<p>For almost three millennia, philosophy and its more pragmatic offspring, psychology and the cognitive sciences, have struggled to understand the complex principles reflected in the patterned operaΒ tions of the human mind. What is knowledge? How does it relate to what we feel and do? What are the
Catharsis and Cognition in Psychotherapy
β Scribed by Barry Guinagh (auth.)
- Publisher
- Springer-Verlag New York
- Year
- 1987
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 137
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
The origin of this book goes back to the fall of 1971. I was beginning my fourth year as an Assistant Professor of Educational Psychology at the University of Florida when I became depressed. I went into psychotherapy, and after much emotional pain, learned to grieve for my handicapped son. While in therapy I read widely in hopes of understanding and helping myself; after my recovery, I continued my interest in psychotherapy at a professional level. In 1975, I attended a workshop by Albert Ellis on rational-emotive therapy and was impressed by his approach. I decided to study rational psychotherapy with Maxie Maltsby at the University of Kentucky. After 4 months I returned to the UniΒ versity of Florida, teaching courses in the area of personality and beginning to write this book, which at that time was to be only about the rational approach to change. However, by early 1978, I was depressed again. I returned to my original therapist, who had recently become interested in a variation of primal therapy. I found this therapy very powerful and lengthy; 2 years later, I ended the therΒ apy, feeling fit, but unsure what to make of my experience. I still found the ideas in rational therapy useful, but was certain that cathartic approaches were also helpful. I returned to writing the book, this time seeking to explain how these two different approaches could both be therapeutic.
β¦ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages i-ix
Catharsis and Cognition....Pages 1-3
Catharsis and Change....Pages 4-15
Cognition and Change....Pages 16-26
Sigmund Freudβs Use of Catharsis and Cognition....Pages 27-39
Tears of Grief....Pages 40-48
Psychological Trauma....Pages 49-60
Catharsis in Therapy: Primal Therapy....Pages 61-68
Cognitive Methods: Hypnotism and Meditation....Pages 69-80
Cognitive Self-Help: Positive Thinking....Pages 81-89
The Rational Approach to Therapy....Pages 90-100
Psychotherapy Research....Pages 101-107
Catharsis and Cognition in Psychotherapy....Pages 108-114
Back Matter....Pages 115-131
β¦ Subjects
Psychology, general
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
A virtual Who's Who in the field of cognitive psychotherapy! Tracing the history and derivation of cognitive psychotherapy, the authors discuss its recent developments as an evolving and integrative therapy. Chapters illustrate the applications of cognitive psychotherapy to treat such disorders as
<p>A virtual Who's Who in the field of cognitive psychotherapy! Tracing the history and derivation of cognitive psychotherapy, the authors discuss its recent developments as an evolving and integrative therapy. Chapters illustrate the applications of cognitive psychotherapy to treat such disorders a
In the first edition, recognized specialists from the major ideological schools address the role and conceptualization of cognitive processes and procedures of the psychotherapeutic encounter. In the almost two decades since the publication of the first edition, the "cognitive revolution" has moved
<p>Developed in the early 1960s by Aaron Beck and Albert Ellis in the USA, mostly for the short-term treatment of patients suffering from emotional disorders, cognitive psychotherapy has rapidly expanded both in its scope and geographically. In fact, when attending recent European conferences relati