About this item
Highlights
- Drawing on scientific research from diverse disciplines coupled with his ground-breaking work with dissociative states of consciousness, Dr. Frank W. Putnam describes the psychobiology of states of mind and traces their roles in normal and abnormal mental phenomena from newborns to meditating Zen monks.
- Author(s): Frank W Putnam
- 448 Pages
- Medical, Psychiatry
Description
Book Synopsis
Drawing on scientific research from diverse disciplines coupled with his ground-breaking work with dissociative states of consciousness, Dr. Frank W. Putnam describes the psychobiology of states of mind and traces their roles in normal and abnormal mental phenomena from newborns to meditating Zen monks. Challenging readers to scrutinize their own states of mind, he examines the nature and paradoxes of personality such as hypocrisy, secret lives, and religious conversion. PTSD, drugs, addictions, thrill-seeking, multiple personality disorder, peak states, epiphanies, meditation, sex, and hypnosis provide further examples of the illumination of a states-of-mind perspective on behavior and human potential. A Professor of Psychiatry at the University of North Carolina and Emeritus Professor of Pediatrics, Dr. Putnam is an author of over 200 scientific publications related to child maltreatment and maternal depression and two books on the dissociative disorders.
Review Quotes
This remarkable book encompasses a major scientific breakthrough. It brings together mental states previously considered separate and brilliantly connects them, opening up a new perspective on human psychology and new modalities of treatment. -Richard Rhodes, Pulitzer Prize-winning author and historian (The Making of the Atomic Bomb; John James Audubon, & many more) Invoking William James, scientist and philosopher, as his spirit guide, Dr. Putnam approaches his subject with both breadth of knowledge and depth of understanding. His unifying concept of "state-spaces" is original and illuminating. Reading this book is altogether a mind-expanding experience. -Judith Herman, MD Author of Trauma and Recovery