Remorse and Reparation
Herausgeber: Cox, Murray
Remorse and Reparation
Herausgeber: Cox, Murray
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Produktdetails
- Verlag: Jessica Kingsley Publishers
- Seitenzahl: 288
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. Dezember 1998
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 231mm x 158mm x 12mm
- Gewicht: 336g
- ISBN-13: 9781853024528
- ISBN-10: 185302452X
- Artikelnr.: 21879860
Murray Cox M.A.F.R.C.Psych.M.Inst.G.A.(Hon) was Consultant Psychotherapist at Broadmoor Hospital from 1970 to 1997. He edited Shakespeare Comes to Broadmoor and Forensic Psychotherapy: Crime Psychodynamics and the Offender Patient (jointly with Christopher Cordess) and wrote Shakespeare as Prompter and Mutative Metaphors in Psychotherapy with Alice Theilgaard, all published by Jessica Kingsley.
Foreword, Jessica Kingsley. Remorse and Reparation: `To Double Business
Bound' Dr Murray Cox. Section 1. Clinical Perspectives. 1. Reflections on
Remorse in Forensic Psychiatry Dr Andrew S. Horne, Broadmoor Hospital. 2.
The Aginbite of Inwit, or, The Varieties of Moral Experience Dr James
Gilligan, Harvard University. 3. Necessary but not Sufficient: the Personal
View of a Psychiatric Member of the Parole Board Dr David Tidmarsh, Parole
Board. 4. Psychoanalytic Aspects of Remorse and Reparation Cleo van Velsen,
Analyst. 5. A Defective Capacity to Feel Sorrow: Interferences to the
Development of Remorse and Reparation Dr Leslie Sohn, The Maudsley
Hospital. 6. Feelings of Guilt and the Attribution of Blame for Criminal
Acts Dr Gisli Gudjonsson, Institute of Psychiatry. 7. Remorse for Being:
Through the Lens of Learning Disability Professor Sheila Hollins, St
George's Hospital Medical School. Section 2. Legal Perspectives. 1. Remorse
and Rehabilitation John Harding, Inner London Probation Service. 2. Remorse
and Reparation - a Judicial Perspective His Honour Henry Palmer. Section 3.
Remorse and Reparation from Other Perspectives. 1. Remorse and Reparation:
a Philosophical Analysis Dr Alan Thomas, King's College London. 2. The Most
Dreadful Sentiment: a Sociological Commentary Baroness Cox and Dr Michael
Borgeaud, University of North London. 3. Un-doing: Social Suffering and the
Politics of Remorse Professor Nancy Scheper-Hughes, University of
California. 4. Representations of Remorse and Reparation in Classical
Greece Dr Douglas Cairns, University of Leeds. 5. Cases of Conscience in
the Universe of Shakespeare's Plays: `Abhorring of Himselfe is a Recovering
of Himselfe' Professor John Wilks, Okayama University. 6. Kierkegaard and
Remorse: Remorse as an Existentialist Concern Alice Theilgaard and Bjarne
Jacobsen, University of Copenhagen. Bibliogaphy.
Bound' Dr Murray Cox. Section 1. Clinical Perspectives. 1. Reflections on
Remorse in Forensic Psychiatry Dr Andrew S. Horne, Broadmoor Hospital. 2.
The Aginbite of Inwit, or, The Varieties of Moral Experience Dr James
Gilligan, Harvard University. 3. Necessary but not Sufficient: the Personal
View of a Psychiatric Member of the Parole Board Dr David Tidmarsh, Parole
Board. 4. Psychoanalytic Aspects of Remorse and Reparation Cleo van Velsen,
Analyst. 5. A Defective Capacity to Feel Sorrow: Interferences to the
Development of Remorse and Reparation Dr Leslie Sohn, The Maudsley
Hospital. 6. Feelings of Guilt and the Attribution of Blame for Criminal
Acts Dr Gisli Gudjonsson, Institute of Psychiatry. 7. Remorse for Being:
Through the Lens of Learning Disability Professor Sheila Hollins, St
George's Hospital Medical School. Section 2. Legal Perspectives. 1. Remorse
and Rehabilitation John Harding, Inner London Probation Service. 2. Remorse
and Reparation - a Judicial Perspective His Honour Henry Palmer. Section 3.
