The Structure of MoralePickle Partners Publishing, 3 сент. 2018 г. - Всего страниц: 198 During World War I, when Captain J. T. MacCurdy, a Canadian psychiatrist and Cornell University lecturer, was despatched on a special mission to Britain, he undertook one of the earliest studies of war neuroses. The new factor was the availability of high explosives following Nobel’s discovery of dynamite in 1867 (nitroglycerin and diatomaceous earth) and developments thereof such as trinitrotoluene (TNT) and picric acid. High explosives were a boon to the mining and the civil engineer but inflicted terrible injuries on combatants. Shell shock—or, as we would now call it, post-traumatic stress disorder—resulted from extreme experiences on the battlefield, injury, concussion, being buried alive or simply the scale of the slaughter. This book, which was first published in 1943, contains the text of lectures delivered by Dr. J. T. MacCurdy to groups of officers from the army and the auxiliary women’s services early in WWII. MacCurdy, continuing on from his findings during WWI, discusses the nature of fear, the national factors at play in the creation and sustainability of morale with reference to the Allied and Axis powers, and the significance of psychological factors in practice in an organized community. “This intelligent, objective analysis of the nature of the psychological factor in war was intended for the British soldier, but its interest and application are universal.”—Foreign Affairs |
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... attack. That was a remote catastrophe and so, emotionally, is this. There is a contrast between the actuality of the destruction of others and one's own scathelessness. Of all the signals of danger the sound of the bomb's explosion is ...
... attack. That was a remote catastrophe and so, emotionally, is this. There is a contrast between the actuality of the destruction of others and one's own scathelessness. Of all the signals of danger the sound of the bomb's explosion is ...
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... attacks on one area the size of which is determined by the number of bombs available. The more nearly the local ... attack will vary with the size of the bombed area relative to that occupied by the population which considers itself ...
... attacks on one area the size of which is determined by the number of bombs available. The more nearly the local ... attack will vary with the size of the bombed area relative to that occupied by the population which considers itself ...
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... attacks on London morale are known to the world. In October 1940 I had occasion to drive through South-East London just after a series of attacks on that district. Every hundred yards or so, it seemed, there was a bomb crater or ...
... attacks on London morale are known to the world. In October 1940 I had occasion to drive through South-East London just after a series of attacks on that district. Every hundred yards or so, it seemed, there was a bomb crater or ...
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... attacks from visible bombers to have learned to identify their characteristic sound. Another signal of imminent bombing is anti-aircraft gun fire. The emotional meaning of this must necessarily be complicated because it is primarily a ...
... attacks from visible bombers to have learned to identify their characteristic sound. Another signal of imminent bombing is anti-aircraft gun fire. The emotional meaning of this must necessarily be complicated because it is primarily a ...
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... attacks on British aerodromes were beginning, the enemy spent a large part of one night in bombing a certain aerodrome from a great height with smallish, shrieking bombs. After each salvo sappers went on the landing ground and filled in ...
... attacks on British aerodromes were beginning, the enemy spent a large part of one night in bombing a certain aerodrome from a great height with smallish, shrieking bombs. After each salvo sappers went on the landing ground and filled in ...
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action activity animal army attack authority bayonet become behaviour belief bomb disposal bombing British British Raj centuries civil civilian conditioned conscious course culture danger democracy departmentalism emergency emotional enemy evolution example factors fear feeling fight force frightened German Gestapo give given government service hand hara-kiri herd herd instinct hierarchical organization Hitler human ideal immobility immobility response important individual inevitably instinct intelligence interest Japan judgment kind labour leader least liaison lives loyalty Luftwaffe man’s matter means Mechanized Warfare merely military morale nature Nazi near-miss never officer old Prussian one’s operation patriotism perhaps pineal body political population possible principle probably problem produce psychological psychologist Public School purely religion responsibility result Royal Air Force rules Russia scale of values shew signal social social stratification soldier stimulus superiority survival tend tendency theory tradition unconscious