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Mélisande in the wood : song / words by Ethel Clifford ; music by Alma Goetz.

[London] : Chappell & Co. Ltd. 50, New Bond Street, London, W. New York: 37, West Seventeenth Street. Melbourne: 11&12, The Rialto, Collins Street, Copyright, MCMII [1902], by Chappell & Co.




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Generics, modality, and morality / by Ravi Thakral.

St Andrews, 2019.




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Contributions to the science of mythology / by the Right Hon. Professor F. Max Müller, K.M. Member of the French Institute. In two volumes.

[London] : Longmans, Green, and Co. 39 Paternoster Row, London ; New York and Bombay, 1897.




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Ancient symbol worship : influence of the phallic idea in the religions of antiquity / by Hodder M. Westropp and C. Staniland Wake. With an introduction, additional notes, and an appendix. By Alexander Wilder, M.D.

New York : J.W. Bouton, 706 Broadway, 1874.




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Agenda : U.S. poetry special issue / guest edited by Grey Gowrie.

[London] : [Printed in Great Britain by Poets' and Painters' Press, 146 Bridge Arch, Sutton Walk, London SE.1], 1976.




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Agenda : Thomas Hardy special issue / guest edited by Donald Davie.

[London] : [Printed by Poets' and Painters' Press, 146 Bridge Arch, Sutton Walk, London, S.E.1], [1972]




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Agenda : Robert Lowell special issue / guest edited by William Bedford.

[London] : [Printed in Great Britain by Poets' and Painters' Press, 146 Bridge Arch, Sutton Walk, London S.E.1], [1980]




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Agenda : Greek poetry special issue / edited by Peter Levi, S.J.

[London] : [Poets' and Painters' Press], [1969]




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Agenda : Giuseppe Ungaretti special issue / edited by Andrew Wylie.

[London] : [Printed by Poets' and Painters' Press, London, S.E.1.], [1970]




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Agenda : Geoffrey Hill special issue / edited by William Cookson.

[London] : [Printed in Great Britain by Poets' and Painters' Press 146 Bridge Arch, Sutton Walk, London S.E.1], [1979]




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Plagued by Trumpism

The spread of diseases is one negative side effect of globalisation




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Delhi High Court extends interim bail of 2177 undertrial prisoners by another 45 days amid coronavirus COVID-19 pandemic

The order stated, "The interim bails for a period of 45 days granted to 2,177 UTPs, ...are hereby extended by another period of 45 days from the date of their respective expiry of interim bails on the same terms and conditions."




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Diagnosis of Mental Disorders by Clinical Psychologists - Is it Unethical?

According to their ethical code...which usually becomes part of a state's licensing statutes...the unethics of diagnosing mental disorders by clinical psychologists is a problem.

Clinical psychology has its roots in psychometrics...the scientific measurement of mental functions. The earliest and most commonly known example of this is IQ testing.

For a Ph.D. in clinical psychology...students had to know and use the scientific literature...then to design and carry out publishable scientific research.

If they couldn't...it didn't matter how caring they were in the clinic. They didn't get a Ph.D. because the Code of Ethics For Psychologists -- Standard 2.04 says clearly...

Psychologists' work is based upon established scientific...knowledge of the discipline.

And the 'disorders' in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (DSM)...the diagnostic bible...are not determined by scientific investigation. Scientific knowledge is missing in the diagnostic practice of clinical psychology.

A clinical psychologist diagnoses a 'disorder' by matching symptoms to descriptions in the DSM. Good science requires a standard of what's normal before you can decide what is abnormal. But normal and disordered are never defined to differentiate them. So the extent of any 'disorder' can't be measured.

Despite its requirement to be scientific in its activities...the profession became 'medicalized' and adopted the procedures and the jargon of psychiatry -- which has never claimed to be a scientific discipline. It uses borrowed terms like...mental health...psychotherapy...psychopathology...psychiatric diagnosis. And it often relies on medication to manage symptoms in patients.

Why would psychologists use unethical methods?

Unfortunately the incentives...or pressures...are great for psychologists to use unvalidated diagnoses. Insurance companies...who pay psychologists...and the courts...that use them as expert witnesses...put great emphasis on diagnosis of mental disorder.

How could this affect me?

It wouldn't be such a serious matter...except a diagnosis of psychiatric disorder can have unexpected negative consequences in people's lives. When they don't know who uses diagnostic data or how...people even can lose their liberty based on unvalidated disorders.

