A Humane Vision of Clinical Psychology, Volume 1 : The Theoretical Basis for a Compassionate Psychotherapy (Advances in Theoretical and Philosophical Psychology)

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A Humane Vision of Clinical Psychology, Volume 1 : The Theoretical Basis for a Compassionate Psychotherapy (Advances in Theoretical and Philosophical Psychology)

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  • 製本 Paperback:紙装版/ペーパーバック版/ページ数 264 p.
  • 言語 ENG
  • 商品コード 9781032259925
  • DDC分類 616.89

Full Description

The primary purpose of psychotherapy is to improve a patient's subjective experience. A Humane Vision of Clinical Psychology, Volume I shows readers what this might really mean, how it can be achieved, and where prevailing views go wrong in achieving it.

It lays out an alternative idea of human suffering and human healing, one that deemphasizes constructs and prioritizes experience itself. Early chapters argue that helping people to "know new things" is the ultimate target of psychotherapeutic change, but that our field has not sufficiently reflected on the complications of this task. A theory is then offered, which suggests that the unthinkable aspects of human experience are responsible for the very ways in which we human beings think. It invites and outlines a serious reformulation of psychotherapy in which human cognition is not the seat but the beneficiary of human change.

This book will be valuable for therapists, psychologists, psychiatrists, and other practitioners as well as graduate and undergraduate students in the fields of psychiatry, psychology, psychotherapy, mental health, social work, and philosophy. It will be of great interest for clinicians who find themselves disenchanted with the field's current ethos, which is stilted by scientistic approaches to soothing the suffering of the other.

Contents

Part I: The Basis for a Critique, 1. Beyond the World of Constructs, Part II: Wandering About Knowing and Wondering into a Better Method, 2. The Misattribution of Knowing and the Sentiment of Experience: There is No Such Floor, 3. The Striving Mind, 4. Existential Structure and the Experience Paradox, 5. The Current, the Ocean, and Illusions of Finitude, 6. The Tenderness of Soul and the Development of Reality: Out Past the Artifice of Mind, Part III: Psychotherapy: Mechanisms and Meaning, 7. What Psychotherapy Isn't: The Limitations of Knowledge Transfer, 8. The Experiential Basis of Right Knowing: Love, Loss, and Loathing, 9. A Shrinking Self is a Growing Self, 10. The Contiguity of Being, 11. Compassionately Going With: Psychotherapy is a Dance on the Brink