Description

Book Synopsis
Garry Prouty writes: In developing this book with my colleagues, I have come to realize that Pre-Therapy is not only a theory and technique of psychotherapy, but also a method of understanding psychological phenomena. Western humanistic psychology has traditionally focused on higher levels of human functioning such as peak experiences or self actualization. In contrast, Pre-Therapy focuses on lower levels of functioning - learning disability, regression, chronic schizophrenia and dementia. Pre-Therapy is a commitment to understand and treat the regressed levels of 'Being in the World'. It is possibly a paradigm shift within western humanistic psychology.In a different sense, Pre-Therapy is a cultural conserve. It maintains a consistent 'non-directive' position derived from mid-20th Century Rogerian Psychology. It also embraces a 'concrete phenomenology'. In Martin Buber's language this is described as 'pointing at the concrete'. Pre-Therapy enables the therapist to contact the patient's regressed levels through the concreteness of the Contact Reflections. What is important about this text, is not Pre-Therapy itself. This can be read in other books and papers.What is important in this text is the growth resulting from Pre-Therapy. Roughly speaking Pre-Therapy has undergone three changes: 1966-1986 'birth' in the United States; 1986-2006 Expansion and growth in Europe; and, The expansion beyond itself to other distinct and separate psychological phenomena - a second generation of theorizing and applications. For the reader not familiar with Pre-Therapy, Part I outlines a brief history of the approach and Part II is a review of the theory itself. Part III contains independent approaches to divergent issues and problems. They have their commonality only by being rooted in Pre-Therapy. They are emergent developments.

Table of Contents
PrefacePart I: A brief history of Pre-TherapyPart II: A review of Pre-TherapyPart III: Emergent DevelopmentsCh 1 Pre-Therapeutic approaches with people 'with special needs'. Marlis Portner, SwitzerlandCh 2 The falling man: Pre-Therapy applied to somatic hallucinating. Dion Van Werde, BelgiumCh 3 Pre-Therapy and Dementia Care. Penny Dodds, UKCh 4 ECPI: Objective Evaluation for the Pre-Therapy Interview. Aldo Dinacci, ItalyCh 5 The Development of Inter-subjectivity in relation to Psychotherapy and It's Implication for Pre-Therapy. Hans Peters, NetherlandsCh 6 Pre-Therapy and the Pre-Expressive Self. Garry Prouty, USACh 7 Metaphact Process: A New Way of Understanding Schizophrenic Thought Disorder. Margaret Warner and Judith Trytten, USACh 8 The therapy of Dissociation: Its phases and developments. Tom Coffeng, NetherlandsCh 9 The Hallucination of the Unconscious Self. Garry Prouty, USA

Emerging Developments in Pre-therapy: A Pre-Therapy Reader

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A Paperback by Garry F. Prouty

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    View other formats and editions of Emerging Developments in Pre-therapy: A Pre-Therapy Reader by Garry F. Prouty

    Publisher: PCCS Books
    Publication Date: 15/10/2008
    ISBN13: 9781906254094, 978-1906254094
    ISBN10: 1906254095

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    Garry Prouty writes: In developing this book with my colleagues, I have come to realize that Pre-Therapy is not only a theory and technique of psychotherapy, but also a method of understanding psychological phenomena. Western humanistic psychology has traditionally focused on higher levels of human functioning such as peak experiences or self actualization. In contrast, Pre-Therapy focuses on lower levels of functioning - learning disability, regression, chronic schizophrenia and dementia. Pre-Therapy is a commitment to understand and treat the regressed levels of 'Being in the World'. It is possibly a paradigm shift within western humanistic psychology.In a different sense, Pre-Therapy is a cultural conserve. It maintains a consistent 'non-directive' position derived from mid-20th Century Rogerian Psychology. It also embraces a 'concrete phenomenology'. In Martin Buber's language this is described as 'pointing at the concrete'. Pre-Therapy enables the therapist to contact the patient's regressed levels through the concreteness of the Contact Reflections. What is important about this text, is not Pre-Therapy itself. This can be read in other books and papers.What is important in this text is the growth resulting from Pre-Therapy. Roughly speaking Pre-Therapy has undergone three changes: 1966-1986 'birth' in the United States; 1986-2006 Expansion and growth in Europe; and, The expansion beyond itself to other distinct and separate psychological phenomena - a second generation of theorizing and applications. For the reader not familiar with Pre-Therapy, Part I outlines a brief history of the approach and Part II is a review of the theory itself. Part III contains independent approaches to divergent issues and problems. They have their commonality only by being rooted in Pre-Therapy. They are emergent developments.

    Table of Contents
    PrefacePart I: A brief history of Pre-TherapyPart II: A review of Pre-TherapyPart III: Emergent DevelopmentsCh 1 Pre-Therapeutic approaches with people 'with special needs'. Marlis Portner, SwitzerlandCh 2 The falling man: Pre-Therapy applied to somatic hallucinating. Dion Van Werde, BelgiumCh 3 Pre-Therapy and Dementia Care. Penny Dodds, UKCh 4 ECPI: Objective Evaluation for the Pre-Therapy Interview. Aldo Dinacci, ItalyCh 5 The Development of Inter-subjectivity in relation to Psychotherapy and It's Implication for Pre-Therapy. Hans Peters, NetherlandsCh 6 Pre-Therapy and the Pre-Expressive Self. Garry Prouty, USACh 7 Metaphact Process: A New Way of Understanding Schizophrenic Thought Disorder. Margaret Warner and Judith Trytten, USACh 8 The therapy of Dissociation: Its phases and developments. Tom Coffeng, NetherlandsCh 9 The Hallucination of the Unconscious Self. Garry Prouty, USA

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