UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA http://melvyl.cdlib.org 12 March 2008

Meduna, Ladislas Joseph, 1896- Title Carbon dioxide therapy; a neurophysiological treatment of nervous disorders Edition [1st ed.] Publisher Springfield, Ill., Thomas [1950] Description xv, 236 p. 24 mc Note Bibliography: p. 220-225

Meduna, Ladislas Joseph, 1896- Title Carbon dioxide therapy; a neurophysiological treatment of nervous disorders. Edition 2d ed. Publisher Springfield, Ill. : Thomas, [1958] Description 541 p. illus. 24 cm. Note "Published as a collaborative effort of the members of the Carbon Dioxide Research Association." Note Includes bibliography. Language English

 

NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY http://catnyp.nypl.org 12 March 2008

Meduna, Alexander, 1957- : Automata and languages : theory and applications / Alexander Meduna. c2000 1 2 Meduna, Brigitte. : Studien zum Formular der p�pstlichen Justizbriefe von Alexander III. bis Innocenz III. (1159-1216) : die non obstantibus-Formel / Brigitte Meduna. 1989 1 3 Meduna, Jir�. : Die lat�nezeitlichen Siedlungen in M�hren / Jir� Meduna. 1980 1 4 Medunarodna asocijacija pozorisnih kriticara -- See International Association of Theatre Critics 1 5 Medunarodna elektrotehnicka komisija -- See International Electrotechnical Commission 1 6 Medunarodna federacija biblioteckih udruzenja i institutcija -- See International Federation of Library Associations and Institutions

Note no L. Meduna found at all.

 

GOOGLE BOOKS :

Catatonia in Autism Spectrum Disorders By Dirk Marcel Dhossche

credits Laszlo Meduna. "The study of catatonia in Autism Spectrum Disorders is a novel and controversial topic", gives the blurb.

Please Note The existence of any 'autism' has not been ever proved, beyond some such facts that some kids are less healthy than others ; some may be less active, some may be relatively more withdrawn compared to some others. This might suffice for the parents to have been duped by some quacks into believing that the child is 'ill' with something or other, and the cycle begins — of "curing" a non-existent 'illness', which cannot be cured (because you cannot 'cure' anything which does not in fact exist).

In the process of any such cure the child might be seriously harmed ; if everybody around believes that the child suffers some certain (though non-existent) illness then attempts at the impossible (curing a non-existent 'illness') cannot naturally lead anywhere other than harming the child.

Note that this novel and controversial topic may be (and seems likely to be) nothing other than a new imposition. By whom ? this could perhaps be tentatively termed the psycho-terrorist. Confer the works of L. Beria, G.B. Chisholm, Carl Binger, Andrei Snezhnevsky (the former USSR), etc.

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