Archimedes’ Lever

Auteurs

  • Dan Bloom

DOI :

https://doi.org/10.30820/1664-9583-2020-1-28

Mots-clés :

philosophy, psychotherapy, theory, practice, wonder, science, disappointment, empiricism, Kant, Husserl

Résumé

This is a reflection on philosophy and psychotherapy. It develops the notion that the two are so entwined that it is more appropriate to consider the philosophy of psychotherapy, the thinking that is intrinsic in it. The paper proposes that thinking is an engaged and embodied practice of understanding and psychotherapy is its embodied, clinical enactment. Philosophy and psychotherapy, in some sense, began as common human responses to the being-in-the-world, wonder, and disappointment. This idea is discussed from an historical perspective from pre-Socratic philosophy, empiricism, the Kantian, and phenomenology. A central focus is on thinking as implicit in the psychotherapy process.

Biographie de l'auteur

Dan Bloom

Dan Bloom, JD, LCSW, is psychotherapist, supervisor and trainer in New York City. He teaches at the NYIGT and is guest and adjunct faculty at gestalt institutes worldwide and frequent conference presenter. He is past president and Fellow of NYIGT and past president of AAGT.

Publiée

2020-04-18

Comment citer

Bloom, D. (2020). Archimedes’ Lever. Science psychothérapeutique, 10(1), 28–35. https://doi.org/10.30820/1664-9583-2020-1-28

Numéro

Rubrique

Thème principal: Philosophie et Psychothérapie