Routledge Handbook of Well-Being (eBook, ePUB)
Redaktion: Galvin, Kathleen
41,95 €
41,95 €
inkl. MwSt.
Sofort per Download lieferbar
21 °P sammeln
41,95 €
Als Download kaufen
41,95 €
inkl. MwSt.
Sofort per Download lieferbar
21 °P sammeln
Jetzt verschenken
Alle Infos zum eBook verschenken
41,95 €
inkl. MwSt.
Sofort per Download lieferbar
Alle Infos zum eBook verschenken
21 °P sammeln
Routledge Handbook of Well-Being (eBook, ePUB)
Redaktion: Galvin, Kathleen
- Format: ePub
- Merkliste
- Auf die Merkliste
- Bewerten Bewerten
- Teilen
- Produkt teilen
- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung
Bitte loggen Sie sich zunächst in Ihr Kundenkonto ein oder registrieren Sie sich bei
bücher.de, um das eBook-Abo tolino select nutzen zu können.
Hier können Sie sich einloggen
Hier können Sie sich einloggen
Sie sind bereits eingeloggt. Klicken Sie auf 2. tolino select Abo, um fortzufahren.
Bitte loggen Sie sich zunächst in Ihr Kundenkonto ein oder registrieren Sie sich bei bücher.de, um das eBook-Abo tolino select nutzen zu können.
This book explores established conceptualisations of wellbeing, providing an overview of the key debates and drawing attention to current issues and critiques. Taken as a whole, this important reference work offers new clarification of the widely used notion of wellbeing, focusing particularly on experiential perspectives.
- Geräte: eReader
- ohne Kopierschutz
- eBook Hilfe
- Größe: 2.17MB
Andere Kunden interessierten sich auch für
- Routledge International Handbook of Advanced Quantitative Methods in Nursing Research (eBook, ePUB)51,95 €
- Routledge Handbook of Philosophy and Nursing (eBook, ePUB)46,95 €
- The Routledge Handbook of Visual Impairment (eBook, ePUB)45,95 €
- Routledge Handbook of Health and Media (eBook, ePUB)46,95 €
- Routledge Handbook on the Global History of Nursing NIP (eBook, ePUB)62,95 €
- Routledge Handbook of the Medical Humanities (eBook, ePUB)45,95 €
- Routledge Handbook of Medicine and Poetry (eBook, ePUB)46,95 €
-
-
-
This book explores established conceptualisations of wellbeing, providing an overview of the key debates and drawing attention to current issues and critiques. Taken as a whole, this important reference work offers new clarification of the widely used notion of wellbeing, focusing particularly on experiential perspectives.
Dieser Download kann aus rechtlichen Gründen nur mit Rechnungsadresse in A, B, BG, CY, CZ, D, DK, EW, E, FIN, F, GR, HR, H, IRL, I, LT, L, LR, M, NL, PL, P, R, S, SLO, SK ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 358
- Erscheinungstermin: 15. Mai 2018
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781317532521
- Artikelnr.: 56887406
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 358
- Erscheinungstermin: 15. Mai 2018
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781317532521
- Artikelnr.: 56887406
- Herstellerkennzeichnung Die Herstellerinformationen sind derzeit nicht verfügbar.
Kathleen T. Galvin is Professor of Nursing Practice, School of Health Sciences at the University of Brighton, UK.
Part I: The Human Experience of Wellbeing
What is wellbeing? Philosophical and theoretical foundations
Chapter 1 Paul Gilbert
Residence, Identity and Wellbeing
Chapter 2 Nigel Rapport
A Sense of Well-Being: The Anthropology of a First-Person Phenomenology
Chapter 3 Robert Mugerauer
Cities, Wellbeing, World- A Heideggarian Analysis
Chapter 4 Hirobumi Takenouchi
Dwelling in the world with others as mortal beings: 'Well-being' in
post-disaster Japanese Society
Chapter 5 Jennifer Bullington
Well-being and Being-well: A Merleau-Pontian perspective on Psychosomatic
Health
Chapter 6 Charlotte Knowles
Feminist Approaches to Well-being
Chapter 7 Samuel Clark
Philosophical Taxonomies of Well-being
Chapter 8 Les Todres and Kathleen T. Galvin
Dwelling- Mobility: An Existential Theory of Well-being
Chapter 9 Gideon Calder
Capabilities, Well-being and Universalism.
