Time Statues Revisited: Book Five: Human Family

Time Statues Revisited: Book Five: Human Family

by Robert F. Morgan
Time Statues Revisited: Book Five: Human Family

Time Statues Revisited: Book Five: Human Family

by Robert F. Morgan

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Overview

On Time Statues: Time is a place. Each moment is a statue in time, always rooted in that time and that place. Visits include Martin Luther King Jr., Timothy Leary, Pat Norman, Rollo May, Allen Ginsberg, Ernst Beier, Singapore, Guam, Hawaii, New Zealand, Australia, Japan, a Taotaomona jungle spirit. In the final BOOK FIVE of an eight decade lifespan revisit to "Human Family".

Product Details

BN ID: 2940161006825
Publisher: Barnes & Noble Press
Publication date: 04/07/2023
Series: TIME STATUES REVISITED , #5
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 7 MB

About the Author

Born in the lull between the two world wars, he now shares his lifespan perspectives on today’s interesting times with us.
Robert F. Morgan, Ph.D. is a Life Member of the American Psychological Association. An NIMH Pre-Doctoral Fellow at Michigan State University, he continued with more than 60 years of post-­doctoral practice and teaching experience.
A former speech collaborator and project consultant for organizations including Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., he was founding editor of the Cambridge University Press Journal of Tropical Psychology, and founder of the Division of Applied Gerontology in the International Association of Applied Psychology (IAAP). He has overseen 126 psychology doctoral dissertations in California, Singapore, and Australia, along with a contemporary trauma psychology seminar at the University of New Mexico. He has published more than a hundred articles and 17 books on topics including life span psychology, trauma psychology in context, applied gerontology, international psychology, and even unfortunate baby names.
Only semi-retired, he avoids a lethargic status by continuing to think and write. He also hopes to avoid that opposite error exemplified by misleading voices of our era and, of course, Lincoln’s prescient warning: “It is better to be silent and thought a fool than to open one’s mouth and remove all doubt.”
Well, his readers will continue to be the judge of that.
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