Humanity's Dark Side : Evil, Destructive Experience, and Psychotherapy /
"There are many forms of human destructiveness: war, rape, murder, slavery, the Holocaust, other manifestations of genocide, oppression, torture, theft, exploitation, child abuse, gang warfare, and extortion, to name just a few. There are also everyday "little" ways in which we hurt e...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Otros Autores: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Washington, D.C. :
American Psychological Association,
©2013.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Contents
- Contributors
- Preface
- Introduction: the Dark Side Metaphor
- Part I Journeys Beyond the Carl Rogers�Rollo May Debate
- Introduction: Journeys Beyond the Carl Rogers�Rollo May Debate
- Chapter 1 Radical Openness to Radical Mystery: Rollo May and the Awe-Based Way
- Chapter 2 Whence the Evil? A Personalistic and Dialogic Perspective
- Chapter 3 Darth Vader, Carl Rogers, and Self-Organizing Wisdom
- Part II Clinical Encounters with the Dark Side Introduction: Clinical Encounters with the Dark Side
- Chapter 4 Theogonies and Therapies: A Jungian Perspective on Humanity�s Dark Side
- Chapter 5 Decalogue, or How to Live a Life: Engendering Self-Examination
- Chapter 6 Evil: An Experiential Constructivist Understanding
- Chapter 7 When People Do Bad Things: Evil, Suffering, and Dependent Origination
- Chapter 8 The Ubiquity of Evil�And Multimodal Cognitive Treatment of Its Effects
- Chapter 9 Virtue and the Organizational Shadow: Exploring False Innocence and the Paradoxes of Power Part III Broader Implications: Is Psychology a Moral Endeavor?
- Introduction: Broader Implications: Is Psychology a Moral Endeavor?
- Chapter 10 Beyond Good and Evil: Variations on Some Freudian Themes
- Chapter 11 Deny No Evil, Ignore No Evil, Reframe No Evil: Psychology�s Moral Agenda
- Chapter 12 Feeling Bad, Being Bad, and the Perils of Personhood
- Afterword