
existential psychotherapy
Description
Book Introduction
The author felt that studying psychiatry in medical school was similar to the human anguish of novelists Tolstoy and Dostoevsky, and he included his anguish about this in this book.
What the author emphasizes in the text is that it is wrong for humans to unconsciously deny death and pursue so-called 'love' or 'happiness', and that this denial causes people to suffer from a pathological phenomenon that prevents them from enjoying the true meaning of life.
A true confrontation with death forces individuals to seriously question what their true purpose in life is.
But in reality, even though facing death is holistic and central to living a truly meaningful life, we do not want to think or talk about death.
To explain this phenomenon, Yalom addresses the four core elements of existential psychotherapy in this book: death, freedom, isolation, and meaninglessness.
His efforts to elicit these subtopics connect the hidden language and ideas of existentialist thought through interdisciplinary exchanges in the fields of literature, philosophy, psychology, and theology.
Therefore, the rational literary presentation and clinical cases of existentialist philosophers Sartre, Heidegger, and Kierkegaard, existentialist writers Camus, Tolstoy, and Dostoevsky, existentialist theologian Tillich, and existentialist psychologists Frankl and May in this book will leave readers with surprising insights and deep impressions, and open their eyes to new fields.
What the author emphasizes in the text is that it is wrong for humans to unconsciously deny death and pursue so-called 'love' or 'happiness', and that this denial causes people to suffer from a pathological phenomenon that prevents them from enjoying the true meaning of life.
A true confrontation with death forces individuals to seriously question what their true purpose in life is.
But in reality, even though facing death is holistic and central to living a truly meaningful life, we do not want to think or talk about death.
To explain this phenomenon, Yalom addresses the four core elements of existential psychotherapy in this book: death, freedom, isolation, and meaninglessness.
His efforts to elicit these subtopics connect the hidden language and ideas of existentialist thought through interdisciplinary exchanges in the fields of literature, philosophy, psychology, and theology.
Therefore, the rational literary presentation and clinical cases of existentialist philosophers Sartre, Heidegger, and Kierkegaard, existentialist writers Camus, Tolstoy, and Dostoevsky, existentialist theologian Tillich, and existentialist psychologists Frankl and May in this book will leave readers with surprising insights and deep impressions, and open their eyes to new fields.
index
Chapter 1: Introduction
Existential Therapy: Dynamic Psychotherapy
Directions in Existential Therapy: A Strange Yet Familiar Therapy
The field of existential psychotherapy
Existential Therapy and the Academic World
Part 1 Death
Chapter 2 Life, Death, and Anxiety
The interdependence of life and death
Death and Anxiety
Inattention to Death in Psychotherapy and Practice
Freud: Anxiety without Death
Chapter 3: The Concept of Death in Children
The prevalence of death concern in children
The Concept of Death: Developmental Stages
Death anxiety and the development of psychopathology
Death Education for Children
Chapter 4 Death and Psychopathology
Death Anxiety: A Paradigm of Psychopathology
distinctiveness
Ultimate Savior
An Integrated Perspective on Psychopathology
Schizophrenia and fear of death
The existential paradigm of psychopathology: Research evidence
Chapter 5 Death and Psychotherapy
Death as a limiting situation
Death as a primary source of anxiety
Problems of psychotherapy
Death insensitivity
Part 2 Freedom
Chapter 6 Responsibility
Responsibility as an existential concern
Avoidance of responsibility: a clinical phenomenon
Acceptance of responsibility and psychotherapy
The American Type of Responsibility - or How to Take Responsibility for Your Life.
-Execute on your own terms.
Take care of yourself and achieve it.
Responsibility and Psychotherapy: Research Evidence
Limits of responsibility
Guam's sense of responsibility and existential guilt
Chapter 7 Will
Responsibility, will, action
Clinical Understanding of Will: Rank, Farber, May
Will and clinical practice
wish
Decision-Choice
Past vs. Future in Psychotherapy
Part 3: Alienation
Chapter 8: Existential Alienation
What is existential alienation?
Alienation and relationships
Existential alienation and interpersonal psychopathology
Chapter 9: Existential Alienation and Psychotherapy
Guidelines for Understanding Interpersonal Relationships
Facing the client's alienation
Alienation and the True Encounter between Client and Counselor
Part 4: Meaninglessness
Chapter 10: Meaninglessness
The meaning of the text
The meaning of life
Loss of meaning: clinical implications
Clinical investigation
Chapter 11 Meaninglessness and Psychotherapy
Why We Need Meaning
Psychotherapy strategies
Epilogue
annotation
Search
Existential Therapy: Dynamic Psychotherapy
Directions in Existential Therapy: A Strange Yet Familiar Therapy
The field of existential psychotherapy
Existential Therapy and the Academic World
Part 1 Death
Chapter 2 Life, Death, and Anxiety
The interdependence of life and death
Death and Anxiety
Inattention to Death in Psychotherapy and Practice
Freud: Anxiety without Death
Chapter 3: The Concept of Death in Children
The prevalence of death concern in children
The Concept of Death: Developmental Stages
Death anxiety and the development of psychopathology
Death Education for Children
Chapter 4 Death and Psychopathology
Death Anxiety: A Paradigm of Psychopathology
distinctiveness
Ultimate Savior
An Integrated Perspective on Psychopathology
Schizophrenia and fear of death
The existential paradigm of psychopathology: Research evidence
Chapter 5 Death and Psychotherapy
Death as a limiting situation
Death as a primary source of anxiety
Problems of psychotherapy
Death insensitivity
Part 2 Freedom
Chapter 6 Responsibility
Responsibility as an existential concern
Avoidance of responsibility: a clinical phenomenon
Acceptance of responsibility and psychotherapy
The American Type of Responsibility - or How to Take Responsibility for Your Life.
-Execute on your own terms.
Take care of yourself and achieve it.
Responsibility and Psychotherapy: Research Evidence
Limits of responsibility
Guam's sense of responsibility and existential guilt
Chapter 7 Will
Responsibility, will, action
Clinical Understanding of Will: Rank, Farber, May
Will and clinical practice
wish
Decision-Choice
Past vs. Future in Psychotherapy
Part 3: Alienation
Chapter 8: Existential Alienation
What is existential alienation?
Alienation and relationships
Existential alienation and interpersonal psychopathology
Chapter 9: Existential Alienation and Psychotherapy
Guidelines for Understanding Interpersonal Relationships
Facing the client's alienation
Alienation and the True Encounter between Client and Counselor
Part 4: Meaninglessness
Chapter 10: Meaninglessness
The meaning of the text
The meaning of life
Loss of meaning: clinical implications
Clinical investigation
Chapter 11 Meaninglessness and Psychotherapy
Why We Need Meaning
Psychotherapy strategies
Epilogue
annotation
Search
GOODS SPECIFICS
- Date of issue: June 25, 2007
- Page count, weight, size: 637 pages | 1,187g | 188*257*35mm
- ISBN13: 9788958914853
- ISBN10: 8958914858
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