“The inner (family) triad comprises the functional behaviors that, taken together, underpin the appropriate manifestations of the three senses-of-self. The respective roles played out in life by all adult two-brained (mammalian) beings are infused, balanced and matured by the inner family triad.”
Keith A. Buzzell, Man, A Three-brained Being, (Fifth Press, 2007), P. 47.
Search results for “family triad” in Keith Buzzell’s books about the Fourth Way
The term “Family Triad” appears in Buzzell’s writings and is indexed below. These results come from using the “Search Books” tool from the menu above. The full search results are accessible by typing “family triad” into the search books tool. For convenience we have placed them at the bottom of this page.
Explorations In Active Mentation (2006) — 4 hits | ||
p. 116 | neocortex) that, for many years, it was mistakenly referred to as part of the third brain. The Family Triad Within the neural structures of the cingulate gyrus, three associative areas undergo simultaneous | |
p. 117 | the sense of self-other and to all social interactions of mammals that they have been named “The Family Triad” by their discoverer, Dr. Paul MacLean of the National Institute of Mental Health. MacLean stated | |
p. 118 | in one’s “might” with courage into a future that is possible, meaningful but hazardous. The family triad of behaviors is an unconditional neural commitment to the future of the offspring. The offspring’s |
Man, A Three-brained Being (2007) — 9 hits | ||
p. 47 | The Triune Brain The Family Triad In his seminal and comprehensive volume entitled The Triune Brain in Evolution, Dr. Paul MacLean states: “In addition to endothermy, there were three | |
p. 47 | resonance with the survival triad of the second brain, as was noted earlier. The inner ( family) triad comprises the functional behaviors that, taken together, underpin the appropriate manifestations | |
p. 47 | life by all adult two-brained (mammalian) beings are infused, balanced and matured by the inner “family triad” . 12 Paul D. MacLean, The Triune Brain in Evolution, (New York: Plenum Press |