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Life is made of encounters and is born out of an encounter. We are different. We must accept it, on the genetic as well as biological level. Looking for the single "urge to be" of each object binds us to consider its preferences when it comes to special encounters and links as well as possibilities of life aspirations articulating to situations around diseases and physical external traumas. By applying itself to all objects, animated or not, from the infinitely small to the infinitely big, the logic of this urge to grow allows us to assemble various theories likely to describe the living.…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Life is made of encounters and is born out of an encounter. We are different. We must accept it, on the genetic as well as biological level. Looking for the single "urge to be" of each object binds us to consider its preferences when it comes to special encounters and links as well as possibilities of life aspirations articulating to situations around diseases and physical external traumas. By applying itself to all objects, animated or not, from the infinitely small to the infinitely big, the logic of this urge to grow allows us to assemble various theories likely to describe the living. Consequently, our evolution follows an "Urge to grow" which is proper to each of us, which lives from the hazards according to important moments of life of both parents and, especially, of the carrying mother in the first moments of evolution. The physical stays hand in hand with the psychological for a singular creation of the subject and its environment. The nervous system thus ensures that, from its basic formation until the complex completion by allowing the coordination of the entire neuronal information network between the subject and the environment.
Autorenporträt
Dr Lawrence THIEBERT post-graduated as Ph.D in Psycho-analytical Anthropology in 2006. Fourteen years ago, I stumbled onto something like a sort of ¿key¿ which could help me understand and, likewise, begin to give an answer to certain problems the scientific world believed they were utterly impossible to solve.