raymond Dassman, Professor of Biology, University of Califoria: "The 3rd World War has begun: it is being waged against the Earth." Most scientists agree that a million or more species will become extinct between now and the turn of the century, a rate of extinction some thousands of times the natural background rate. etc. etc. etc. We have all heard the news. Yet it has not changed our behaviour except in rather trivial ways.

    50. Satyana Institute - Bibliography
    Tarnas, Richard, The Passion of the Western Mind B) ecopsychology 1. Swan, James,Nature As Teacher Healer 2. Macy, Joanna, World as Lover/World as Self 3
    http://www.satyana.org/html/bibliography.html
    1. Devall, Bill, Living Richly In An Age of Limits
    2. Devall, Bill and Sessions, George, Simple in Means/Rich in Ends
    3. Sessions, George, Deep Ecology For the 21st Century
    4. Drengson, Alan, The Deep Ecology Movement: An Introductory Anthology
    5. Mander, Gerry, In the Absence of the Sacred
    6. Merchant, Carolyn; Radical Ecology: The Search for a Liveable World
    7. Aberley, Doug, Boundaries of Home
    8. LaChapelle, Dolores, Sacred Land, Sacred Sex: The Rapture of the Deep
    9. Rothenberg, David, Is it Painful To Think? Conversations with Arne Naess
    10. Fox, Warwick, Toward a Transpersonal Ecology
    11. Quinn, Daniel, Ishmael 14. Tarnas, Richard, The Passion of the Western Mind B) Ecopsychology 2. Macy, Joanna, World as Lover/World as Self 5. Roszak, Ted, The Voice of the Earth 7. Snyder, Gary, The Practice of the Wild 8. McLuhan, T.C., The Way of the Earth 10. Hillman, James, and Venture, Michael, We've Had Hundred Years of Psychotherapy And The World Is Getting Worse

    51. EcoPsychology
    ecopsychology,
    http://www.dr.ellis.20m.com/custom4.html
    Cheap Web Site Hosting
    EcoPsychology Home Page About Page Personal Coaching Clinical Psychology ... Policies and Forms EcoPsychology and the New Millennium:
    Moving from an extractive economy and culture in a world dominated by multi-national corporations
    to
    an age of ecological values and goals and a culture and way of life beneficial and benign to the Earth
    As Thomas Berry has pointed out we are at a special point in history in which we must carry out "deep cultural therapy" and create a culture and way of life that is benign and beneficial to the Earth. Berry calls the new age we are entering the Ecozoic era and he says that the effort to create this new era is "the great work" of our time. [See Berry's book, "The Great Work: Our Way Into The Future".]
    EcoPsychology is the field of knowledge and practice that concerns our relationship with the Earth and natural world. On this page, we will share material that relates to this field and to the "practice" of carrying out The Great Work required of us at this time in history.
    We will begin with a closer look at Thomas Berry's book, "The Great Work", a book highly recommended to anyone living at this time in the evolution of our planet and the human species.

    52. Ecopsychology
    ecopsychology Connecting With Nature. ecopsychology (from The Psych.com The InternetPsychology Resource). ecopsychologyWeb. Last update 9 March 1999.
    http://www.lib.kth.se/~lg/ecopsyc.htm
    Ecopsychology Connecting With Nature Ecopsychology (from The Psych.com - The Internet Psychology Resource) EcopsychologyWeb
    Last update: 9 March 1999

    53. Shamanic Counseling And Ecopsychology
    Shamanic Counseling and ecopsychology. An Interview with Leslie Gray. Whatalternatives to to talking cures does shamanism offer ecopsychology?
    http://dr.lesliegray.home.mindspring.com/
    Shamanic Counseling and Ecopsychology
    An Interview with Leslie Gray
    SLOANE: What is ecopsychology? GRAY: Ecopsychology is an emerging field that recognizes that you cannot have sanity without sane relationships with your environment. Currently in the U.S., groups of cutting-edge thinkers have been participating in dialogues aimed at the creation of a new profession combining sensitivity of the psychotherapist with the expertise of the environment. SLOANE: Is there a practice that accompanies ecopsychology or is it a body of thought? GRAY: Right now, it's mainly a body of thought, but fortunately, those who are forging this new field will not have to reinvent the wheel. We have only to look at the cross-cultural practices of perennial shamanism to find effective models of applied ecopsychology. SLOANE: What do you mean by perennial shamanism? GRAY: Shamanism is the oldest form of mind/body healing known to humankind. It involves the use of altered states of consciousness for the purpose of restoring well-being to those who are experiencing ill-health or helplessness. Shamanism is estimated by archeologists to be at least forty thousand years old. It's been practiced perennially -or continuously-by virtually all indigenous peoples up to today. Only in the West were its practices essentially eradicated, because of the so-called Enlightenment. SLOANE: How does shamanism relate to ecopsychology?

