This book describes many different and useful ways of understanding personal relationships from a dialectical perspective. It is written for scholars in higher education, both faculty and students, across many fields within the social sciences and the humanities who seek answers to questions about how people relate to one another. The book is valuable for all scholars who pursue new ideas because it models a form of scholarly communication in which:
* multiple voices can be acknowledged as valid;
* the worth of one perspective is not measured by the denigration of another; and
* difference is celebrated as conducive to learning rather than threatening to it.
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Communication Communication & Journalism Communications Education & Reference Foreign Language Study & Reference Health, Fitness & Dieting Health, Fitness & Dieting Interpersonal Relations Language Arts Personal Transformation Politics & Social Sciences Psychology Psychology & Counseling Relationships Self Help Self-Help Self-Help & Psychology Social Sciences Words, Language & Grammar