S. A. Tomilin on the issue of placement of human personality and its health in social hygiene

Author(s):  
V. S. Nechaev ◽  
1984 ◽  
Vol 29 (12) ◽  
pp. 990-990
Author(s):  
Rae Carlson
Keyword(s):  

1934 ◽  
Vol 29 (2) ◽  
pp. 233-233
Author(s):  
Charles C. Josey
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
O. Klepikov ◽  
S. Eprintsev ◽  
S. Shekoyan

Data of the Federal Information Fund for Social Hygiene Monitoring conducted on the basis of the Federal Center for Hygiene and Epidemiology of Rospotrebnadzor have been analyzed to assess environmental risks, as well as to develop environmental safety system as a factor for sustainable development of the territory in the regions of the Russian Federation. Atmospheric air pollution in Russian regions was evaluated by content of priority pollutants. Ranking of Russian regions according to the quality of drinking water supply was carried out. The possibility of using Federal Information Fund for Social Hygiene Monitoring as an integral part of the model for optimizing the social and environmental conditions of populated areas is estimated.


Author(s):  
John Deigh

This essay does two things. First, it gives an account of the development of Freud’s thought in human psychology from its beginnings in the studies of psychoneurosis he undertook jointly with Joseph Breuer to the mature theory of the human personality that Freud constructed in the last stages of his career. The main focus of the essay’s account of his thought in these last stages is on his theory of the acquisition in human beings of a conscience. Second, it explains the philosophical import of Freud’s theory of human personality by placing it within the tradition of naturalism in ethics and answers the objections of two critics of his account of conscience who side with Kant on the question of the nature of conscience.


PMLA ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 121 (5) ◽  
pp. 1405-1423 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joseph R. Slaughter

With adoption of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) in 1948, the United Nations conscripted, almost by default, the historically Euronationalist forms of the Bildungsroman and natural law to legitimate its vision of a new international order. This essay elaborates the conceptual vocabulary, deep narrative grammar, and humanist social vision that normative human rights law and the idealist Bildungsroman share in their cooperative efforts to articulate, normalize, and realize a world founded on the fundamental dignity and equality of what both the UDHR and early theorists of the novel term “the free and full development of the human personality.” Historically, formally, and ideologically, they are mutually enabling and complicit fictions: each projects, in advance of administrative structures comparable to those of the nation-state, an image of human personality and sociality that ratifies (and makes legible) the other's idealistic vision of the proper relations between individual and society. (JRS)


Nature ◽  
1941 ◽  
Vol 147 (3722) ◽  
pp. 261-262
Keyword(s):  

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