Humanistic psychotherapy
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An Intimate Stranger: The Myth of Self-Knowledge in Psychotherapy
When we speak of self-knowledge, we presuppose a dichotomy within the self: the observer and the observed. This bifurcation, though handy for analytical purposes, risks oversimplifying the inherent complexity of the human psyche. The dichotomy posits the ‘self’ as a static entity that can be known, studied, and comprehended, an assumption which in itself is… Continue reading
Analyses, Attachment-Based Therapy (ABT), Authenticity, Camus, Clinical, Cognitive, Consciousness, Dasein, Descartes, Dialectic, Edgar Morin, ego, emotional development, Existentialism, Freud, Heidegger, Humanistic psychology, integrationist, Myth, Myth of self-knowledge, Nietzsche, Paradox, Paul Wadey, Philosophy of Mind, Psychoanalytic psychotherapy, Psychoanalytical History, Psychology, Relational psychoanalytic, Self-Knowledge, therapy