1st Edition

Clinical Phenomenology and Cognitive Psychology

By David Fewtrell, Kieron O'Connor Copyright 1995
    232 Pages
    by Routledge

    228 Pages
    by Routledge

    Cognitive therapies are often biased in their assessment of clinical problems by their emphasis on the role of verbally-mediated thought in shaping our emotions, and in stressing the influence of thought upon feeling. Alternatively, a more phenomenological appraisal of psychological dysfunction suggests that emotion and thinking are complementary processes which influence each other.

    Cognitive psychology developed out of information-processing models, whereas phenomenological psychology is rooted in a philosophical perspective which avoids the assumptions of positivist methodology. But, despite their different origins, the two disciplines overlap and complement each other. This book, originally published in 1995, illustrates how feeling states are a crucial component of mental health problems and, if adequately differentiated, can result in a greater understanding of mental health.

    Foreword  1. A Philosophy of Self-body and Self-world Relations  2. The Relationship between Feeling and Thought  3. The Problem of Defining the Moods and Emotions  4. Panic Disorder as a Clinical Entity  5. Psychogenic Dizziness and other Self-world Disturbances  6. Dysfunctional Self-awareness - Depersonalisation Phenomena  7. The Psychopathy of Craving  8. Capgras Syndrome and Delusions of Misidentification  9. Positive Experience and States of Enlightenment  10. Some Common Ground between Phenomenological and Cognitive Psychology

    Biography

    David Fewtrell, Kieron O'Connor