Brown

The Seba library treats Brown in 8 passages, across 8 authors (including Bowlby, John, Jung, Carl Gustav, Flores, Philip J).

In the library

the findings of a major study of this very sort by George Brown, a British sociologist, have been published during the past decade and these go some way to providing the answers we seek.

Bowlby identifies George Brown’s sociological study as the decisive empirical resource for establishing the causal relationship between loss and depressive disorders.

Bowlby, John, Loss: Sadness and Depression (Attachment and Loss, Volume III), 1980thesis

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brown, crystal throne, 210, 214

Jung’s alchemical colour index positions brown as a specific chromatic quality associated with the crystal throne image, situating it within the symbolic spectrum of the alchemical opus.

Jung, Carl Gustav, Psychology and Alchemy, 1944thesis

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Brown, S. (1985). Treating the alcoholic: A developmental model of recovery. New York: John Wiley & Sons. Brown, S. (1988). Treating adult children of alcoholics: A developmental perspective.

Stephanie Brown’s developmental model of alcoholism recovery and her work on adult children of alcoholics are cited as foundational clinical references in group psychotherapy with addicted populations.

Flores, Philip J, Group Psychotherapy with Addicted Populations An, 1997supporting

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The Brown-Peterson Recovery Progress Inventory (Brown and Peterson 1991, Morgan 2000a) offers a conceptual framework of AA spirituality together with measures of spiritual domains, including behaviors, thought patterns and beliefs.

The Brown-Peterson Recovery Progress Inventory is presented as a validated instrument for operationalizing AA spirituality within alcohol and other drug research.

Benda, Brent B., Spirituality and Religiousness and Alcohol/Other Drug Problems: Treatment and Recovery Perspectives, 2006supporting

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The transit from black to white via blue implies that blue always brings black with it.

Hillman’s discussion of alchemical colour transitions contextualizes the broader chromatic matrix within which brown appears as a subsidiary station in Jung’s colour symbolism.

Hillman, James, Alchemical Psychology, 2010aside

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