Description

Book Synopsis
In this book, Raabe argues that philosophy can effectively inform and improve conventional methods of treating mental illness. He presents clinical evidence showing that mild and so-called clinical mental illnesses can be both prevented and alleviated with philosophical talk therapy. Raabe offers concrete case examples that support his findings.

Trade Review
I heartily recommend this book to all students whose aim is to work in the field of mental healthcare. Philosophy's Role in Counseling and Psychotherapy could also be very helpful for the general public in raising awareness of how philosophy may show the way out of some of the mental dilemmas and distress created and caused by the self and society. I can recommend this easily readable, understandable and yet very authoritative book for anyone who is interested in mental healthcare. But, this book is especially of interest for academicians and the students of psychology, counseling, psychiatry and philosophy who wants to have a better understanding of the nature of mental health and its relevance to philosophical insights from early Greeks to our day. I believe it will make an excellent textbook and a source book for scholars. * Metapsychology Online *
This book restores the philosophical wonder of theorizing about psychotherapy. Peter Raabe presents different dilemmas of the helping professions in a dignified and humane way by making problematic issues questionable and understandable. With this dose of philosophy in clinical encounters, professional and would-be therapists alike might be more attuned to finding just solutions for human predicaments. Philosophy’s Role in Counseling and Psychotherapy could also be helpful for the general public in raising awareness of how philosophy may show the way out of some of the mental prisons created by the self and society. -- Shlomit C. Schuster Ph.D., author of Philosophy Practice: An Alternative to Counseling and Psychotherapy
Professor Peter Raabe analyzes conceptual confusions, methodological flaws, logical fallacies, and biased considerations that are committed by psychiatrists, psychoanalysts, and psychotherapists when they are interpreting and treating mental suffering according to a medical model. His proposed paradigm shift is the philosophical counseling approach. The impact of philosophy is indeed already present in any sort of psychotherapy and counseling that takes into account the specific nature of the mental domain and deals with subjective contents and attitudes that interfere with the client's ability to cope well in situations that are problematic from his perspective. The founders had knowingly adopted philosophical ideas. Professor Raabe maintains, however, that the impact itself is insufficient, as regular psychotherapists and counselors usually do not have the philosophical knowledge and skills that are necessary for their effective application. Raabe demonstrates his counseling approach in many inspiring ways and thereby exemplifies the richness of the philosophical arsenal in helpful questions and effective tools. This is a good source of wisdom even for psychiatrists that do not share all the anti-medical conclusions and a real challenge even for philosophers that do not share all the philosophical premises. -- Ora Gruengard

Table of Contents
Acknowledgments Introduction Part I: Psychotherapy at the Start of the 21st Century Chapter 1: Problematic Paradigms Chapter 2: Problematic Practices Chapter 3: Contemporary Modality Part II: Philosophy as Therapy Chapter 4: Past Precedence Chapter 5: The Clinic’s Appropriation of Philosophy Chapter 6: Psycho-therapeutic Philosophy in Psychotherapy Chapter 7: Preventive (Prophylactic) Philosophy Part III: Application Chapter 8: An Education Plan Chapter 9: Teaching ‘Sanity’ Chapter 10: Three Case Studies Chapter 11: Recovery, Cure, and Philosophy Appendix: Oppositional Defiant Disorder (ODD) Bibliography

Philosophys Role in Counseling and Psychotherapy

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    A Hardback by Peter Raabe

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      View other formats and editions of Philosophys Role in Counseling and Psychotherapy by Peter Raabe

      Publisher: Jason Aronson, Inc.
      Publication Date: 11/26/2013 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780765709172, 978-0765709172
      ISBN10: 0765709171

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      In this book, Raabe argues that philosophy can effectively inform and improve conventional methods of treating mental illness. He presents clinical evidence showing that mild and so-called clinical mental illnesses can be both prevented and alleviated with philosophical talk therapy. Raabe offers concrete case examples that support his findings.

      Trade Review
      I heartily recommend this book to all students whose aim is to work in the field of mental healthcare. Philosophy's Role in Counseling and Psychotherapy could also be very helpful for the general public in raising awareness of how philosophy may show the way out of some of the mental dilemmas and distress created and caused by the self and society. I can recommend this easily readable, understandable and yet very authoritative book for anyone who is interested in mental healthcare. But, this book is especially of interest for academicians and the students of psychology, counseling, psychiatry and philosophy who wants to have a better understanding of the nature of mental health and its relevance to philosophical insights from early Greeks to our day. I believe it will make an excellent textbook and a source book for scholars. * Metapsychology Online *
      This book restores the philosophical wonder of theorizing about psychotherapy. Peter Raabe presents different dilemmas of the helping professions in a dignified and humane way by making problematic issues questionable and understandable. With this dose of philosophy in clinical encounters, professional and would-be therapists alike might be more attuned to finding just solutions for human predicaments. Philosophy’s Role in Counseling and Psychotherapy could also be helpful for the general public in raising awareness of how philosophy may show the way out of some of the mental prisons created by the self and society. -- Shlomit C. Schuster Ph.D., author of Philosophy Practice: An Alternative to Counseling and Psychotherapy
      Professor Peter Raabe analyzes conceptual confusions, methodological flaws, logical fallacies, and biased considerations that are committed by psychiatrists, psychoanalysts, and psychotherapists when they are interpreting and treating mental suffering according to a medical model. His proposed paradigm shift is the philosophical counseling approach. The impact of philosophy is indeed already present in any sort of psychotherapy and counseling that takes into account the specific nature of the mental domain and deals with subjective contents and attitudes that interfere with the client's ability to cope well in situations that are problematic from his perspective. The founders had knowingly adopted philosophical ideas. Professor Raabe maintains, however, that the impact itself is insufficient, as regular psychotherapists and counselors usually do not have the philosophical knowledge and skills that are necessary for their effective application. Raabe demonstrates his counseling approach in many inspiring ways and thereby exemplifies the richness of the philosophical arsenal in helpful questions and effective tools. This is a good source of wisdom even for psychiatrists that do not share all the anti-medical conclusions and a real challenge even for philosophers that do not share all the philosophical premises. -- Ora Gruengard

      Table of Contents
      Acknowledgments Introduction Part I: Psychotherapy at the Start of the 21st Century Chapter 1: Problematic Paradigms Chapter 2: Problematic Practices Chapter 3: Contemporary Modality Part II: Philosophy as Therapy Chapter 4: Past Precedence Chapter 5: The Clinic’s Appropriation of Philosophy Chapter 6: Psycho-therapeutic Philosophy in Psychotherapy Chapter 7: Preventive (Prophylactic) Philosophy Part III: Application Chapter 8: An Education Plan Chapter 9: Teaching ‘Sanity’ Chapter 10: Three Case Studies Chapter 11: Recovery, Cure, and Philosophy Appendix: Oppositional Defiant Disorder (ODD) Bibliography

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