People do great wrongs to each other all the time, sometimes deliberately, sometimes accidentally. This book looks at how people, communities, and nations can address great wrongs and how they can heal from them - taking into consideration how differences in cultures, histories, and group expectations affect the possibilities for healing.
People do great wrongs to each other all the time, sometimes deliberately, sometimes accidentally. This book looks at how people, communities, and nations can address great wrongs and how they can heal from them - taking into consideration how differences in cultures, histories, and group expectations affect the possibilities for healing.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Nancy Nyquist Potter received her Ph.D. in Philosophy in 1994 from the University of Minnesota and she is currently an Associate Professor of Philosophy at the University of Louisville. Her research interests range from virtue ethics to the role of humor in conflict to philosophy and mental illness. She is Vice-President of the Association for the Advancement of Philosophy and Psychiatry, an Associate Editor for the journal Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology, and serves on local hospital ethics committees and councils.
Inhaltsangabe
* 1: David H Brendel: Psychotherapy and the truth and reconcilation commission: the dialectic of individual and collective healing * 2: Christa Kruger: Spiral of growth: a social psychiatric perspective on conflict resolution, reconciliation and relationship development * 3: Peter Zachar: Reconciliation as compromise and the management of rage * 4: Colleen Murphy: Political reconciliation, the rule of law and post-traumatic stress disorder * 5: Allison Mitchell: When philosophical assumptions matter * 6: Deborah Spitz: How much truth and how much reconciliation? Intrapsychic, interpersonal and social aspects of resolution * 7: Mary Rawlinson: Forgiveness: Beyond virtue and the law; on the moral significance of the act of forgiveness in Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit * 8: Gerrit Glas: Elements of a phenomenology of evil and forgiveness * 9: Piet Verhagen: Forgiveness: a critical appraisal * 10: Sharon Lamb: Forgiveness therapy in gendered contexts: what happens to the truth? * 11: Christian Perring: Telling the truth about mental illness: the role of narrative * 12: Lewis Mehl-Madrona: Healing relational trauma through relational means: aboriginal approaches
* 1: David H Brendel: Psychotherapy and the truth and reconcilation commission: the dialectic of individual and collective healing * 2: Christa Kruger: Spiral of growth: a social psychiatric perspective on conflict resolution, reconciliation and relationship development * 3: Peter Zachar: Reconciliation as compromise and the management of rage * 4: Colleen Murphy: Political reconciliation, the rule of law and post-traumatic stress disorder * 5: Allison Mitchell: When philosophical assumptions matter * 6: Deborah Spitz: How much truth and how much reconciliation? Intrapsychic, interpersonal and social aspects of resolution * 7: Mary Rawlinson: Forgiveness: Beyond virtue and the law; on the moral significance of the act of forgiveness in Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit * 8: Gerrit Glas: Elements of a phenomenology of evil and forgiveness * 9: Piet Verhagen: Forgiveness: a critical appraisal * 10: Sharon Lamb: Forgiveness therapy in gendered contexts: what happens to the truth? * 11: Christian Perring: Telling the truth about mental illness: the role of narrative * 12: Lewis Mehl-Madrona: Healing relational trauma through relational means: aboriginal approaches
Rezensionen
This is not a handbook of 'How to do forgiveness', nor a self-help guide; rather, it is an exploration of why forgiveness seems so often to be a vital component of the healing process and of what happens when forgiveness does not happen. By combining insights from philosophy, sociology and psychology, this volume is a valuable addition to the literature on conflict, and a useful resource for anyone encountering traumatic situations where forgiveness may prove helpful in the journey towards recovery. Mental Health Today
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