Psychology of Survival: Human Reactions to the Catastrophes of War |
Contents
PREFACE by Tage Erlander Prime Minister of Sweden | 1 |
THE INDIVIDUALS PSYCHOLOGICAL REACTIONS | 20 |
Reactions after the danger is over | 47 |
Copyright | |
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acts of war acute adjustment afraid air attack Andrea Doria anxiety apathetic atomic bomb become behavior body bombing attacks calm capacity for psychological catastrophe centers of population civil defense common sense condition conscious danger Defence research board demands dependent diarrhea difficult dread effects Emotional paralysis especially evacuated everyday example experience explosion fear feeling felt flight give happened herd instinct Hiroshima human hysterical increased individual inner tension insecurity instinct knowledge Koblenz lives loss of tonus mental military misfortune modern nature near-misses neurotic obvious one's organization panic patient peacetime perhaps period person phase population possible preparedness problem psychological reactions psychological resistance psychosis react reaction of terror remote-misses rescue rumors second world second world war shelter situation someone sound strains suddenly survive survivors sweat glands symptoms TAGE ERLANDER thing threat trembling typical understand uneasiness violent wartime society wounded