Listening to the Melody of the Mind carefully scrutinizes the person of the psychodynamic therapist across the full range of necessary attributes. The theme can be summarized in the following question: what are the distinguishing characteristics of the competent psychodynamic psychotherapist?
Listening to the Melody of the Mind carefully scrutinizes the person of the psychodynamic therapist across the full range of necessary attributes. The theme can be summarized in the following question: what are the distinguishing characteristics of the competent psychodynamic psychotherapist?Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Part 1 Preface Part 2 Part I. Introduction Chapter 3 1. Two Minds Establish a Psychotherapy Chapter 4 2. How the Talking Cure Works Chapter 5 3. When the Therapist Is Good Enough Chapter 6 4. When the Therapist Isn't Good Enough Chapter 7 5. Authenticity Part 8 Part II. The Necessary Clinical Knowledge Chapter 9 6. Adequate Theoretical/Conceptual Frameworks Chapter 10 7. Multiple Points of View Chapter 11 8. Supervised Experience in Diagnosing and Treating Chapter 12 9. Spectrum Disorders-Schizophrenia, Mood Disorders Chapter 13 10. Disorders of the Borderline Syndrome Chapter 14 11. Coordinated Split Treatment Part 15 Part III. The Nature of the Clinical Experience Chapter 16 12. Patient-Therapist motivations for Psychotherapy Chapter 17 13. Empathy and Therapeutic Tact Chapter 18 14. How the Therapist's Mind Works Chapter 19 15. Cognitive Style and the Therapeutic Alliance Chapter 20 16. Addressing the Patient's Need to Fight Chapter 21 17. The Place of Dreams in the Therapeutic Process Chapter 22 18. Psychopharmacology and the Complexity of Psychodynamics Part 23 Part IV. The Challenges of the Clinical Experience Chapter 24 19. Countertransference and Rescue Fantasies Chapter 25 20. Feelings Chapter 26 21. Negative Therapeutic Reactions Chapter 27 22. People Psychotherapy Probably Can't Help Chapter 28 23. Rarely Encountered Disorders Chapter 29 24. Non-empirical Psychotherapists Part 30 Closing Comments
Part 1 Preface Part 2 Part I. Introduction Chapter 3 1. Two Minds Establish a Psychotherapy Chapter 4 2. How the Talking Cure Works Chapter 5 3. When the Therapist Is Good Enough Chapter 6 4. When the Therapist Isn't Good Enough Chapter 7 5. Authenticity Part 8 Part II. The Necessary Clinical Knowledge Chapter 9 6. Adequate Theoretical/Conceptual Frameworks Chapter 10 7. Multiple Points of View Chapter 11 8. Supervised Experience in Diagnosing and Treating Chapter 12 9. Spectrum Disorders-Schizophrenia, Mood Disorders Chapter 13 10. Disorders of the Borderline Syndrome Chapter 14 11. Coordinated Split Treatment Part 15 Part III. The Nature of the Clinical Experience Chapter 16 12. Patient-Therapist motivations for Psychotherapy Chapter 17 13. Empathy and Therapeutic Tact Chapter 18 14. How the Therapist's Mind Works Chapter 19 15. Cognitive Style and the Therapeutic Alliance Chapter 20 16. Addressing the Patient's Need to Fight Chapter 21 17. The Place of Dreams in the Therapeutic Process Chapter 22 18. Psychopharmacology and the Complexity of Psychodynamics Part 23 Part IV. The Challenges of the Clinical Experience Chapter 24 19. Countertransference and Rescue Fantasies Chapter 25 20. Feelings Chapter 26 21. Negative Therapeutic Reactions Chapter 27 22. People Psychotherapy Probably Can't Help Chapter 28 23. Rarely Encountered Disorders Chapter 29 24. Non-empirical Psychotherapists Part 30 Closing Comments
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