Human Psychology from the Origins to Modern Times - 666 Chapters of the Science of MindVolume II continues the journey through the 666 Chapters of the Science of Mind, following humanity's psychological evolution from the growth of the individual to the depths of personality and the study of mental disorder.Across 130 chapters (151-280), this volume explores the whole arc of human development and personality formation. It begins with the significant theories of developmental psychology - from prenatal life and early infancy to the challenges of adolescence, adulthood, and ageing. The works of Freud, Erikson, Piaget, Vygotsky, Bowlby, Ainsworth, and Kohlberg illuminate how human beings learn, attach, reason, and mature within their social and cultural worlds.The narrative then moves into the study of personality - tracing the emergence of trait theories, psychoanalytic and humanistic perspectives, and the biological and cognitive foundations that make each person unique. From Allport and Cattell to Jung, Rogers, and Maslow, these chapters reveal the enduring question of what constitutes the self.Finally, the volume introduces clinical psychology and psychopathology, examining how psychological science classifies, understands, and treats mental disorders. Here, the reader encounters the frameworks of the DSM and ICD, the tension between the medical and psychological models, and the first explorations of anxiety, mood, and personality disorders that mark the modern era of mental-health research.Bringing together developmental, personality, and clinical psychology, Volume II portrays the unfolding of the human mind in growth, identity, and disorder. Each chapter integrates historical insight, theoretical depth, and human meaning, tracing how the science of psychology seeks not only to describe behaviour but to heal, understand, and transform it.This second volume builds upon the foundations of Volume I - moving from the origins of mind to the living dynamics of human development, individuality, and psychological health.