Psychotherapy and its discontents
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Psychotherapy and its discontents
Open University Press, 1992
- : hbk
- : pbk
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
- Volume
-
: pbk ISBN 9780335096770
Description
Psychotherapists and critics of psychotherapy outline their views and answer their adversaries. The critics draw attention to the inadequacy of research validating the results of psychotherapy and argue that no treatment at all may be as effective as therapy, that some people's experience of therapy is harmful, that there is a preciousness and pretentiousness about many psychotherapists, that psychotherapists may be flawed and exploitative, that psychotherapy is anachronistically detached from the new-paradigm views, and that psychotherapy embodies a form of psychological reductionism that weakens its credibility. The object of this book is to reduce the antagonism between the two camps so that future debate can be more constructive than hitherto.
The contributors are Michael Barkham, Ian Craib, Gill Edwards, Albert Ellis, Hans Eysenck, Stephen Frosh, Sol Garfield, Ernest Gellner, Jeremy Holmes, Paul Kline, Katherine Mair, Jeffrey Masson, David Pilgrim, Jeff Roberts, John Rowan, David Shapiro and Stuart Sutherland.
Table of Contents
The tyranny of psychotherapy
psychoanalysis, social role and testability
problems of methodology in studies of psychotherapy
the outcome problem in psychotherapy
the myth of therapist expertise
what goes wrong in the care and treatment of the mentally ill
does psychotherapy need a soul?
psychotherapy and political evasions
concluding remarks
- Volume
-
: hbk ISBN 9780335096787
Description
Psychotherapists and critics of psychotherapy outline their views and answer their adversaries. The critics draw attention to the inadequacy of research validating the results of psychotherapy and argue that no treatment at all may be as effective as therapy, that some people's experience of therapy is harmful, that there is a preciousness and pretentiousness about many psychotherapists, that psychotherapists may be flawed and exploitative, that psychotherapy is anachronistically detached from the new-paradigm views, and that psychotherapy embodies a form of psychological reductionism that weakens its credibility. The object of this book is to reduce the antagonism between the two camps so that future debate can be more constructive than hitherto. The contributors are Michael Barkham, Ian Craib, Gill Edwards, Albert Ellis, Hans Eysenck, Stephen Frosh, Sol Garfield, Ernest Gellner, Jeremy Holmes, Paul Kline, Katherine Mair, Jeffrey Masson, David Pilgrim, Jeff Roberts, John Rowan, David Shapiro and Stuart Sutherland.
Table of Contents
- The tyranny of psychotherapy
- psychoanalysis, social role and testability
- problems of methodology in studies of psychotherapy
- the outcome problem in psychotherapy
- the myth of therapist expertise
- what goes wrong in the care and treatment of the mentally ill
- does psychotherapy need a soul?
- psychotherapy and political evasions
- concluding remarks.
by "Nielsen BookData"