Tuesday, May 12, 2009

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Psychotherapeutic Process I - Dirk Revenstorf

In the first of his four volumes of the different schools of psychological techniques to Dirk Revenstorf deals with the deep psychological aspects of psychotherapy. The approximately 60 pages of the first chapter, however, are devoted to a general introduction to what the author describes the one hand, the basic approaches of the various currents in psychotherapy, as well as other aspects of a scientific comparative view of these approaches. So take subjects such as, treatment evaluation ',' therapy process 'as well, Ethics of the psychotherapist' a central place in this chapter.

The second chapter is devoted to extensive Freud, the father of psychology and his psychoanalysis. But as interesting and trend may have been some of his ideas as fast as can pansexualism Freud, who was in the Fin de Siècle most revolutionary and appropriate to pay in light of today's society boredom. Nevertheless, I found this chapter especially with regard to history and history of psychotherapy interesting.

The following chapter extends the Revenstorf of Freud primarily on the single individual understood concept of the unconscious to the collective unconscious posited by Jung, which sustains its archetypes represents. Sets the area of the important factors for the ontogeny to the phylogeny is extended, because Jung sees archetypes that the psychological legacy of evolution in the individual manifests.

The fourth chapter is additional to the previously dominant intellectual-psychological perspective, the human body into view of psychotherapy. During this test assumes the integration of the body at empire still interesting, but sometimes somehow abstruse trains, so you notice well in the course of the chapter, how this movement basis, for many of today's popular views (about the psychology of form or the Embodiment).

Building on the movement of the third chapter, in which the phylogeny was introduced as a design element of ontogeny, is the fifth chapter of the social aspect highlighted as one of the driving forces on the individual development based on the idea eagle. Thus we find quickly the transition to Berne's transactional analysis, which constitutes the main part of this chapter.

as a concise outline of the early beginnings of depth psychology, whose roots extend to almost all modern forms of psychotherapy, this book has liked me. From today's perspective, although some of the underlying ideas may as abstruse or are outdated, but based on their historical context and related issues and topics of contemporary society gets the reader the ability to abstract, from its environment are resolved approach, which has me more than once encouraged to think about how well the current views are already acting in the near future. Thoughts that have often reminds me of the following lines from Giuseppe Tomasi's novel, Il Gattopardo "(The Leopard):


" It has to change much, so that everything stays the way it is. "

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