David Seabury
David Seabury (1885 – 1 April 1960) was an American psychologist, author, and lecturer. While practicing as a consulting psychologist in New York City, he published fifteen books. He founded the Centralist School of Psychology, was the founder and president of the David Seabury School of Psychology, and was president of the Seabury University of Adult Education. In 1923 he married feminist journalist Florence Guy Woolston.
Bibliography
- Unmasking Our Minds (1924)
- What Makes Us Seem So Queer (1934)
- How to Worry Successfully (1936)
- The Art of Selfishness (1937)
- Build Your Own Future (1938)
- Adventures in Self-Discovery (1938)
- How to Get Things Done (with Alfred Uhler, 1938)
- Why We Love and Hate (1939)
- How Jesus Heals Our Minds Today (1941)
- High Hopes for Low Spirits (1955)
- The Art of Living Without Tension (1958)
gollark: Mine and I think most of them here *are* still doing actual teaching, although with more computers than usual.
gollark: Hmm. Apparently the UK just went into lockdown again despite Boris saying he really didn't want to, except they're still keeping schools because of course.
gollark: > <@!258639553357676545> How many egregious privacy violations does the app have?I haven't actually checked.
gollark: The UK rolled out a contact tracing app (very late) but I have no idea how much use it actually has.
gollark: The amazing power of exponential growth!
References
- "Dr. David Seabury Is Dead at 74; Psychologist Wrote and Lectured"; New York Times; April 3, 1960; p. 86.
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