1 result for (book:wth AND heading:"part one chapter 2 januari 26 1984" AND stemmed:attitud)
BIOLOGICALLY VALID THOUGHTS, ATTITUDES, AND BELIEFS
[... 9 paragraphs ...]
— and we will begin Chapter 2, to be titled: “Biologically Valid Thoughts, Attitudes, and Beliefs.”
(Long pause.) When you are born you possess a group of attitudes toward yourself and toward life. These allow you to grow with the greatest possible impetus into childhood. They are also important in every period of your life. You can see (long pause) the results in life all about you, though in animals or plants these are experienced as a matter of feelings rather than, say, as thoughts or attitudes.
It may sound very simplistic to tell you that you must have sunny thoughts as well as rays of the physical sun in order to be healthy — but sunny thoughts are as biologically necessary to your well-being as are the rays of the sun that shines in the sky. Even as infants, then, you are predisposed naturally toward certain feelings, thoughts and attitudes that are meant to insure your healthy survival and emergence into adulthood. These are actually composed of inbred psychological information as necessary and vital to your life as the data transmitted by your genes and chromosomes. Indeed, these inbred, inner psychological predispositions are all-important if the information carried by your genes and chromosomes is to be faithfully followed.
[... 6 paragraphs ...]
Again, have him almost as nonchalantly as possible imagine himself behaving as normally as possible in the future. Now this is to be a new future, brought on as the result of healthier, wiser beliefs and attitudes. The “future” that he feared, he must understand, no longer exists — for it was composed of beliefs he no longer holds.
[... 6 paragraphs ...]
Your dream represents Ruburt’s more healthy attitude toward his eyes and their vision. It also represents his growing faith in his own psychic vision, and hence his return to his own natural rhythms and motion.
[... 1 paragraph ...]
(4:37 p.m. “Well, I’m glad I asked about those dreams,” I said. Both of them were very good, and should reinforce Jane’s progress and attitudes.
[... 1 paragraph ...]
(I told Jane that Seth’s opening line for Chapter 2, about possessing a group of attitudes toward oneself and toward life, at birth, runs directly counter to establishment theory that the newborn is like a blank slate, to be imprinted through teaching and experience. This would be especially true of behaviorism. She laughed.)