The Discovery of BeingW. W. Norton & Company, 4 mei 2015 - 224 pagina's “Clear, accurate, and interesting. There is no better short introduction to the existential approach to psychology.” —Dallas Morning News The brilliant psychologist Rollo May was a major force in existential psychology. Here, he brings together the ideas of Kierkegaard, Nietzsche, and other great thinkers to offer insights into its ideas and techniques. He pays particular attention to the causes of loneliness and isolation and to our search to find new and firm moorings in order to move toward a future where responsibility, creativity, and love can play a role. |
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Pagina 10
... become possible. In contrast to the psychologies that conclude with theories about conditioning, mechanisms of behavior, and instinctual drives, I maintain that we must go below these theories and discover the person, the being to whom ...
... become possible. In contrast to the psychologies that conclude with theories about conditioning, mechanisms of behavior, and instinctual drives, I maintain that we must go below these theories and discover the person, the being to whom ...
Pagina 13
... become too popular in some quarters, particularly in national magazines. But we have been comforted by a saying of Nietzsche's: "The first adherents of a movement are no argument against it." In the United States there is, paradoxically ...
... become too popular in some quarters, particularly in national magazines. But we have been comforted by a saying of Nietzsche's: "The first adherents of a movement are no argument against it." In the United States there is, paradoxically ...
Pagina 19
... become "shadows," and everyone else in the world does too. It can erode the patient's sense of responsibility, and can rob the therapy of much of the dynamic for the patient's change. What has been lacking is a concept of encounter ...
... become "shadows," and everyone else in the world does too. It can erode the patient's sense of responsibility, and can rob the therapy of much of the dynamic for the patient's change. What has been lacking is a concept of encounter ...
Pagina 21
... becomes inconsistent because it fits someone else. One's own meaning becomes meaningless because it is borrowed from somebody else's meaning. Speaking now more concretely of the concept of encounter, I mean it to refer to the fact that ...
... becomes inconsistent because it fits someone else. One's own meaning becomes meaningless because it is borrowed from somebody else's meaning. Speaking now more concretely of the concept of encounter, I mean it to refer to the fact that ...
Pagina 25
... becoming, emerging — this experiencing human being immediately in the room with me. There are in this country several undertakings to systematize psychoanalytic theory in terms of forces, dynamisms, and energies. The approach I propose ...
... becoming, emerging — this experiencing human being immediately in the room with me. There are in this country several undertakings to systematize psychoanalytic theory in terms of forces, dynamisms, and energies. The approach I propose ...
Inhoudsopgave
9 | |
24 | |
THE CULTURAL | 35 |
FOUR How Existentialism | 60 |
FIVE Kierkegaard Nietzsche and Freud | 67 |
CONTRIBUTIONS | 89 |
SEVEN Anxiety and Guilt as Ontological | 109 |
ELEVEN Transcending the Immediate | 143 |
TWELVE Concerning Therapeutic | 151 |
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accept analysis anxiety aspects aware basic become behavior Binswanger Boss capacity to transcend concept consciousness culture Dasein death death instinct Descartes despair developed dynamic Eigenwelt Ellen West emphasize exis existen existential analysts existential approach Existential Psychology existential psychotherapy existential therapists existentialists existing person experience fact feel freedom Freud future grasp Heidegger Henri Ellenberger historical Hutchens immediate situation implications individual insight Karl Jaspers Kurt Goldstein Ludwig Binswanger man's Martin Heidegger meaning Mitwelt mode modern nature neurosis neurotic Nietzsche's nonbeing object one's oneself ontological guilt past patient Paul Tillich philosophy possible potentialities precisely present problems psychiatrists psychiatrists and psychologists psychoanalysis psychological psychotherapy question radical reality reason relation relationship repression scientific self-awareness self-consciousness sense sexual significant speak specific technical technique tence tendency theory therapy thought threat Tillich tion transcend the immediate transference truth Umwelt uncon unconscious understanding Western writes