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 9
... question of whether life has any meaning at all, flock to therapists. But therapy itself is often an expression of the fragmentation of our age rather than an enterprise for overcoming it. Often these persons, seeking release from their ...
... question of whether life has any meaning at all, flock to therapists. But therapy itself is often an expression of the fragmentation of our age rather than an enterprise for overcoming it. Often these persons, seeking release from their ...
Pagina 10
... questions that are deepest and most fundamental — questions of love, death, anxiety, caring. The writings in this book have grown out of my passion to find the being in my fellow persons and myself. This always involves the search for ...
... questions that are deepest and most fundamental — questions of love, death, anxiety, caring. The writings in this book have grown out of my passion to find the being in my fellow persons and myself. This always involves the search for ...
Pagina 17
... questions: What is this person's relation to his own potentialities? What goes on that he chooses or is forced to choose to block off from his awareness something which he knows, and on another level knows that he knows? In my work in ...
... questions: What is this person's relation to his own potentialities? What goes on that he chooses or is forced to choose to block off from his awareness something which he knows, and on another level knows that he knows? In my work in ...
Pagina 18
... question of the human being's margin of freedom with respect to his potentialities, a margin in which resides his responsibility for himself which even the therapist cannot take away. Another concept from classical analysis besides ...
... question of the human being's margin of freedom with respect to his potentialities, a margin in which resides his responsibility for himself which even the therapist cannot take away. Another concept from classical analysis besides ...
Pagina 19
... question: How is it possible that one being relates to another? What is the nature of human beings that two persons can communicate, can grasp each other as beings, have genuine concern with Bases of Psychotherapy 1g.
... question: How is it possible that one being relates to another? What is the nature of human beings that two persons can communicate, can grasp each other as beings, have genuine concern with Bases of Psychotherapy 1g.
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