When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Postmodern psychology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Postmodern_psychology

    Postmodern psychology is an approach to psychology that questions whether an ultimate or singular version of truth is actually possible within its field. It challenges the modernist view of psychology as the science of the individual, [1] in favour of seeing humans as a cultural/communal product, dominated by language rather than by an inner self.

  3. Modern psychoanalysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modern_psychoanalysis

    The qualitative research method recommended by modern analytic institutes is described in an issue of the journal Modern Psychoanalysis. [ 17 ] [ 18 ] Candidates conduct single case studies in which the psychoanalytic sessions are used as laboratories to investigate the unconscious motives of specific transference resistances.

  4. Metamodernism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metamodernism

    "Metamodernism is what we get when we take the strategies associated with postmodernism and productively reduplicate and turn them in on themselves. This will entail disturbing the symbolic system of poststructuralism, producing a genealogy of genealogies, deconstructing deconstruction, and providing a therapy for therapeutic philosophy." [15]

  5. Harlene Anderson - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harlene_Anderson

    Harlene Anderson (born 1942) is an American psychologist and a cofounder of the Postmodern Collaborative Approach to therapy. In the 1980s, Anderson and her colleague Harold A. Goolishian pioneered a new technique that is used to relate to patients within therapy through language and collaboration, and without the use of diagnostic labels.

  6. Relational-cultural therapy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Relational-cultural_therapy

    Relational-cultural theory, and by extension, relational-cultural therapy (RCT) stems from the work of Jean Baker Miller, M.D. Often, relational-cultural theory is aligned with the feminist and or multicultural movements in psychology. In fact, RCT embraces many social justice aspects from these movements.

  7. Social therapy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_Therapy

    Social therapy is an activity-theoretic practice developed outside of academia at the East Side Institute for Group and Short Term Psychotherapy in New York. Its primary methodologists are cofounders of the East Side Institute, Fred Newman and Lois Holzman .

  8. Psychotherapy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psychotherapy

    Beck's approach used primarily the socratic method, and links have been drawn between ancient stoic philosophy and these cognitive therapies. [59] Cognitive and behavioral therapy approaches were increasingly combined and grouped under the umbrella term cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) in the 1970s.

  9. Solution-focused brief therapy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solution-focused_brief_therapy

    The conclusion of the two meta-analyses and the systematic reviews, and the overall conclusion of the most recent scholarly work on SFBT, is that solution-focused brief therapy is an effective approach to the treatment of psychological problems, with effect sizes similar to other evidenced-based approaches, such as CBT and IPT, but that these ...