Part II: How are understandings of well-being developing? Disciplinary and
professional perspectives
Chapter 10 David Seamon
Well-being and phenomenology: Lifeworld, Natural Attitude, Homeworld and
Place
Chapter 11 Timothy Darvill, Vanessa Heaslip, Kerry Barras
Heritage and Well-being: Therapeutic places, past and present
Chapter 12 Minae Inahara
Disability and Ambiguities: Technological Support in a Disaster Context
Chapter 13 Stephen Burwood
The Existential situation of the patient: Well-being and Absence
Chapter 14 Karin Dahlberg, Albertine Ranheim, Helena Dahlberg
Ecological health and caring
Chapter 15 Chris Milton
A Jungian contribution to the notion of well-being
Chapter 16 Lennart Nordenfeldt
A new stance on Quality of Life
Chapter 17 Virgina Eatough
"What can't be cured must be endured": Living with Parkinson's disease.
Chapter 18 Eleonora P. Uphoff & Kate E. Pickett
The Distribution, Determinants and Root Causes of Inequalities in
Well-being
Chapter 19 Stephen Wallace
Agencies of Well--being
Chapter 20 Ann Hemingway
Embodied Routes to Well-being: Horses and Young People
Chapter 21 Julie Jomeen & Colin Martin
Well-being and quality of life in maternal care context
Chapter 22 Steven Smith
Well-Being and Self-Interest: Personal Identity, Parfit, and Conflicting
Attitudes to Time in Liberal Theory and Social Policy
Chapter 23 KMW (Bill) Fulford & Kathleen T. Galvin
Values-based Practice: at Home with our Values
Part III: How is Well-being manifest in human life? The Aesthetic of
Well-being
Chapter 24 Dorthe Jorgensen
Creativity and Aesthetic Thinking: Towards an Aesthetics of Well-being
Chapter 25 Deborah Padfield
Collaborative drawings: blue-prints of conversation dynamics: The role of
images and image-making processes to improve communication and the
wellbeing of pain patients and clinicians in a series of art workshops at
the National Portrait Gallery, London.
Chapter 26 Catherine Lamont-Robinson
Embodied connectivity through the Visual and Tactual arts.
Chapter 27 Monica Prendergast and Carl Leggo
Poetry and/ as Wellness
Chapter 28 Jennifer Schulz
Thirteen ways of looking at a clinic
Chapter 29 Denis Francesconi
Eudaimonic Well-being and Education
Chapter 30 Kathleen T. Galvin & Les Todres
Eighteen Kinds of well-being but there may be many more: A conceptual
Framework that provides direction for Caring
What is wellbeing? Philosophical and theoretical foundations
Chapter 1 Paul Gilbert
Residence, Identity and Wellbeing
Chapter 2 Nigel Rapport
A Sense of Well-Being: The Anthropology of a First-Person Phenomenology
Chapter 3 Robert Mugerauer
Cities, Wellbeing, World- A Heideggarian Analysis
Chapter 4 Hirobumi Takenouchi
Dwelling in the world with others as mortal beings: 'Well-being' in
post-disaster Japanese Society
Chapter 5 Jennifer Bullington
Well-being and Being-well: A Merleau-Pontian perspective on Psychosomatic
Health
Chapter 6 Charlotte Knowles
Feminist Approaches to Well-being
Chapter 7 Samuel Clark
Philosophical Taxonomies of Well-being
Chapter 8 Les Todres and Kathleen T. Galvin
Dwelling- Mobility: An Existential Theory of Well-being
Chapter 9 Gideon Calder
Capabilities, Well-being and Universalism.
Part II: How are understandings of well-being developing? Disciplinary and
professional perspectives
Chapter 10 David Seamon
Well-being and phenomenology: Lifeworld, Natural Attitude, Homeworld and
Place
Chapter 11 Timothy Darvill, Vanessa Heaslip, Kerry Barras
Heritage and Well-being: Therapeutic places, past and present
Chapter 12 Minae Inahara
Disability and Ambiguities: Technological Support in a Disaster Context
Chapter 13 Stephen Burwood
The Existential situation of the patient: Well-being and Absence
Chapter 14 Karin Dahlberg, Albertine Ranheim, Helena Dahlberg
Ecological health and caring
Chapter 15 Chris Milton
A Jungian contribution to the notion of well-being
Chapter 16 Lennart Nordenfeldt
A new stance on Quality of Life
Chapter 17 Virgina Eatough
"What can't be cured must be endured": Living with Parkinson's disease.
