An attractive explanation of anonymous discoveries and alcohol addicts' plans, anecdotes and excerpts of God's diary, communication and occasional memoirs of early AA characters
The most complete history of A.A. was written. It is not that God contains anecdotes and excerpts of diaries, communication, and occasional memoirs of the initial A.A. personality. An interesting, fast and authoritative explanation of the discovery and development of the program, and the anonymity of alcohol dependence that we know today.
Ernie Kurtz got a doctorate. In 1978 he published a doctoral dissertation in the history of American civilization at Harvard University and published it as a book titled "Non-God: History of Alcoholism." Since then, he has announced "incomplete spirituality" and "shame and sin: booklet: features of relying on circulation". He also published a number of papers on his interests, including academic articles and popular articles, and lectured on topics related to mental academic research both at home and abroad. Some of his articles were published in the book "Eni Kurtz" published in 1999. Dr. Kurtz teaches American history and American religious history at Georgia University and Loyola University in Chicago. From 1978 to 1997 he worked at the Summer Alcohol Research School of Rutgers University and served as a lecturer at the Department of Social Welfare Management at the University of Chicago from 1987 to 1997. After a short period of Guest House Research Education Director, then Catholic Priestly Alcohol Therapy Facility, Arnie retired to Ann Arbor, Michigan, and started class at the University of Michigan Information Faculty. He continued extensive lectures until the end of 1997. At that time, a poor medical procedure resulted in spinal surgery. Ironically, I am spending the rest of my time on the complexity and the possibilities of electronic research in this field, "I am walking like I am drunk now." Arnie died in January 2015
The book "Anonymous to Alcoholics" begins with an introduction letter written by a doctor specializing in alcohol and drug poisoning in the 1930's. Along with the first member of alcoholism, he believes alcoholics patients have physical and mental illness. This double disease not only explains why alcohol lacks the ability to control alcohol intake, it also can not choose whether to drink alcohol. When alcohol drinks his first drink, a vicious circle of alcoholism begins (according to A.A.). He drank this first drink, because he was mentally interested in alcohol. When he is awake he becomes absorbed in drinking and eventually gives up to temptation and acknowledges drinking. Alcohol is mentally not only caught by alcohol but physically allergic to alcohol.
The concept of alcoholism and disease is thought that alcoholism is a natural history predicted to be the major biological causal relationship and is consistent with accepted disease definitions. The characteristic of alcoholism is that individuals lose management of drinking and therefore influence his or her life, which is a sort of "illness" and was brought into academic literature in the 1950s. It is inside. Concept of alcoholism. This concept is rooted in 19th century medicine and it makes no sense as a disease. In 1977, the WHO investigator group * responded to the use of loose and mixed alcoholism and recommended using alcohol dependency syndrome in psychiatry. analogy
Ernie Kurtz got a doctorate. In 1978 he published a doctoral dissertation in the history of American civilization at Harvard University and published it as a book titled "Non-God: History of Alcoholism." Since then, he has announced "incomplete spirituality" and "shame and sin: booklet: features of relying on circulation". He also published a number of papers on his interests, including academic articles and popular articles, and lectured on topics related to mental academic research both at home and abroad. Some of his articles were published in the book "Eni Kurtz" published in 1999. Dr. Kurtz teaches American history and American religious history at Georgia University and Loyola University in Chicago. From 1978 to 1997 he worked at Summer Alcohol Research School at Rutgers University and served as a lecturer at the Department of Social Welfare Management at the University of Chicago from 1987 to 1997.