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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This is a 7 page paper which examines the interpersonal theory formulated by Harry Stack Sullivan.
The bibliography has 10 sources.
Page Count:
7 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_JHHarr.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
relationships where the social and cultural forces are the primary factors which are responsible for mental health. Sullivan paid attention to the interaction of the individual with others. Sullivan
felt that loneliness was the most painful of all human experiences as he felt that the individuals achievement of satisfaction depended on the satisfactory relationship with others. BACKGROUND The foundation
of Harry Stack Sullivans theory of interpersonal relations was his concept that a healthy personality is the result of healthy relationships (Harry Stack Sullivan, 2003). For the majority
of his life, he worked with patients, psychiatrists and social psychologists in his efforts to prove to them all, that people are primarily influenced by their relationships with others. Sullivans
primary belief was that a persons individual personality develops as a result of the way other people perceive them (Harry Stack Sullivan, 2003). According to Sullivan, the others which
he referred to included not only the people that a person comes in contact with each day, but also such entities as the government, and imaginary and idealized figures (Harry
Stack Sullivan, 2003). Sullivans work focused primarily on schizophrenics and he contributed much to the study of psychotherapy as a treatment for schizophrenia (Harry Stack Sullivan, 2003). It is
a source of wonder to try to determine what the motivation source was for Harry Stack Sullivan. Sullivan was a lonely child, a college failure and a graduate of
a diploma-mill medical school who experienced a lackluster medical career (Ozarin, 2005). Sullivan had a chance contact with psychiatry at the age of 30 which turned his life around
(Ozarin, 2005). After that chance encounter, Sullivan had national and international influence in the psychiatric community for the remainder of his life (Ozarin, 2005). THE FEELING OF ANXIETY Sullivan
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