To lead an honorable life : invitations to think about client-centered therapy and the person-centered approach : a collection of the work of John M. Shlien
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Bibliographic Information
To lead an honorable life : invitations to think about client-centered therapy and the person-centered approach : a collection of the work of John M. Shlien
PCCS Books, 2003
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This collection of the work of John Shlien is exactly what the subtitle says: 'an invitation to think about client-centered therapy and the person-centered approach'. It features John's best-known work alongside some lesser-know papers and a handful of hitherto unpublished essays. John Shlien was one of the most influential of Carl Rogers' students and associates, as a writer, researcher and academic. With a witty, provocative style as a writer and speaker, John was an insightful commentator and creative theorist, able to provoke vigorous debate wherever he went. This collection gives the reader a chance to sample the breadth of his ideas.
Table of Contents
- Section 1: Psychological Health To Feel Alive:A thought on motivation
- A Criterion of Psychological Health
- Creativity and Psychological Health
- A Client-Centered Approach to Schizophrenia: First approximation
- Secrets and the Psychology of Secrecy
- Macht Therapie Glucklich? Can Therapy Make You Happy? Section 2: A Literalist Approach. The Literal-Intuitive Axis: And other thoughts
- A Countertheory of Transference
- Embarrassment Anxiety: A literalist theory. Section 3: Applications: Theory Research and Life. Basic Concepts in Group Psychotherapy: A Client-Centered point of view
- Empathy in Psychotherapy: Vital Mechanism? Yes. Therapist's Conceit? All Too Often. By Iself Enough? No
- The Robert W. White School. Section 4: The Position of Client-Centered Therapy. 'Introduction'
- Theory as Autobiography: The Man and the Movement
- Untitled and Uneasy.
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