Chapter 18 Eleonora P. Uphoff & Kate E. Pickett
The Distribution, Determinants and Root Causes of Inequalities in
Well-being
Chapter 19 Stephen Wallace
Agencies of Well--being
Chapter 20 Ann Hemingway
Embodied Routes to Well-being: Horses and Young People
Chapter 21 Julie Jomeen & Colin Martin
Well-being and quality of life in maternal care context
Chapter 22 Steven Smith
Well-Being and Self-Interest: Personal Identity, Parfit, and Conflicting
Attitudes to Time in Liberal Theory and Social Policy
Chapter 23 KMW (Bill) Fulford & Kathleen T. Galvin
Values-based Practice: at Home with our Values
Part III: How is Well-being manifest in human life? The Aesthetic of
Well-being
Chapter 24 Dorthe Jorgensen
Creativity and Aesthetic Thinking: Towards an Aesthetics of Well-being
Chapter 25 Deborah Padfield
Collaborative drawings: blue-prints of conversation dynamics: The role of
images and image-making processes to improve communication and the
wellbeing of pain patients and clinicians in a series of art workshops at
the National Portrait Gallery, London.
Chapter 26 Catherine Lamont-Robinson
Embodied connectivity through the Visual and Tactual arts.
Chapter 27 Monica Prendergast and Carl Leggo
Poetry and/ as Wellness
Chapter 28 Jennifer Schulz
Thirteen ways of looking at a clinic
Chapter 29 Denis Francesconi
Eudaimonic Well-being and Education
Chapter 30 Kathleen T. Galvin & Les Todres
Eighteen Kinds of well-being but there may be many more: A conceptual
Framework that provides direction for Caring
Part I: The Human Experience of Wellbeing
What is wellbeing? Philosophical and theoretical foundations
Chapter 1 Paul Gilbert
Residence, Identity and Wellbeing
Chapter 2 Nigel Rapport
A Sense of Well-Being: The Anthropology of a First-Person Phenomenology
Chapter 3 Robert Mugerauer
Cities, Wellbeing, World- A Heideggarian Analysis
Chapter 4 Hirobumi Takenouchi
Dwelling in the world with others as mortal beings: 'Well-being' in
post-disaster Japanese Society
Chapter 5 Jennifer Bullington
Well-being and Being-well: A Merleau-Pontian perspective on Psychosomatic
Health
Chapter 6 Charlotte Knowles
Feminist Approaches to Well-being
Chapter 7 Samuel Clark
Philosophical Taxonomies of Well-being
Chapter 8 Les Todres and Kathleen T. Galvin
Dwelling- Mobility: An Existential Theory of Well-being
Chapter 9 Gideon Calder
Capabilities, Well-being and Universalism.
Part II: How are understandings of well-being developing? Disciplinary and
professional perspectives
Chapter 10 David Seamon
Well-being and phenomenology: Lifeworld, Natural Attitude, Homeworld and
Place
Chapter 11 Timothy Darvill, Vanessa Heaslip, Kerry Barras
Heritage and Well-being: Therapeutic places, past and present
Chapter 12 Minae Inahara
Disability and Ambiguities: Technological Support in a Disaster Context
Chapter 13 Stephen Burwood
The Existential situation of the patient: Well-being and Absence
Chapter 14 Karin Dahlberg, Albertine Ranheim, Helena Dahlberg
Ecological health and caring
Chapter 15 Chris Milton
A Jungian contribution to the notion of well-being
Chapter 16 Lennart Nordenfeldt
A new stance on Quality of Life
Chapter 17 Virgina Eatough
"What can't be cured must be endured": Living with Parkinson's disease.
Chapter 18 Eleonora P. Uphoff & Kate E. Pickett
The Distribution, Determinants and Root Causes of Inequalities in
Well-being
Chapter 19 Stephen Wallace
Agencies of Well--being
Chapter 20 Ann Hemingway
Embodied Routes to Well-being: Horses and Young People
Chapter 21 Julie Jomeen & Colin Martin
Well-being and quality of life in maternal care context
Chapter 22 Steven Smith
Well-Being and Self-Interest: Personal Identity, Parfit, and Conflicting
Attitudes to Time in Liberal Theory and Social Policy
Chapter 23 KMW (Bill) Fulford & Kathleen T. Galvin
Values-based Practice: at Home with our Values
Part III: How is Well-being manifest in human life? The Aesthetic of
Well-being
Chapter 24 Dorthe Jorgensen
Creativity and Aesthetic Thinking: Towards an Aesthetics of Well-being
Chapter 25 Deborah Padfield
Collaborative drawings: blue-prints of conversation dynamics: The role of
images and image-making processes to improve communication and the
wellbeing of pain patients and clinicians in a series of art workshops at
the National Portrait Gallery, London.
