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The Mysterious Life of the Body: A New Look at Psychosomatics

Almqvist & Wiksell International (1999)

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  1. Environmental influences on the experiences of people with Parkinson’s disease.Helena Sunvisson & Sirkka-Liisa Ekman - 2001 - Nursing Inquiry 8 (1):41-50.
    Environmental influences on the experiences of people with Parkinson’s diseaseThis study elucidates environmental influences on lived illness experiences. For two consecutive years, persons with Parkinson’s disease (PD) participated in 1 week of daily walking in the Swedish mountains. Daily, low‐intensive walking that is free of intense effort or time pressures associated with group interaction characterized the week. Participants were interviewed 3 months after the mountain stay regarding experiences in the mountains, daily living, and how their experience in the mountains influenced (...)
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  • Learning turning points - in life with long-term illness - visualized with the help of the life-world philosophy.Mia M. U. Berglund - unknown
    A long-term illness is an occurrence that changes one’s life and generates a need to learn how to live with it. This article is based on an empirical study of interviews on people living with different long-term illnesses. The results have shown that the learning process is a complex phenomenon interwoven with life as a whole. The essential meaning of learning to live with long-term illness concerns a movement toward a change of understanding of access to the world. In this (...)
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  • Towards a phenomenology of dyslexia.Matthew John Irvine Philpott - unknown
    In this thesis I apply Merleau-Ponty's brand of existential phenomenology to the developmental language disorder 'dyslexia'. Developmental dyslexia is marked by an unexpected failure to acquire written language skills, in particularly reading, spelling and aspects of writing, and has primarily been studied by experimental cognitive psychology, physiology, and more recently, the neurosciences. The current explanatory paradigm holds the view that symptoms of dyslexia are caused by deficits in phonological skills, in particularly verbal memory and phoneme awareness. As a means of (...)
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  • The lived body of the psychosomatic patient.Søren Holm - 2000 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 3 (1):77-80.
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