The Emergent Self: An Existential-Gestalt Approach

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Routledge, Mar 26, 2018 - Psychology - 160 pages
This book tracks a particular understanding of self, philosophically, from research evidence and in its implications for psychotherapy. At each step, the author includes first the theory he is working from, then the clinical implications of the theory, followed by some links to the philosophical outlook inherent in the theory, and finally a more extended case example.It takes the view that the continuing self is partly an illusion, partly a construct, and that we in fact have to work to stay the same in the face of all the different possibilities the world offers us. The author believes that we do this for two reasons. First of all, continuity allows deeper contact: friendships, loving relationships with partners and families. Secondly, and balancing this, the predictable is less anxiety-producing, and that we avoid this existential anxiety by acting in a stereotyped way and avoiding some of the depths of contact.
 

Contents

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
CHAPTER TWO Complexity and Emergence
CHAPTER THREE Relationship and Feedback
CHAPTER FOUR Chaos Process and Structure
CHAPTER FIVE Choice and Will
CHAPTER SIX Death and Endings
APPENDIX Gestalt Therapy and Emergence
INDEX
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