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Dimensions of Psychotherapy, Dimensions of Experience: Time, Space, Number and State of Mind [Hardback]

Edited by (American University, Washington DC, USA), Edited by (Co-Director, International Psychotherapy Institute and private practice, USA)
  • Formāts: Hardback, 296 pages, height x width: 234x156 mm, weight: 710 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 14-Jul-2005
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1583918639
  • ISBN-13: 9781583918630
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  • Hardback
  • Cena: 74,21 €
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 296 pages, height x width: 234x156 mm, weight: 710 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 14-Jul-2005
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1583918639
  • ISBN-13: 9781583918630
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:

How do the fundamental elements of experience impact on the practice of psychotherapy?

Dimensions of Psychotherapy, Dimensions of Experience explores the three basic elements of psychotherapy - time, space and number - summarising theory, setting it in context and bringing concepts to life with clinical illustrations.

Michael Stadter and David Scharff bring together contributions describing how each of these elements, as well as their simple and direct manifestations in the physical world, also combine to form the psychological dimensions of symbolic reality both in the inner world and in the transactional world.  They also reveal how, in encounters between patient and therapist, the combination of inner worlds form a new, uniquely psychological, fourth dimension that saturates the activity and experience of the other three elements.  This book aims to increase our understanding of the action of the three dimensions of psychotherapy by looking at the elements that constitute the setting and process in which clinicians engage every day.  The contributors, all of whom are experienced psychotherapists and psychoanalysts, connect their thinking on the dimensions to clinical practice by illustrating their ideas with case material and examining their impact on general treatment issues.

This book will be useful to practicing psychotherapists and psychoanalysts and students of psychoanalysis and philosophy.

 

Notes on contributors xi
Acknowledgements xv
Introduction: Exploring the dimensions 1(6)
Michael Stadter
David E. Scharff
PART I Time
Time, life and psychotherapy: an overview
7(6)
Michael Stadter
David E. Scharff
Time and the unconscious life-cycle
13(12)
Kent Ravenscroft
Time-near and time-far: the changing shape of time in trauma and psychotherapy
25(14)
Michael Stadter
Bad infinity: narcissism and the problem of time
39(12)
Leslie A. Johnson
Time and endurance in psychotherapy
51(16)
Lea Setton
Jill Savege Scharff
PART II Space
Spatial metaphor and spatial reality: an overview
61(6)
Michael Stadter
David E. Scharff
Right now I'm sitting in the bookshelf: patients' use of the physical space in psychotherapy
67(10)
Geoffrey Anderson
Changing spaces: the impact of a change in the psychotherapeutic setting
77(12)
Judith M. Rovner
Pandora in time and space
89(16)
Earl Hopper
Telephone, psychotherapy and the 21st century
105(10)
Sharon Zalusky
Conquering geographic space: teaching psychoanalytic psychotherapy and infant observation by video link
115(12)
David E. Scharff
Exploring space in workgroups
127(16)
Susan E. Barbour
PART III Number
Numbers in mind, numbers in motion: an introduction
139(4)
David E. Scharff
Michael Stadter
Number theory, intersubjectivity and schizoid phenomena
143(10)
James L. Poulton
Super-vision or space invader? Two's company and three makes for paranoid tendencies
153(12)
Carl Bagnini
Four: on adding up to a family
165(16)
Christopher Bollas
Dynamic mathematics in mental experience. I: Complex numbers represent psychic object relations
181(14)
David E. Scharff
Hope Cooper
Dynamic mathematics in mental experience. II: Numbers in motion, a dynamic geography of time and space
195(16)
David E. Scharff
Hope Cooper
PART IV State of mind
The fourth dimension: state of mind
209(2)
David E. Scharff
Michael Stadter
Chaos theory and object relations: a new paradigm for psychoanalysis
211(18)
David E. Scharff
Jill Savege Scharff
Hideouts and holdouts
229(12)
Sheila Hill
Being and becoming
241(12)
Charles Ashbach
The use of the self revisited
253(16)
Theodore J. Jacobs
Epilogue 269(2)
Michael Stadter
David E. Scharff
Index 271


Michael Stadter is a clinical psychologist and a member of the faculty and Board of Directors of the International Psychotherapy Institute. He is also Clinical Psychologist-in-Residence at the Department of Psychology at the American University in Washington DC.

David E Scharff is Co-Director of the International Psychotherapy Institute and a psychoanalyst in private practice.