Juan Camilo Ramírez Curso: Comportamiento Anormal Fundación Universitaria San Martín Semestre 2009-I Nocturna Guía para análisis de caso Esquizofrenia 1. Clasificación Multiaxial: Eje I: trastornos clínicos Otros problemas que pueden ser objeto de atención: F20. 00‚ Esquizofrenia tipo paranoide‚ continuo [295.30] Eje II: Trastornos de la personalidad retraso mental. Z03.2 Sin diagnóstico [V7109] Eje III: Enfermedades medicas Sin diagnostico Eje IV: Problemas psicosociales
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Nursing Process Assessment: • An inability to communicate‚ which takes its toll on interpersonal relationships and intimacy. Evidenced by Nash’s relationship with his wife and other people. • Nash exhibits many of the key symptoms of the disease: hallucinations (he has a roommates but he lives in a single dorm room) • Nash exhibits delusions (thinks he works for the government) • He has ideas of reference‚ poor social skills (mumbles‚ doesn’t talk much to strangers)‚ awkward gestures and facial
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down every window‚ Layers of Fear ticks the first box in the list of horror clichés straight from the off. That’s not to say this psychedelic first-person horror doesn’t offer anything unique. Starting out in a seemingly empty 19th-century mansion certainly sets an uncomfortable tone‚ and aided by the rambling narrative of an artist who has completely lost his mind - Layers of Fear consistently unsettles you. While it’s forgivable to consider the concept of Layers of Fear as unoriginal‚ it would be
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published in 1954. Where the sole survivor of a vampire pandemic‚ Robert Neville‚ must hunt for food and drink by day‚ and defend his home from monsters by night. Yet‚ such texts would not have been possible if not for the authors during the Gothic era that laid the foundation for such works to be created by today’s novelists. The novels Castle of Otranto by Horace Walpole‚ and “Sir Bertrand” by Anna and John Aikin‚ give excellent examples on this subject. It was these works where the natural elements
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Fringes‚ a place where whoever is not the “True Image of God”‚ is a mutant. The text is written in first person and narrated by David Strorm‚ one of the telepathic children. It follows David’s life and the events he encounters. “The Chrysalids” shows the distinct separation between what is normal and what is abnormal. Wyndham explores many themes throughout the text‚ the main one being fear. “Most people are motivated by fear”‚ in “The Chrysalids.” This essay will explore the theme of fear with the different
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Fear and the Happily Ever After Gods and monsters tell us a lot about the societies that created them: the society’s beliefs‚ desires and fears. Mike Rugnetta‚ host of Idea Channel‚ talks about the relationship between fictional monsters and real people in his video‚ “Why Do We Love Zombies?” In Homer’s The Odyssey‚ translated by Robert Fagles‚ Scylla and Charybdis‚ the monstrous obstacles on the way to Ithaca‚ are a powerful duo. The way Odysseus reacts to them is reflective of the ancient Greeks’
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for copyright infringement. This policy is in effect for the following document: Bettelheim‚ Bruno. Fear of Fantasy; Hansel and Gretel; The Jealous Queen in ’Snow White’ and the Myth of Oedipus; Snow White / from The Uses of Enchantment: The Meaning and Importance of Fairy Tales‚ NY: Vintage Books‚ 1975. pp. 116-123; 159-66; 194-99; 199-215. Selection falls within Fair Use for Winter 2004 ONLY. Fear of Fantasy Bruno Bettelheim‚ The Uses of Enchantment: The Meaning and Importance of Fairy Tales (New
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Ignorance + Fear = Racism Racism is really another word for ignorance. It’s another way of saying that nature should have had only one type of flower or tree. It’s another way of looking at the world with your eyes closed to diversity and change. Racism is another word for fear. Fear of the unknown is understandable‚ of course‚ and for many of us those of different races and creeds are the great unknown. Most of us are brought up in a particular environment with a particular type of people
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Meeting At Night/ Parting At Morning – Appreciation Meeting at Night and Parting at Morning‚ composed by Robert Browning‚ are two poems that represent the personal morality and paradigms associated with an individual living in the early 19th Century. Meeting at Night tells the tale of a young lover travelling a long distance to meet up with his lover whilst it also metaphorically recounts a sexual encounter. Browning chooses to represent society’s repressive nature by portraying a secretive
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think the existence of rules keeps people from deviating from the norm for fear of consequences‚ but if there were no negative consequences for people’s actions‚ people could ideally‚ do whatever they wanted without fear of retribution or being outcasted. Imagine there being no consequence for murder or rape. How many scorned people are out there plotting revenge on people‚ but never act on their thoughts because they fear the repercutions of their actions? I think there are more than you can imagine
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