Remorse and Reparation from Other Perspectives. 1. Remorse and Reparation:
a Philosophical Analysis Dr Alan Thomas, King's College London. 2. The Most
Dreadful Sentiment: a Sociological Commentary Baroness Cox and Dr Michael
Borgeaud, University of North London. 3. Un-doing: Social Suffering and the
Politics of Remorse Professor Nancy Scheper-Hughes, University of
California. 4. Representations of Remorse and Reparation in Classical
Greece Dr Douglas Cairns, University of Leeds. 5. Cases of Conscience in
the Universe of Shakespeare's Plays: `Abhorring of Himselfe is a Recovering
of Himselfe' Professor John Wilks, Okayama University. 6. Kierkegaard and
Remorse: Remorse as an Existentialist Concern Alice Theilgaard and Bjarne
Jacobsen, University of Copenhagen. Bibliogaphy.
Foreword, Jessica Kingsley. Remorse and Reparation: `To Double Business
Bound' Dr Murray Cox. Section 1. Clinical Perspectives. 1. Reflections on
Remorse in Forensic Psychiatry Dr Andrew S. Horne, Broadmoor Hospital. 2.
The Aginbite of Inwit, or, The Varieties of Moral Experience Dr James
Gilligan, Harvard University. 3. Necessary but not Sufficient: the Personal
View of a Psychiatric Member of the Parole Board Dr David Tidmarsh, Parole
Board. 4. Psychoanalytic Aspects of Remorse and Reparation Cleo van Velsen,
Analyst. 5. A Defective Capacity to Feel Sorrow: Interferences to the
Development of Remorse and Reparation Dr Leslie Sohn, The Maudsley
Hospital. 6. Feelings of Guilt and the Attribution of Blame for Criminal
Acts Dr Gisli Gudjonsson, Institute of Psychiatry. 7. Remorse for Being:
Through the Lens of Learning Disability Professor Sheila Hollins, St
George's Hospital Medical School. Section 2. Legal Perspectives. 1. Remorse
and Rehabilitation John Harding, Inner London Probation Service. 2. Remorse
and Reparation - a Judicial Perspective His Honour Henry Palmer. Section 3.
Remorse and Reparation from Other Perspectives. 1. Remorse and Reparation:
a Philosophical Analysis Dr Alan Thomas, King's College London. 2. The Most
Dreadful Sentiment: a Sociological Commentary Baroness Cox and Dr Michael
Borgeaud, University of North London. 3. Un-doing: Social Suffering and the
Politics of Remorse Professor Nancy Scheper-Hughes, University of
California. 4. Representations of Remorse and Reparation in Classical
Greece Dr Douglas Cairns, University of Leeds. 5. Cases of Conscience in
the Universe of Shakespeare's Plays: `Abhorring of Himselfe is a Recovering
of Himselfe' Professor John Wilks, Okayama University. 6. Kierkegaard and
Remorse: Remorse as an Existentialist Concern Alice Theilgaard and Bjarne
Jacobsen, University of Copenhagen. Bibliogaphy.
Bound' Dr Murray Cox. Section 1. Clinical Perspectives. 1. Reflections on
Remorse in Forensic Psychiatry Dr Andrew S. Horne, Broadmoor Hospital. 2.
The Aginbite of Inwit, or, The Varieties of Moral Experience Dr James
Gilligan, Harvard University. 3. Necessary but not Sufficient: the Personal
View of a Psychiatric Member of the Parole Board Dr David Tidmarsh, Parole
Board. 4. Psychoanalytic Aspects of Remorse and Reparation Cleo van Velsen,
Analyst. 5. A Defective Capacity to Feel Sorrow: Interferences to the
Development of Remorse and Reparation Dr Leslie Sohn, The Maudsley
Hospital. 6. Feelings of Guilt and the Attribution of Blame for Criminal
Acts Dr Gisli Gudjonsson, Institute of Psychiatry. 7. Remorse for Being:
Through the Lens of Learning Disability Professor Sheila Hollins, St
George's Hospital Medical School. Section 2. Legal Perspectives. 1. Remorse
and Rehabilitation John Harding, Inner London Probation Service. 2. Remorse
and Reparation - a Judicial Perspective His Honour Henry Palmer. Section 3.
Remorse and Reparation from Other Perspectives. 1. Remorse and Reparation:
a Philosophical Analysis Dr Alan Thomas, King's College London. 2. The Most
Dreadful Sentiment: a Sociological Commentary Baroness Cox and Dr Michael
Borgeaud, University of North London. 3. Un-doing: Social Suffering and the
Politics of Remorse Professor Nancy Scheper-Hughes, University of
California. 4. Representations of Remorse and Reparation in Classical
Greece Dr Douglas Cairns, University of Leeds. 5. Cases of Conscience in
the Universe of Shakespeare's Plays: `Abhorring of Himselfe is a Recovering
of Himselfe' Professor John Wilks, Okayama University. 6. Kierkegaard and
Remorse: Remorse as an Existentialist Concern Alice Theilgaard and Bjarne
Jacobsen, University of Copenhagen. Bibliogaphy.