Prof. Hossein Salehi Najafabadi
Hossein Salehi Najafabadi (born 11 August 1975) is an Iranian scholar, researcher, and writer known for his works in philosophy, psychology, and applied economics. He has proposed several theoretical frameworks, including the Theory of Time Repetition in Existence in philosophy, Fear as the Basis of Psychological Disorders in psychoanalysis, and applied economic models.
Education
Salehi Najafabadi completed a Bachelor’s degree in Radio Telecommunications at Imam Khomeini University in Nowshahr, Iran. He earned a Master’s degree and a Doctorate in Islamic Philosophy from Al-Hojjah University of Islamic Sciences in Mashhad. He later obtained an MA in Clinical Psychology from Islamic Azad University, Tehran. He also completed a PhD and Post-Doctorate in Psychoanalysis at NSIU University (Canada–USA), as well as a PhD in Applied Economics from the London Department of Applied Economics.
Academic work and theories
Philosophy
- Theory of Time Repetition in Existence: a philosophical model discussing the cyclical structure of time.
Psychology and Psychoanalysis
- Fear as the Basis of Psychological Disorders: proposes fear as the root mechanism of mental disorders.
Applied Economics
- Ten-System Applied Economics Model: discusses the foundations of traditional and non-classical economies.
- Theory of Economic Development in Two Applied Branches: examines multidimensional development within applied economic systems.
Academic positions, honors, and recognition
Salehi Najafabadi has been associated with multiple international scientific organizations. His recognitions include:
- Member of the jury panel at the International Association For New Scientific Achievments (IANSA)
- Recipient of a Scientific Pin from the science evaluation institute affiliated with the Royal Society of Sciences (UK)
- Awarded the Second-Degree Medal of Science from IANSA
- Honorary title of Distinguished Scientist and honorary faculty membership at the International Institute for Scientific Evaluation of England (IISEE)