1st Edition

The Psychology of Feeling Sorry The Weight of the Soul

By Peter Randall Copyright 2013
304 Pages
by Routledge

304 Pages
by Routledge

304 Pages
by Routledge

Can feeling genuinely sorry enable an important healing experience? Can relieving the weight of guilt restore a general sense of self-worth? Can an individual's dawning awareness give birth to feelings of remorse; perhaps even to acts of repentance? The concepts of betrayal, vengeance and forgiveness have long been a major part of religious doctrine throughout the world. However, only in recent... Read more

The Weight of the Soul. The Stirrings of Conscience. Interpersonal Relationships and Betrayal. Interpersonal Relationships, Religion and Vengeance. Shame, Guilt and Remorse. Remorse and Criminal Offending. Religion, Spirituality and Remorse. Forgiveness. Remorse, Empathy, Forgiveness and Therapy. The Weight of the Soul.

Biography

Peter Randall is a retired Chartered Psychologist and Fellow of the British Psychological Society.

"The book is a fascinating, rich, and highly rewarding account of the complexity of feeling sorry with its related phenomenology, actions, and interpersonal reverberations... There is much that is relevant to psychologists in the helping professions, including the likelihood that regrets and shame might emerge toward the end of one’s life. Interpersonal transgressions weigh down on people—hence the title of Randall’s volume—and a strength of the book is that it does not follow affective science blindly in giving quantitative succour to qualitative spiritual questions but seeks answers instead in the complex details of human secular and faith-based existence." - Gavin Sullivan, Leeds Metropolitan University, PsycCRITIQUES