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"Clinical Perspectives on Meaning: Positive and Existential
Psychotherapy . . . is an outstanding collection of new
contributions that build thoughtfully on the past, while at the
same time, take the uniquely human capacity for meaning-making to
important new places." - From the preface by Carol D. Ryff and
Chiara Ruini This unique theory-to-practice volume presents
far-reaching advances in positive and existential therapy, with
emphasis on meaning-making as central to coping and resilience,
growth and positive change. Innovative meaning-based strategies are
presented with clients facing medical and mental health challenges
such as spinal cord injury, depression, and cancer. Diverse
populations and settings are considered, including substance abuse,
disasters, group therapy, and at-risk youth. Contributors
demonstrate the versatility and effectiveness of meaning-making
interventions by addressing novel findings in this rapidly growing
and promising area. By providing broad international and
interdisciplinary perspectives, it enhances empirical findings and
offers valuable practical insights. Such a diverse and varied
examination of meaning encourages the reader to integrate his or
her thoughts from both existential and positive psychology
perspectives, as well as from clinical and empirical approaches,
and guides the theoretical convergence to a unique point of
understanding and appreciation for the value of meaning and its
pursuit. Included in the coverage: * The proper aim of therapy:
Subjective well-being, objective goodness, or a meaningful life? *
Character strengths and mindfulness as core pathways to meaning in
life * The significance of meaning to conceptualizations of
resilience and posttraumatic growth * Practices of meaning-making
interventions: A comprehensive matrix * Working with meaning in
life in chronic or life-threatening disease * Strategies for
cultivating purpose among adolescents in clinical settings *
Integrative meaning therapy: From logotherapy to existential
positive interventions * Multiculturalism and meaning in
existential and positive psychology * Nostalgia as an existential
intervention: Using the past to secure meaning in the present and
the future * The spiritual dimension of meaning Clinical
Perspectives on Meaning redefines these core healing objectives for
researchers, students, caregivers, and practitioners from the
fields of existential psychology, logotherapy, and positive
psychology, as well as for the interested public.
This landmark volume introduces the new series of proceedings from
the Viktor Frankl Institute, dedicated to preserving the past,
disseminating the present, and anticipating the future of Franklian
existential psychology and psychotherapy, i.e. logotherapy and
existentialanalysis . Wide-ranging contents keep readers abreast of
current ideas, findings, and developments in the field while also
presenting rarely-seen selections from Frankl's work. Established
contributors report on new applications of existential therapies in
specific (OCD, cancer, end-of-life issues) and universal (the
search for meaning) contexts as well as intriguing possibilities
for opening up dialogue with other schools of psychology. And this
initial offering establishes the tenor of the series by presenting
varied materials across the field, including: Archival and
unpublished articles and lectures by Frankl. Peer-reviewed studies
on logotherapy process, measures, and research. New case studies
using logotherapy and existential analysis in diverse settings.
Papers advocating cross-disciplinary collaboration. Philosophical
applications of existential psychology. Critical reviews of
logotherapy-related books. Volume 1 of Logotherapy and Existential
Analysis will attract a wide audience, including psychologists
(clinical, social, personality, positive), psychotherapists of
different schools, psychiatrists in private practice, and
researchers in these fields. Practitioners in counseling, pastoral
psychology, coaching, and medical care will also welcome this new
source of ideas and inspiration.
This book is a first attempt to combine insights from the two
perspectives with regard to the question of meaning by examining a
collection of theoretical and empirical works. This volume
therefore is destined to become an important addition to
psychological literature: both from the viewpoint of the history of
ideas (again this would be one of the first times that positive and
existentialist psychologies meet) and from the viewpoint of
theoretical and empirical research into the meaning concept in
psychology.
What is mind? What is its relationship to the physical world? Is
consciousness a causative agent in the physical world? With much
progress being made in the neurosciences, many have thought that
these questions could be answered by reducing them to questions
about physical systems such as the brain. But this approach has
foundered on the core problem of consciousness: Why is it that some
brain processes are accompanied by conscious awareness? This
anthology points out new sources and unexamined paths of
consciousness research. By presenting a wide spectrum of
non-reductive theories, the volume endeavours to overcome the
dichotomy between dualism and monism that keeps plaguing the debate
in favour of new and more differentiated positions.
