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 89
... probably shun any role that he thought was politically repressive . He might refuse to offer students psycotherapy on the ground that such treatment would reduce the urgency of their drives toward dissent . ) For the sake of argument ...
... probably shun any role that he thought was politically repressive . He might refuse to offer students psycotherapy on the ground that such treatment would reduce the urgency of their drives toward dissent . ) For the sake of argument ...
˹éÒ 143
... probably respond well to psychotherapy , drug therapy , or hospitalization . A woman who knows the laws of her state and is looking for an abortion on psychiatric grounds quickly learns that she must talk suicide if she is to get her ...
... probably respond well to psychotherapy , drug therapy , or hospitalization . A woman who knows the laws of her state and is looking for an abortion on psychiatric grounds quickly learns that she must talk suicide if she is to get her ...
˹éÒ 151
... probably be made that social factors such as poverty and race , whose effects are easier to study and measure , should be given more weight in mitigating responsi- bility than the weight currently given to psychological factors . When a ...
... probably be made that social factors such as poverty and race , whose effects are easier to study and measure , should be given more weight in mitigating responsi- bility than the weight currently given to psychological factors . When a ...
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Introduction | 11 |
Psychotherapy and Social Change | 17 |
Psychiatric Treatment in an Oppressive Environment | 29 |
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able abortion accept actions active agencies aggression allow alter argue assume aware become behavior believe causes child commitment consider convinced course create criminal deal define develop direct disturbed drugs effect efforts emotional environment examine excuses experience fear feel forces forms freedom future goals greater hospital human important individual influence institutions issues justify kind lead less limited lives man's means ment mental illness moral noted offenders oppressive organizations patient person physical physician planning political position possible practice present probably problems professional psychiatric psychiatrist psychological psychotherapy questions radical reasons receive recommend reform repressive responsibility role seek seems sense situation social society sometimes status quo stress suicidal tests therapist therapy treat treatment usually values violence women York