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Informationen zum Autor Dave Mearns is formerly Director of the Counselling Unit and Professor of Counselling at the University of Strathclyde, Glasgow. Dave is author or co-author of four other counselling books published by SAGE: Person-Centred Counselling in Action, Second Edition, Experiences of Counselling in Action, Person-Centred Counselling Training and Person-Centred Therapy Today: New Frontiers in Theory and Practice . Brian Thorne is Emeritus Professor of Counselling at the University of East Anglia and a Founder Member of The Norwich Centre for Personal and Professional Development. He is also a Professor of Education in the College of Teachers and co-author (with Dave Mearns ) of the bestselling books, Person-Centred Counselling in Action, Second Edition (SAGE, 1999) and Person-Centred Therapy Today (SAGE, 2000). Klappentext `This book is clearly a labour of love by two authors with unique abilities and unparalleled experience'- Charles J O'Leary, Denver, ColoradoThis book represents a significant contribution to the development of the person-centred approach. It breaks new ground in presenting the authors' reworking of Carl Rogers' theory of the Self, an innovation which has been years in the making and has implications for both theory and practice. Zusammenfassung Represents a contribution to the development of the person-centred approach. This title is intended for teachers and students of counselling and psychology and those who consider themselves to be person-centred in their approach to helping clients. Inhaltsverzeichnis Towards an Inhuman Society? Is Therapy Losing Its Humanity? The ¿Heart¿ of Person-Centred Therapy Spiritual and Existential? Person-Centred Therapy Anti-Intellectual, Unmanly and Westernized? Revisiting the Core Conditions The Nature of ¿Configurations¿ within Self Person-Centred Therapy with ¿Configurations¿ of Self Person-Centred Therapy at the Difficult Edge A Developmentally Based Model of Fragile and Dissociated Process Advancing Person-Centred Theory Supervision in Person-Centred Therapy Future Challenges Dangers and Opportunities ...
List of contents
Towards an Inhuman Society?
Is Therapy Losing Its Humanity?
The 'Heart' of Person-Centred Therapy
Spiritual and Existential?
Person-Centred Therapy
Anti-Intellectual, Unmanly and Westernized?
Revisiting the Core Conditions
The Nature of 'Configurations' within Self
Person-Centred Therapy with 'Configurations' of Self
Person-Centred Therapy at the Difficult Edge
A Developmentally Based Model of Fragile and Dissociated Process
Advancing Person-Centred Theory
Supervision in Person-Centred Therapy
Future Challenges
Dangers and Opportunities
Report
`At the risk of being directive, I would say you should buy this book. It contains some of the most stimulating and refreshing ideas to have emerged in the person-centred literature since On Becoming a Person '- Person-Centred Practice
`This book is a "must have" for all person-centred therapists and for trainers and therapistsin other approaches who are genuinely interested in wanting to understand more about person-centred therapy in the 21st century. It is a book to be proud of, and describes innovations in model that all person-centred therapists can feel proud to be associated with' - British Journal of Guidance & Counselling
`This is a book that is rooted in the origins of person-centred therapy but stands at the cutting edge of new ideas developing in this tradition. It will reinvigorate those of us already immersed in this tradition. It should convince newcomers of the vitality and potential of this approach to therapy' - Tim Bond, University of Bristol