Existential psychology examines how people deal with the biggest issues - such as finding meaning in life and facing death. It deals with many of the same problems as psychoanalysis and analytical psychology, but emphasises the view that one can understand the life of another by listening to their way of seeing existence and opening up their ‘phenomenal world’. As a therapeutic approach it is recognised by the British Psychological Society and taught on a number of courses. This introductory text discusses all the main contemporary theories of existential psychology, and illustrates them with case examples. Practical implications for clinical work are considered, and comparisons with other approaches such as humanistic psychotherapy are made throughout.
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Contents
About the author
Preface
Chapter 1: What is existential psychology?
Chapter 2: Happiness and suffering
Chapter 3: Love and aloneness
Chapter 4: Adversity and success: The role of crisis for human development
Chapter 5: Death anxiety and life commitment
Chapter 6: Free choice and the obligations of your life reality
Chapter 7: To find the meaning of life in a chaotic world
Appendix A: Existential writers and their major works
Appendix B: Existential therapy and counselling
Bibliography
Index
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Bo Jacobsen The University of Copenhagen.
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