    54. Ecopsychology
    ecopsychology. Theodore Roszak. The subject of our dialogue is the convergenceof psychological insight and environmental concern called 'ecopsychology'.
    http://www.globalideasbank.org/BI/BI-131.HTML
    Ecopsychology
    Theodore Roszak
    www.utne.com/subscribe/gifts/friends or by calling (01) 800 736 UTNE). We are a small group of San Francisco Bay Area psychologists and environmentalists. We invite you to join us in one of the liveliest dialogues on the cultural landscape. The subject of our dialogue is the convergence of psychological insight and environmental concern called 'ecopsychology'. We see ecopsychology as an effort to strengthen our sympathetic bond with the natural world. One name for that bond - a new one - is 'the ecological unconscious'. But there are other, older names. In ancient days, it was called the anima mundi; many tribal people speak of it as their connections with Mother Earth and Father Sun and all our four-legged relatives. Ecopsychology, far from being something new under the sun, belongs to the original form of environmentalism and the oldest tradition of psychological healing we know. 'Stone Age psychiatry', as it has been called. On its ecological side, ecopsychology seeks to acquaint the environmental movement with a subtler, more sensitive psychological way of approaching the public it seeks to win over to its cause. This means asking searching questions about the values and motivations that change human behaviour. Why are so many of us such bad environmental citizens, even when we 'know better'? How do we change our wasteful and destructive behaviour? Has the environmental movement gone as far as it can with scare tactics and guilt trips? Does it risk a serious backlash if it continues to shame and blame a bewildered public?

    55. Ecopsychology
    Sierra Club Books Edited by Theodore Roszak, Mary E. Gomes, and Allen D. Kannerecopsychology Restoring the Earth / Healing the Mind Forewords by Lester R
    http://www.ucpress.edu/books/sc/pages/SC64068.html
    All Books Journals E-Editions The Press
    Edited by Theodore Roszak, Mary E. Gomes, and Allen D. Kanner
    Ecopsychology
    Restoring the Earth / Healing the Mind
    Forewords by Lester R. Brown and James Hillman
    A Sierra Club Book

    Publication Date: May 1995 Subjects: Environmental Studies Ecology Philosophy Psychology Rights: World 366 pages, 6 x 9 inches Paperback
    Available Now Description About the Editors
    DESCRIPTION (back to top) This pathfinding collection shows how the health of the planet is inextricably linked to the psychological health of humanity, individually and collectively. As such, it is sure to become a definitive work for the burgeoning ecopsychology movement, which is both a new beginning for environmentalism and a revolution in modern psychology. Collected here are writings from the premier psychotherapists, thinkers, and eco-activists working in the field, including: James Hillman, world-renowned Jungian analyst, relating the "one core issue for all psychology" - the nature and limits of human identity - to the condition of the planet Chellis Glendinning, author of My Name Is Chellis and I'm in Recovery from Western Civilization, alerting us to "the link between the psychological process of addiction and the technological system"

    56. Oops!
    ecopsychology. Posted by Melissa on Thursday, 21 November 2002, at119 pm. Hello Joanna, I have to do a project for a University
    http://www.joannapoppink.com/dsmiv_discuss/discuss.cgi?read=12

