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...Freudian Bruno Bettelheim, 82, for the first time, patted him on the back and called him "one of the few people at this | conference that I respect," thus indicating how far therapeutic ecumenism has to go. Among the other visiting stars who had never met were Human-Potential Guru Carl Rogers and Joseph Wolpe, one of the founders of behavior therapy. Wolpe found the talk about therapeutic unity resistible. Zeig, in his opening address, referred to "the great ballet of differences" in the field, but Wolpe called it a "babble of conflicting voices." Wolpe complained about the proliferating forms...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Behavior: A Therapist in Every Corner | 12/23/1985 | See Source »

...lack of space. "Why are you all here?" Jay Haley, director of the Family Therapy Institute in Washington, plaintively asked one of the conventiongoers. "We want to see you all before you die" was the response. Other stars on hand included the grandchildren of such giants as Sigmund Freud, Carl Jung and Alfred Adler. Sophie Freud is a professor of social work at Simmons College in Boston; Dieter Baumann, a Jungian analyst in Zurich; and Margot Adler, a reporter for National Public Radio...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Behavior: A Therapist in Every Corner | 12/23/1985 | See Source »

...problem of making sense of the field was painfully apparent during a panel on schizophrenia when three of the four members said that the disease was nonexistent. Family Therapist Carl Whitaker said, "The problem is that you have a disease, but the disease is abnormal integrity, loyalty to a view of the world that the schizophrenic is willing to stake his life on." Szasz saw schizophrenia as a "legal-cultural fiction." Said he: "It's useful to Mr. and Mrs. Hinckley to think of their son as schizophrenic when he's really just...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Behavior: A Therapist in Every Corner | 12/23/1985 | See Source »

...researcher's typical "workday" consists mostly of writing programs, attending seminars, and just sitting and thinking about knotty problems, says Professor Carl E. Hewitt, a scientist at the lab. Hewitt says scientists at the lab spend surprisingly little time doing "lab work." "The lab is the computer," says Poggio...

Author: By David Cook, | Title: MIT: Making Computers Smarter Than Humans | 12/7/1985 | See Source »

...crowing glory of a successful imitation of the human body would certainly be duplication of the thought processes of the human brain. Professor Carl E. Hewitt is exploring possibilities in this area...

Author: By David Cook, | Title: MIT: Making Computers Smarter Than Humans | 12/7/1985 | See Source »

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