
LINKS .to more Sites
& . Previews of my other Websites
Psychology links come first, then
Learn about surviving adversity in a world that is not fair. Some people survive, cope, and thrive better against misfortune when they develop their inborn abilities. ThriveNet has features on resilience, overcoming job loss, serendipity, and more. At
The Wounded Healer Journal is a website for psychotherapists, survivors and others who have experienced the devastation of traumatic experiences, including child abuse. At
Highly Sensitive Persons is a site for people who are usually shy, introverted and socially inhibited. Such people are often acutely aware of other's emotions, find a career to be challenging, and yet have a greater capacity for inner searching. Counselling, coaching, mentoring and guidance with Thomas Eldridge. At
http://www.sensitiveperson.com/
SelfGrowth.com is a guide to information about self improvement, personal growth and natural health on the internet. It is an organised directory, with articles and links. At
The National Center for Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) focuses on the science, diagnosis, and treatment of PTSD and other stress-related disorders. It is an educational resource, providing fact sheets, articles and videos. Articles include topics such as self-help after disasters, relationships, community violence, sexual assault, and severe mental illness. At
One Spirit Project is a website for facilitating personal growth and spiritual development through commentary and discussion. They encourage new perspectives that will help you find meaning and purpose in your life. Large resource directory, with artistic delights such as mandalas, and an e-zine. At
SagePlace contains news, articles, books and quotes related to the healing and wholeness of the mind, body, spirit, and environment. At
PsychNet-UK is an independent psychology website developed as a jump-off point, thereby allowing mental health professionals to access other psychologically based sites quickly and easily.
Mental Health Matters supplies information and resources to mental health consumers, professionals, students and supporters. At
http://www.mental-health-matters.com/
TPM Online is The Philosophers Magazine on the web. It showcases a mixture of news, reviews, features, interviews and new philosophy.
http://www.philosophers.co.uk/index.htm
Spiritual / Philosophical links
Paul Brunton was a rare combination, being an accomplished practitioner of eastern meditational techniques, yet also having a western philosophical and analytical mentality. He wrote many books on spiritual themes, including one on philosophical idealism.
A website devoted to him is the Paul Brunton Philosophic Foundation, at
Portals, Directories, and Search Engines
Search Europe is a search engine and directory dedicated to Europe and everything European. At
Special interests
The Pecos Rio Grande Museum in Texas, USA, is a new era museum, a twenty-first century anthropological display. It offers the art of early man 9,000 to 2,000 before the present era, long before the time of Indian tribes.
My web friend Vahid has a literary site at
My friend Pat Smyth has a site for providing a private investigation service for the UK and Europe.
http://www.geocities.com/shamrock_investigations/
I. T. Resources
Graphic buttons and button design from DeKnop button manager, by Sam Franke, at
http://home.hccnet.nl/s.j.francke/deknop/deknop.htm
Xenu's Link Sleuth (TM) checks Web sites for broken links. Link verification is done on "normal" links, images, frames, plug-ins, backgrounds, local image maps, style sheets, scripts and java applets. A free download, at
http://home.snafu.de/tilman/xenulink.html
ImageForge is a complete painting programme for creating or editing images, retouching photos, assembling slide shows or picture albums, and more. A free download from CursorArts Company, at
http://cursorarts.swmirror.com/
or review and download from 1000files.com at
http://1000files.com/Multimedia_and_Design/Image_Editing/ImageForge_4403_Review.html
This website is just an introduction to my ideas
Previews of my other
Websites
The
descriptions of the sites are further down the page.
My oldest website is a general introduction to my ideas. It is called
The
Strange World of Emotion
http://website.lineone.net/~ian_heath2/
There is an underscore ( _ ) between "ian" and "heath2".
* * *
I have a website on dynamic psychology at
Discover
Your Mind
http://www.discover-your-mind.co.uk/
* * *
Another site is on philosophy of science, at
Relative
Mind, Relative Matter
http://www.relative-mindmatter.co.uk/
* * *
I have a site on the difficulties of the spiritual life.
Patterns
of Spirituality
http://www.dawndreamer.modern-thinker.co.uk/
* * *
My website on general philosophy is
A
Modern Thinker
http://www.modern-thinker.co.uk/
* * *
My website on mental disorder is
Patterns
of Confusion
http://www.confusion.discover-your-mind.co.uk/
* * *
My newest website features just the articles on emotion and abreaction.
World
of Emotion
http://www.emotion.discover-your-mind.co.uk/
* * *
The site The Strange World of Emotion contains articles on dynamic psychology from several of my other sites. It also contains a section on sexual themes, such as bonding, gender, symbolism and violence. The articles give a panoramic view of the usefulness of this kind of psychology for handling a wide range of difficult issues.
The site Discover Your Mind is my site on dynamic psychology and idealism. It also contains the basic articles on emotion and abreaction. Here I extensively apply my ideas on the mind to an exploration of the emotional dynamics that underlie many fields of individual and social activities. This exploration often opens new avenues for understanding old problems. Most articles in this section range between sexuality, belief and ethics, aspects of identity, power, attitudes, relationships and idealism.
The site Relative Mind, Relative Matter is on philosophy of science. It features ideas on the nature of relativity and proposes a solution to the wave-particle paradox in atomic physics. No maths are involved. The difficulty in conceptually understanding what happens within the atom is due to semantics. Western thinkers have consistently mis-understood the meaning of relative concepts. The boundaries between the three concepts of subjectivity, objectivity, and relativity have not been clearly dis-entangled.
The site Patterns of Spirituality describes some of the difficulties, crises and goals of spiritual development. It gives a psychological map for modern times, charting the landmarks on the spiritual journey. It presents new ideas on karma or human causation, explaining the difference between moral karma and psychological karma. It also explains the conflict that living a moral life produces, or why bad things happen to good people. The three levels of power, justice, and freedom are analysed, each of which produces its own kind of sorrow.
The site A Modern Thinker contains some traditional themes of philosophy: the pursuit of truth, belief and morality, mind, semiology and sign systems, language, metaphysics, handling paradoxes (especially in atomic physics), and my view of relativity. Overall, the ideas explore meaning in life and the way that consciousness makes sense of reality. No ability in logical analysis is required - only a wide view of life is needed. Many of my ideas are original and reflect my understanding of the subconscious mind. Come and look at new ideas in philosophy.
The site Patterns of Confusion features analyses of various forms of madness, confusion, violence, creative illness, and psycho-somatic disorders. The unconscious ideas that produce such states of mind are explained. In the articles on this website I only consider the causes and effects of psychological conditions on people ; I do not consider any possible physiological or genetic causes.
My newest site World of Emotion features just my ideas on emotion and abreaction. The three articles on emotion and the five articles on abreaction, which are on the psychology sites above, are split up into much smaller page sizes in order to make them easier to read and digest. Otherwise the content is the same.
|
Ian Heath, London UK
http://members.freezone.co.uk/ian-heath/
My email address is likely to change,
so if you want to write to me, go to the Home page
and use the address at the bottom.