    57. Schumacher College - Ecopsychology
    SCHUMACHER COLLEGE An International Centre for Ecological Studies. ecopsychology.by John Seed. I take ecopsychology to mean psychology in service to the Earth.
    http://www.schumachercollege.org.uk/articles/teachers-articles/ecopsychology.htm
    SCHUMACHER COLLEGE
    An International Centre for Ecological Studies Ecopsychology by John Seed In spite of the modern delusion of alienation, of separation from the living Earth, we humans are not aliens, we belong here. The human psyche too is Earth-born, the result of 4000 million years of continuous evolution. The complex, dynamic biology from which psyche emerged necessarily remains the matrix, the grounding of any sane psychology. I take "ecopsychology" to mean psychology in service to the Earth. We have all heard about the massive assault on our life-support systems. Yet it has not changed our behaviour except in rather trivial ways. How will we change our thinking and our behaviour to bring our technologies and lifestyles into harmony with the biological constraints of Earthly existence? What is needed? Not more horrifying statistics surely. Everybody already knows. We feel helpless and disempowered as the technologic juggernaut rolls along. Scientists warn that we may be the last generation of humanity to have the chance to avert biological collapse and irreparable damage to the systems that support complex life on Earth. Paul Ehrlich thinks that we are sawing off the branch that we're sitting on. James Lovelock said it's as if the brain were to decide that it is the most important organ in the body and started mining the liver. Sounds to me like some kind of psychological problem.

    58. Exploratorium Store-- Ecopsychology
    ecopsychology Restoring the Earth, Healing the Mind In this anthology, ecologicalactivists, therapists, writers, and healers address issues related to
    http://www.exploratoriumstore.com/ecopsychology.html
    Ecopsychology
    Restoring the Earth, Healing the Mind

    In this anthology, ecological activists, therapists, writers, and healers address issues related to psychology and ecology. Essays and interviews are grouped under three broad headings: theoretical perspectives, ecopsychology in practice, and cultural diversity and political engagement. Usually ships the next business day.
    Use Policy
    Contact Us

    59. LILA > ECOPSYCHOLOGY
    research EXPLORING psychotherapy, holotropic therapy, psychedelic exploration,groupwork, breathwork, quantum consciousness, myth, ecopsychology AND THE
    http://www.lila.info/deepecology.htm
    Info Links Forum Chat ... LILA
    Milford Sound - Aotearoa Technology, Trauma, and the Wild Chellis Glendinning
    "We have undergone an untenable violation: a collective trauma that explains the insidious reality of addiction and abuse infusing our lives in mass technological society... The trauma endured by technological people like ourselves is the systemic and systematic removal of our lives from the natural worlds from the tendrils of earthy textures, from the rhythms of sun and moon, from the spirits of the bears and trees, from the life force itself. This is also the systemic and systematic removal of our lives from the kinds of social and cultural experiences our ancestors assumed when they lived In rhythm with the natural world."
    Ecopsychology
    Ecopsychology: Where does it fit in psychology?

    60. Shamanic Counseling And Ecopsychology
    SHAMANIC COUNSELING AND ecopsychology. An Interview with Leslie Gray. Whatalternatives to to talking cures does shamanism offer ecopsychology?
    http://www.woodfish.org/ecorestore.html
    SHAMANIC COUNSELING
    AND
    ECOPSYCHOLOGY
    An Interview with Leslie Gray
    SLOANE: What is ecopsychology? GRAY: Ecopsychology is an emerging field that recognizes that you cannot have sanity without sane relationships with your environment. Currently in the U.S., groups of cutting-edge thinkers have been participating in dialogues aimed at the creation of a new profession combining sensitivity of the psychotherapist with the expertise of the environmentalist. SLOANE: Is there a practice that accompanies ecopsychology or is it a body of thought? GRAY: Right now, it's mainly a body of thought, but fortunately, those who are forging this new field will not have to reinvent the wheel. We have only to look at the cross-cultural practices of perennial shamanism to find effective models of applied ecopsychology. SLOANE: What do you mean by perennial shamanism? GRAY: Shamanism is the oldest form of mind/body healing known to humankind. It involves the use of altered states of consciousness for the purpose of restoring well-being to those who are experiencing ill-health or helplessness. Shamanism is estimated by archeologists to be at least forty thousand years old. It's been practiced perennially -or continuously-by virtually all indigenous peoples up to today. Only in the West were its practices essentially eradicated, because of the so-called Enlightenment. SLOANE: How does shamanism relate to ecopsychology?

    A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

    Page 3     41-60 of 97    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20

    free hit counter