1st Edition
Appraising Personality THE USE OF PSYCHOLOGICAL TESTS IN THE PRACTICE OF MEDICINE
By Harrower, Molly
Copyright 1953
226 Pages
by
Routledge
216 Pages
by
Routledge
226 Pages
by
Routledge
Also available as eBook on:
This is Volume XV of twenty-one in the Individual Differences series. Originally published in 1953, this study looks at the use of psychological tests in the practice of medicine when appraising personality. It is written primarily for doctors and psychologists, it is also directed towards social workers, clergymen, lawyers, teachers, counsellors, nurses, in short towards all who need to know more about the personality of those they work with in order to help them.
Part 1 Part One; Part 1Chapter 1 What Does The Clinical Psychologist Do?; Part 1Chapter 2 Tools Which The Clinical Psychologist Uses; Part 1Chapter 3 Some Unnecessary Misunderstandings; Part 2 The Creation of Miniature Psychological Worlds; Chapter 2 Contrasting Psychological Worlds; Chapter 3 There's More to it than the I.Q; Chapter 4 Projection Via the Pencil Point; Chapter 5 What’s in a Face?; Chapter 6 Psychological Barometers; Chapter 7 The Self in Sentences; Part 3 Which Twin has Epilepsy?; Part 3Chapter 2 Are Psychogenic Factors Involved?; Part 3Chapter 3 Can this Girl be Helped by Psychotherapy?; Part 3Chapter 4 Schizophrenia or the Adolescent Struggle?; Part 3Chapter 5 Pain and Personality; con Concluding Remarks;
Biography
Molly Harrower