A psychotherapist and long-time acquaintance of Albert Ellis
presents a biography of one of the leading contributors to the
theory and practice of modern psychotherapy. Ellis, a prodigious
writer, has been a center of controversy for his writings on sex,
and for his development and advocacy of rational-emotive therapy.
Wiener provides good insights into how ideas are shaped by a
scientist's personal characteristics. "Choice"
The volume is fascinating: Ellis is and has been outspoken and
intellectually stimulating to listeners on his favorite topic: how
to live well'. "Psychological ReportS"
This fascinating study portrays Ellis as a living model of his
own therapy. The author details how Albert Ellis arrived his
theories through his need to find a way of handling his own
psychologically neglected childhood and adolescence. Drawing upon
the recollections of Ellis' brother, childhood friends, Ellis
himself, his associates and companions, former students and
patients, and Ellis' autobiographical notes and correspondence,
Wiener presents an account of the man who, during the mid-fifties,
revolutionized psychotherapy with a more direct, active style of
treatment. Ellis maintained that a person gains nothing by
considering and treating himself as if he had been victimized.
Rather, the person needs immediately to start changing himself by
adopting a different, more objective attitude toward his problem.
This alternative to psychoanalysis is termed RET, or Rational
Emotive Therapy, and is a direct forerunner of the behavioral
cognitive therapy approach.
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