No, not exactly. Section Eight referred to the section of military regulations dealing with discharges for reasons of mental illness or insanity. Since homosexuality was considered a mental illness at the time it could have come under Section Eight. Section Eight was for people who were discharged for mental illnesses on insanity. Homosexuality was considered a mental illness at the time, so ,yes, it included but wasn't limited to gay people.
he is a homosexual that is his illness -> Homosexuality is NOT an illness and any perceptions of sexual orientation as being such are incorrect and misguided. Additionally there are many controversies over Jim Jones' prior mental state so it is difficult to retroactively determine or label his "illness".
Because Bipolar is a mental disorder. What else would they label it
Can someone help me label this sentence? Katie forgot her nonfiction book on the desk.
this kind of label is like your a boyfriend or a girlfriend. people get married and engaged so if your engaged your label is a fiancee. if your married then your label is a spouse (a woman is a wife and a man is a husband). if you have a child your a parent. if you do certain stuff then you are now this label! guess what your mental! if you belaive this! im a child! This all starts in high school. There are the jocks (sports guys), the nerds (possible to have more than one group), the art freaks, the cheerleaders/ bimbos, and usually the preps, who may or may not include any of the other groups. A person label would be stereotyping someone into a group such as that. a person label is like a nerd, geek and a jock... stuff like that
Labelling someone involves assigning a specific term or category to describe or define that person based on certain characteristics, behavior, or assumptions. This can lead to stereotyping, discrimination, or oversimplifying an individual's identity. It can be harmful as it may overlook the complexity and uniqueness of that person.
One answer was: "I don't understand how you can conceive that the two illness are the same. One is in the brain, the other is physical, pertaining to the body." In fact, there are many issues raised by the question: what is physical illness, what is mental illness, how clearly can these be defined, and is there a difference in clarity between such definitions? A physical illness is named when there is an injury to the body (e.g., a closed head trauma), an infection (as by a virus, fungus, or bacterium), or some systemic dysfunction in the physiology of the body (e.g., toxicity or diabetes). Ideally, there is a known cause and an effective course of treatment. A mental illness is named by observing behavior and speech. People report their experience (i.e., phenomenology), exhibit emotional expressions, are relatively aroused or relaxed, behave in expected or unexpected ways, and speak in coherent or confused utterances. When these observations violate social norms, significantly interfere with life functions, cause significant distress, negatively affect health, or otherwise detract from the quality of life and the responses persist despite efforts to ameliorate them, a label of mental illness is invoked. The division between "mental" and "physical" is not so easily determined. Many "mental" disturbances are caused by physical injuries, infections, or toxins. Many "physical" illnesses are influenced, exacerbated or even precipitated by psychological factors. Nonetheless, most so-called "mental illnesses" have components that have been learned. Sometimes, there are suspected physiological susceptibilities as well. Many illnesses in both categories can be reliably recognized and named by trained professionals familiar with the tools that science provides. Behavioral observations, laboratory assays and standardized tests are used to measure disorders in both categories of dysfunction. Some illnesses, of both types, elude identification; this is so when the illness is not clearly manifest, or when the science has not sufficiently progressed to make the definition certain. We speak of "physical" illnesses as something people "have." It may be more proper to speak of "mental" illnesses as something people "do." However, people truly suffer from either type of disorder.
Depression usually does not begin to affect you until puberty. Sometimes, a younger will show signs of depression, but that is unusual. You can be born with a genetic tendency to have depression, but babies and small children are almost always satisfied so long as they are well treated. Having the tendency does not mean that you will become depressed, just that you have a bigger chance of it.
When they always follow orders from someone without questioning why. Like a robot.
The word label is a noun and a verb. The noun is a name given to something or someone to categorise it. The verb form means to give a label to something.
label the ocean that lies north of europe...........
It describes someone who is popular and fashionable, as in Seventeen fashionable.