The Politics of TherapyScience House, 1971 - 283 ˹éÒ Onderzoek naar de sociale invloed die een psychiater heeft op zijn omgeving. Centrale vraag: Moet de psychotherapeut zijn professionele talenten aanwenden om sociale en politieke systemen te helpen veranderen? - In hoofdstuk 5, The uses of abnormality, een paragraaf The homosexual (p. 106-108), waarin Halleck zich keert tegen de beschrijving van homosexualiteit als ziekte. |
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˹éÒ 96
... values and ideologies . He may not have a very clear idea of what values are influencing him at any given moment , but some vision of what is best for his patients will guide him in making each of his therapeutic decisions . In short ...
... values and ideologies . He may not have a very clear idea of what values are influencing him at any given moment , but some vision of what is best for his patients will guide him in making each of his therapeutic decisions . In short ...
˹éÒ 198
... values might encourage psychiatrists to readily impose their values on patients . I doubt that this would happen , but I suspect that if psychiatrists tried to define their value sys- tems more precisely in terms of biological and ...
... values might encourage psychiatrists to readily impose their values on patients . I doubt that this would happen , but I suspect that if psychiatrists tried to define their value sys- tems more precisely in terms of biological and ...
˹éÒ 199
... values such as individual responsibility , honesty , and nonviolence may be the " biological " needs of the society . The biosocial assessment of human values is familiar to psychiatrists ; it is implicit in the writings of Freud and ...
... values such as individual responsibility , honesty , and nonviolence may be the " biological " needs of the society . The biosocial assessment of human values is familiar to psychiatrists ; it is implicit in the writings of Freud and ...
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Introduction | 11 |
Psychotherapy and Social Change | 17 |
Individual Family and Group | 39 |
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able abortion active agencies aggression allow argue assume attitudes aware become behavior believe better causes child commitment consider course criminal deal define develop direct disturbed drugs effect efforts emotional environment examine excuses experience fear feel forces forms freedom future given goals greater hospital human important individual influence institutions issues justify kind less limited lives man's means ment mental mental illness moral offenders oppressive organizations patient person physical physician planning political position possible practice present probably problems professional psychiatric psychiatrist psychological psychotherapy question radical reasons reform repressive responsibility role seek seems sense situation social social systems society sometimes status quo stress suffering suicidal symptoms tests therapeutic therapist therapy treat treatment understand unhappy usually values violence young