Dr willard gaylin biography template
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Hatred: The Psychological Descent Into Violence
We all get angry at the built-in frustrations and humiliations of everyday life. But few of us ever experience the intense and perverse hatred that inspires acts of malignant violence such as suicide bombings or ethnic massacres. In Hatred , Dr.Willard Gaylin, one of America's most respected psychiatrists, describes how raw anställda passions are transformed into acts of violence and cultures of hatred. Such hatred goes beyond mere emotion. Hatred, Gaylin explains, is a psychological disorder, a struktur of quasi-delusional thinking. It requires forming "a passionate attachment," an obsessive involvement with the scapegoat population. It fryst vatten designed to allow the angry and frustrated individual to disavow responsibility for his own failures and misery bygd directing it towards a convenient victim. Gaylin dissects the mechanisms by which cynical political and religious leaders manipulate frustrated and deprived people, leadi
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Hatred: The Psychological Descent Into Violence
Still, I wonder, perhaps naively, if Internet haters aren’t just blowing off steam. Beneath the surface bravado, they really do realize that it’s all just a game. Nobody actually hates anybody else, right?
In “Hatred,” William Gaylin (Columbia University) writes about a specific kind of hatred: that which leads to violence. He denounces a popular and common belief that, deep down, we are all capable of such vicious hatred, given the right combination of trauma and tragedy to push us to the
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Government agencies and professionals who deal with damage claims are literally trying to determine the dollars-and-cents worth of human life. How do we decide what is an efficient annual cost for a nursing home? Or the cost for a new liver? And who is going to pay? Dr. Willard Gaylin was a psychiatrist and president of the Hastings Center, an institute devoted to studying the relationships between biology and ethics. In this episode of World of Ideas, Gaylin explored the growing conflict between the survival of communities and the survival of the individual.
TRANSCRIPT
BILL MOYERS: [on camera] Good evening, I’m Bill Moyers. When I was growing up in Texas no Fourth of July oratory was complete without references to the “dignity and worth of the individual.” The phrase became a cliché, true but boring. Now it’s taking on a new meaning. Government agencies and professionals who deal with damage claims are literally trying to determine the dollars-and