If you see a clinical psychologist and you use insurance to pay for psychotherapy...a diagnosis is usually required...and may legally be shared with the insurer's affiliated companies.

This data sharing may have negative results (e.g., denial of employment)...which the therapist may not have explored with you. If not...then your agreement to put diagnostic data on the insurance form was not informed consent.

However, the Code of Ethics For Psychologists requires informed consent to share information (Standard 3.10) by discussing...

1. the involvement of third parties (e.g., an insurance company or credit card company and their affiliates) and limits of confidentiality. (Standard 10.01).

2. by discussing the foreseeable uses of the information generated through their psychological activities. (Standard 4.02)

How do I know psychiatric diagnosis isn't scientific?

With the DSM-III the American Psychiatric Association tried to validate the psychiatric diagnosis of 'disorders'...using scientific methods to answer the question: Would clinicians...independently evaluating the same symptoms...arrive at the same diagnosis?

The results were discouraging. Clinician agreement was very variable. This makes almost all mental health diagnoses arbitrary. But they are put in medical records as facts.

And this arbitrariness infects the next edition of the manual (DSM-V). The physicians candidly assert they may never establish the scientific validity of these 'disorders'...

Limitations in the current diagnostic paradigm...embodied in the current

DSM-IV...suggest that future research efforts...exclusively focused on

refining the DSM-defined syndromes...may never be successful...in

uncovering their underlying [causes].

So, the 'disorders' are...and will remain scientifically unreliable opinion.

You can read about the future DSM-V at the url listed below.

How are psychiatric disorders discovered if they're not scientific?

They aren't discovered...most are created. Committees of physicians (and a few non-physicians) decide...intuitively...what a mental disorder is.

For example...if a child is no good at arithmetic...she may be diagnosed with 315.1 Mathematics Disorder. Difficulty with arithmetic may be due to lack of interest. But that's not a disorder. Or it may be due to neurological problems. Which makes it a genuine medical issue...not an arbitrary psychiatric disorder.

What should I do?

You can remember that psychologists are required to practice from established scientific knowledge. They must have your informed consent to share information...such as a diagnosis. So...lacking those things...you should have concerns in this age of massive government and corporate data bases.

And you should raise any concerns about the unethics of diagnosing mental disorders with your psychologist or other therapist. But first know what their ethical requirements are. The url for psychologists is below. For other professions just type into a search engine "ethics for..." and add the name of the profession.

If you and your clinical psychologist haven't discussed these things...which might make you decide not to use insurance benefits...your relationship may be on vague ethical grounds...which are inadequate to protect you...the consumer...from unwanted consequences.

Can I still see a psychologist if I don't want a psychiatric diagnosis?

Of course. It's very doable. And I'll cover how in another article.




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Billie Holiday: the last interview and other conversations / with an introduction by Khanya Mtshali

Lewis Library - ML420.H58 A3 2019




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Brahms in context / edited by Natasha Loges, Katy Hamilton

Lewis Library - ML410.B8 B6837 2019




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You shook me all campaign long: music in the 2016 presidential election and beyond / edited by Eric T. Kasper and Benjamin S. Schoening

Lewis Library - ML3917.U6 Y68 2018




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Country music / Dayton Duncan ; based on a documentary film by Ken Burns, written by Dayton Duncan ; with a preface by Ken Burns ; picture research by Susanna Steisel, Susan Shumaker, Pam Tubridy Baucom, and Emily Mosher ; design by Maggie Hinders

Lewis Library - ML3524.D85 2019




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Solid state: the story of Abbey Road and the end of the Beatles / Kenneth Womack ; foreword by Alan Parsons

Lewis Library - ML421.B4 W67 2019




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The Routledge companion to the contemporary musical / edited by Jessica Sternfeld and Elizabeth L. Wollman

Lewis Library - ML2054.R68 2020




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The Oxford handbook of music and the brain / edited by Michael H. Thaut and Donald A. Hodges

Lewis Library - ML3830.O89 2019




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Music, education, and religion: intersections and entanglements / edited by Alexis Anja Kallio, Philip Alperson, and Heidi Westerlund

Lewis Library - ML3921.M883 2019




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Debussy's instrumental music in its cultural context / by Siglind Bruhn

Lewis Library - ML410.D28 B8813 2019




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Music in the role-playing game: heroes & harmonies / edited by William Gibbons and Steven Reale

