Cognitive Therapy and the Emotional DisordersDescribes both theory and therapeutic techniques for anxiety neuroses, depressions, obsessions, phobias, and psychosomatic disorders and demonstrates the range of applicability of the cognitive approach. |
Contents
Introduction | 1 |
Common Sense and Beyond | 6 |
Tapping the Internal Communications | 24 |
Copyright | |
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able accepted activity actual afraid anxiety anxious appear applied appraisal approach attack attempt attitudes avoid Beck becomes behavior behavior therapy believes cognitive therapy common concept consequences considered consists continuous critical danger depressed patient disorders distortions disturbance effective emotional event evidence examination example expectations experience experienced explanations external fact fantasy fear feel felt friends future goals going ideas ideation important improvement increased instance internal interpretation kind label lead learning loss meaning negative neurosis notion object observations occur pain particular performance person phobias physical positive possible present problems processes produce psychoanalysis psychological psychotherapy question reactions reality reasons regard reported response result rules sadness sense showed similar situation social specific stimulus stress student studies successful suicide symptoms systematic techniques theory therapist thinking thoughts threat tion treatment understanding wishes woman York