Chapter 26 Catherine Lamont-Robinson
Embodied connectivity through the Visual and Tactual arts.
Chapter 27 Monica Prendergast and Carl Leggo
Poetry and/ as Wellness
Chapter 28 Jennifer Schulz
Thirteen ways of looking at a clinic
Chapter 29 Denis Francesconi
Eudaimonic Well-being and Education
Chapter 30 Kathleen T. Galvin & Les Todres
Eighteen Kinds of well-being but there may be many more: A conceptual
Framework that provides direction for Caring
What is wellbeing? Philosophical and theoretical foundations
Chapter 1 Paul Gilbert
Residence, Identity and Wellbeing
Chapter 2 Nigel Rapport
A Sense of Well-Being: The Anthropology of a First-Person Phenomenology
Chapter 3 Robert Mugerauer
Cities, Wellbeing, World- A Heideggarian Analysis
Chapter 4 Hirobumi Takenouchi
Dwelling in the world with others as mortal beings: 'Well-being' in
post-disaster Japanese Society
Chapter 5 Jennifer Bullington
Well-being and Being-well: A Merleau-Pontian perspective on Psychosomatic
Health
Chapter 6 Charlotte Knowles
Feminist Approaches to Well-being
Chapter 7 Samuel Clark
Philosophical Taxonomies of Well-being
Chapter 8 Les Todres and Kathleen T. Galvin
Dwelling- Mobility: An Existential Theory of Well-being
Chapter 9 Gideon Calder
Capabilities, Well-being and Universalism.
Part II: How are understandings of well-being developing? Disciplinary and
professional perspectives
Chapter 10 David Seamon
Well-being and phenomenology: Lifeworld, Natural Attitude, Homeworld and
Place
Chapter 11 Timothy Darvill, Vanessa Heaslip, Kerry Barras
Heritage and Well-being: Therapeutic places, past and present
Chapter 12 Minae Inahara
Disability and Ambiguities: Technological Support in a Disaster Context
Chapter 13 Stephen Burwood
The Existential situation of the patient: Well-being and Absence
Chapter 14 Karin Dahlberg, Albertine Ranheim, Helena Dahlberg
Ecological health and caring
Chapter 15 Chris Milton
A Jungian contribution to the notion of well-being
Chapter 16 Lennart Nordenfeldt
A new stance on Quality of Life
Chapter 17 Virgina Eatough
"What can't be cured must be endured": Living with Parkinson's disease.
Chapter 18 Eleonora P. Uphoff & Kate E. Pickett
The Distribution, Determinants and Root Causes of Inequalities in
Well-being
Chapter 19 Stephen Wallace
Agencies of Well--being
Chapter 20 Ann Hemingway
Embodied Routes to Well-being: Horses and Young People
Chapter 21 Julie Jomeen & Colin Martin
Well-being and quality of life in maternal care context
Chapter 22 Steven Smith
Well-Being and Self-Interest: Personal Identity, Parfit, and Conflicting
Attitudes to Time in Liberal Theory and Social Policy
Chapter 23 KMW (Bill) Fulford & Kathleen T. Galvin
Values-based Practice: at Home with our Values
Part III: How is Well-being manifest in human life? The Aesthetic of
Well-being
Chapter 24 Dorthe Jorgensen
Creativity and Aesthetic Thinking: Towards an Aesthetics of Well-being
Chapter 25 Deborah Padfield
Collaborative drawings: blue-prints of conversation dynamics: The role of
images and image-making processes to improve communication and the
wellbeing of pain patients and clinicians in a series of art workshops at
the National Portrait Gallery, London.
Chapter 26 Catherine Lamont-Robinson
Embodied connectivity through the Visual and Tactual arts.
Chapter 27 Monica Prendergast and Carl Leggo
Poetry and/ as Wellness
Chapter 28 Jennifer Schulz
Thirteen ways of looking at a clinic
Chapter 29 Denis Francesconi
Eudaimonic Well-being and Education
Chapter 30 Kathleen T. Galvin & Les Todres
Eighteen Kinds of well-being but there may be many more: A conceptual
Framework that provides direction for Caring