Forms of Feeling: The Heart of PsychotherapyFirst published in 1985. This book is aimed at readers who wish to learn how to engage in psychotherapy: for beginners, for experienced practitioners, for disciplined research workers, as for the author, the word 'psychotherapy' has a very broad meaning. The author describes this as an 'autobiography': the development of ideas, attitudes, and meanings which have arisen and been transformed through joy, sorrow, chaos, and relative tranquillity in a journey of forty years through the world of academic psychiatry, of analytical psychotherapy, of scientific research, and of life in a therapeutic community. To a large extent this book is an expression of individual experience. |
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Crítica de los usuarios - brendanus - LibraryThingRobert Hobson reports his person, eclectic, loose Conversational Model of psychotherapy. in an effort to find a place for it within the accepted structures of psychotherapy Leer comentario completo
Contenido
2 | |
Book II The Minute Particulars
| 161 |
Book III The Heart of a Psychotherapist
| 258 |
Notes
| 282 |
A Note on Sources References and Further Reading
| 298 |
References
| 300 |
Name Index
| 310 |
Subject Index
| 314 |
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Términos y frases comunes
action activity aloneness-togetherness anxiety attitude avoidance basic basic anxiety become behaviour bodily Chapter Chip Coleridge Coleridge’s communication complex conflict Conversational Model convey cotton-grass creative cricket definition dialogue difficult discussion dream emerge emotion experience experiencing explore expression eyes face fantasy fear feeling feeling-language figure find first forms formulation Freda goal heart Herbert McCabe Hobson hope human ideas images imaginative important inner insight interview intimate Joe Smith Jones Jung Kekulé language language-games learning living symbol loneliness look loss Martin Chivers means minute particulars mode mother movement moving metaphor mutual non-verbal organized pain patient patterns peak experience perhaps personal conversation personal relationship possible present problem psychiatrist psychoanalysis psychological psychotherapy reflect relation response Samuel Taylor Coleridge sense shared signal significant situation speak Stephen story suggest talk therapeutic therapist therapy things thinking thought understanding weft whole William Blake William Wordsworth word Wordsworth