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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
7 pages in length. To understand man's behavior and mental processes is to realize the capacity, quirks and composition of the human mind; as a result, studying psychology provides a greater awareness of how each individual harbors altogether different stimuli that creates said behavior and mental processes. It is imperative for these aspects to be clearly understood within the context of interaction with others and with oneself in order to better appreciate the diversity that exists between and among people. Moreover, the study of psychology provides the medical community with adequate tools to help those whose behaviors and mental processes are askew and need realignment. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
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7 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCPsychImp.rtf
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different stimuli that creates said behavior and mental processes. It is imperative for these aspects to be clearly understood within the context of interaction with others and with oneself
in order to better appreciate the diversity that exists between and among people. Moreover, the study of psychology provides the medical community with adequate tools to help those whose
behaviors and mental processes are askew and need realignment. As Rehfeldt (2007) notes, "one way to conceptualize the history of psychology is to emphasize the greater context in which
scientific ideas emerge, defined by scholars as a Zeitgeist, or a spirit of the times" (p. 3). When one considers the term psychology, the first thing that typically comes to
mind is an inherent connection to mental illness; while the fundamental basis of psychology has metamorphosed throughout the previous centuries from a perspective of imbalance to cultural implications to social
interaction to conflict resolution, it still represents a foundation of mental crisis to those who do not realize how much the discipline has integrated other components of life. Indeed,
psychology first cut its proverbial teeth back when mental illness was considered one and the same with criminal insanity, a coupling that cast the truly mentally imbalanced individuals with those
who displayed antisocial behavior far different from their unstable counterparts who "were not recognized as sick people and were accused of having abandoned themselves to shameful and forbidden practices with
the devil, sorcerers and other demons" (Sullivan et al, 2004). Benjamin Rush is looked upon as the first American psychiatrist when in eighteenth century Williamsburg, Virginia he lent his professional
assistance to the countrys original mental institution. One can readily argue how his most significant contribution was in turning around what was heretofore a heinous approach to dealing with
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