This landmark volume introduces the new series of proceedings from
the Viktor Frankl Institute, dedicated to preserving the past,
disseminating the present, and anticipating the future of Franklian
existential psychology and psychotherapy, i.e. logotherapy and
existentialanalysis . Wide-ranging contents keep readers abreast of
current ideas, findings, and developments in the field while also
presenting rarely-seen selections from Frankl's work. Established
contributors report on new applications of existential therapies in
specific (OCD, cancer, end-of-life issues) and universal (the
search for meaning) contexts as well as intriguing possibilities
for opening up dialogue with other schools of psychology. And this
initial offering establishes the tenor of the series by presenting
varied materials across the field, including: Archival and
unpublished articles and lectures by Frankl. Peer-reviewed studies
on logotherapy process, measures, and research. New case studies
using logotherapy and existential analysis in diverse settings.
Papers advocating cross-disciplinary collaboration. Philosophical
applications of existential psychology. Critical reviews of
logotherapy-related books. Volume 1 of Logotherapy and Existential
Analysis will attract a wide audience, including psychologists
(clinical, social, personality, positive), psychotherapists of
different schools, psychiatrists in private practice, and
researchers in these fields. Practitioners in counseling, pastoral
psychology, coaching, and medical care will also welcome this new
source of ideas and inspiration.
This book is a first attempt to combine insights from the two
perspectives with regard to the question of meaning by examining a
collection of theoretical and empirical works. This volume
therefore is destined to become an important addition to
psychological literature: both from the viewpoint of the history of
ideas (again this would be one of the first times that positive and
existentialist psychologies meet) and from the viewpoint of
theoretical and empirical research into the meaning concept in
psychology.
This books takes a new and critical look at the development of
logotherapy and existential analysis, a prominent existential
school of psychotherapy. It explores the intellectual and political
biography of its founder, the Austrian psychiatrist and holocaust
survivor Viktor Frankl, best known for his bestselling "Man's
Search for Meaning". The book focuses on his life and works and
political thinking from the late 1920's to the years spent in
Nazi-occupied Vienna, and finally the time he spent in the
concentration camps Theresienstadt, Auschwitz, and Dachau. It
presents new archival findings on Frankl's involvement with the
Austrian Zionist Movement, his attempts to sabotage the
"euthanasia" program of the National Socialists, and his scathing
critiques of the NS-Psychotherapy school around Goering and his
students, published during the years before Frankl's deportation to
Theresienstadt. This book addresses recent attempts by the author
Timothy Pytell to portray Frankl as a "fellow traveler" of the Nazi
regime and corrects the fundamental errors and misrepresentations
in Pytell's work. It thus offers important perspectives on the
intellectual history of ideas in psychology and existential
psychotherapy, and also serves as key material on the development
of psychotherapy before and during the Holocaust.
Angeregt durch eine Gedankensammlung, stellt mein Werk Vom Sinn des
Speisens oder der Sinnlichkeit im Essen" ein Erkennen, der
eigentlichen Dimensionen des Speisens dar. Teils durch mein
sozialwisssenschaftliches Studium, teils durch meine Kochlaufbahn
haben sich in Sachen Speisen viele Fragen aufgetan, die ich in
Erkenntnissen daruber niedergeschrieben habe. Was ist eigentlich
eine Speise und was ist der Sinn des Einverleibens. Ein Zweck ist
sich zu Erfullen, sein Ich zu erfullen. Das muss doch sinnhaft
geschehen, so entstand ein Diskurs uber aktuelle und tiefergehende
Zusammenhange in den Kapiteln. Kulinaristik ist ausgrenzend in dem
Mass wie sie alles Gute nur noch mit hohen Geldwerten verbindet,
sind doch gerade Armenspeisen zu wahrer Freude geworden einst.
Heute haben wir Kollektive des Essens und gelenkte Freuden. Ich
versuche diese Entwicklung aufzuklaren und gebe fur Arm und Reich
die Botschaft des Speisens zu Erkennen und fuhre zu einem
personlicheren Umgang, pladiere fur individuelle Erfullung. Die
Kapitelthemen zur Speise geben Brisanz und Gestalt wieder. M.
Wenzle
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