Psychology and the Human DilemmaW. W. Norton & Company, 1979 - 221 pagina's In "Psychology and the Human Dilemma," Rollo May, the distinguished psychoanalyst, presents his penetrating views of the conflicts involved in being a person in our modern socitey. Here he deals with man's loss of identity in the contemporary world, the sources of his anxiety, and the ultimate paradox of the concepts of freedom and responsibility. Even as he acknowledges that the twentieth century brings psychological dilemmas more pronounced and more difficult to endure than those of earlier times, Dr. May believes that our unique ability to comprehend paradox and wrestle with dilemma can enable us to develop constructively within the "human predicament." |
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Inhoudsopgave
What Is the Human Dilemma? | 21 |
PART ONEOUR CONTEMPORARY SITUATION | 23 |
Modern Mans Loss of Significance | 25 |
Personal Identity in an Anonymous World 210 25 | 40 |
PART TWOSOURCES OF ANXIETY | 53 |
Historical Roots of Modern Anxiety Theories | 55 |
Anxiety and Values | 83 |
PART THREEPSYCHOTHERAPY | 85 |
The Context of Psychotherapy 7 A Phenomenological Approach to Psychotherapy 8 Existential Therapy and the American Scene 9 JeanPaul Sartre a... | 87 |
PART FOURFREEDOM AND RESPONSIBILITY | 159 |
The Man Who Was Put in a Cage 12 Freedom and Responsibility Reexamined 13 Questions for a Science of Man 14 Social Responsibilities of Psych... | 161 |
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Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
American aspects assumption aware B. F. Skinner become behavior believe Binswanger capacity Carl Rogers centeredness century concept confront consciousness creative culture Descartes dichotomy drugs emotional emphasis example existential psychoanalysis Existential Psychology existentialists experience fact feeling freedom Freud goals historical human dilemma important individual intellectual Jean-Paul Sartre Kierkegaard Kurt Goldstein live man's meaning ment mind modern nature neurosis neurotic anxiety normal anxiety normal guilt NOTES FOR CHAPTER Oedipus one's ontological ourselves patient Paul Tillich person phenomenology philosophers possible presuppositions principle problem psychiatry psycho psychoanalysis psychology psychosis psychotherapy question rational reality reason relation relationship repressed responsibility rience Robert Lifton Sartre Sartre's scientific self-awareness self-relatedness sense significance simply situation social society superego symbols tendency therapist therapy thing Thomas Szasz thought threat tion tragic transcend unconscious understanding values Western Zen Buddhism