Lewis Library - ML3540.7.M876 2020




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Music lessons: the Collège de France lectures / Pierre Boulez ; edited and translated by Jonathan Dunsby, Jonathan Goldman and Arnold Whittall

Lewis Library - ML410.B773 A5 2019




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Queering the field: sounding out ethnomusicology / edited by Gregory Barz and William Cheng

Lewis Library - ML3798.Q43 2020




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Thought and play in musical rhythm: Asian, African, and Euro-American perspectives / edited by Richard K. Wolf, Stephen Blum, and Christopher Hasty

Lewis Library - ML3850.T55 2019




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Switched on pop: how popular music works, and why it matters / Nate Sloan and Charlie Harding ; illustrations by Iris Gottlieb

Lewis Library - ML3470.S6 2020




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Foundations in music psychology: theory and research / edited by Peter Jason Rentfrow and Daniel J. Levitin

Lewis Library - ML3830.F7 2019




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Claude Debussy: a critical biography / François Lesure ; English translation and revised edition by Marie Rolf

Lewis Library - ML410.D28 L4313 2019




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Drama in the music of Franz Schubert / edited by Joe Davies and James William Sobaskie

Lewis Library - ML410.S3 D73 2019




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Bob Dylan: too much of nothing / written by Derek Barker

Lewis Library - ML420.D98 B32 2018




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Music and modernity among first peoples of North America / edited by Victoria Lindsay Levine and Dylan Robinson

Lewis Library - ML3550.M88 2019




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Opera and its voices in Utah / by Walter B. Rudolph ; sponsored by Special Collections & Archives, Merrill-Cazier Library, Utah State University, Logan, Utah

Lewis Library - ML200.8.S18 R83 2018




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Over Here, Over There: Transatlantic Conversations on the Music of World War I / edited by WIlliam Brooks, Christina Bashford, and Gayle Magee

Lewis Library - ML3551.5.B76 2019




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The evolving animal orchestra: in search of what makes us musical / Henkjan Honing ; translated by Sherry Macdonald

Lewis Library - ML3820.H5613 2019




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Music and consciousness 2: worlds, practices, modalities / edited by Ruth Herbert, David Clarke, Eric Clarke

Lewis Library - ML3830.M87 2019




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Queen Bey: a celebration of the power and creativity of Beyoncé Knowles-Carter / edited by Veronica Chambers

Lewis Library - ML420.K675 Q4 2019




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The Cambridge encyclopedia of brass instruments / edited by Trevor Herbert, Arnold Myers, John Wallace

Lewis Library - ML933.C36 2019




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Outreach for music librarians / edited by Scott Stone

Lewis Library - ML111.O98 2019




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An index to music in selected historical anthologies of Western art music / by Mara Parker

Lewis Library - ML128.A7 P28 2019




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Long walk home: reflections on Bruce Springsteen / edited by Jonathan D. Cohen and June Skinner Sawyers

Lewis Library - ML420.S77 L66 2019




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"Taken by the devil": the censorship of Frank Wedekind and Alban Berg's Lulu / Margaret Notley

Lewis Library - ML410.B47 N67 2020




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Music and dementia: from cognition to therapy / edited by Amee Baird, Sandra Garrido, Jeanette Tamplin

Lewis Library - ML3920.M87 2019




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The Grove Music guide to American film music / edited by Daniel Goldmark ; with Peter Graff, contributing editor

Lewis Library - ML102.M68 G76 2019




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The voice as something more: essays toward materiality / edited by Martha Feldman and Judith T. Zeitlin ; with an afterword by Mladen Dolar

Lewis Library - ML3877.I68 2015




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The beautiful ones / Prince ; edited by Dan Piepenbring

Lewis Library - ML420.P974 A3 2019




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Music for the American people: the Lewisohn Stadium concerts / by Jonathan Stern

Lewis Library - ML200.8.N5 S74 2019




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Touched by the sun: my friendship with Jackie / Carly Simon

Lewis Library - ML420.S56296 A3 2019




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London voices, 1820-1840: performers, practices, histories / edited by Roger Parker and Susan Rutherford

Lewis Library - ML286.8.L5 L65 2019




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Decentering the nation: music, Mexicanidad, and globalization / edited by Jesús A. Ramos-Kittrell.

Lewis Library - ML3485.D43 2020