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. |
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Page 33
... psychoanalytic training , my patients had been following the basic rule and had expressed the kind of material generally produced by patients in psychoanalysis . This fact was confirmed by my supervisors in the psychoanalytic institute ...
... psychoanalytic training , my patients had been following the basic rule and had expressed the kind of material generally produced by patients in psychoanalysis . This fact was confirmed by my supervisors in the psychoanalytic institute ...
Page 54
... psychoanalytic model , it is internal but unconscious ( See Figure 1 ) . The psychoanalytic and behavioral models skirt the common conceptions of why a person becomes sad , glad , afraid , or angry . The cognitive approach , however ...
... psychoanalytic model , it is internal but unconscious ( See Figure 1 ) . The psychoanalytic and behavioral models skirt the common conceptions of why a person becomes sad , glad , afraid , or angry . The cognitive approach , however ...
Page 316
... psychoanalytic concepts , there are obvious differences between these two systems of psychotherapy . In contrast to psychoanalysis , cognitive therapy deals with what is immediately derivable from conscious experience . The cognitive ...
... psychoanalytic concepts , there are obvious differences between these two systems of psychotherapy . In contrast to psychoanalysis , cognitive therapy deals with what is immediately derivable from conscious experience . The cognitive ...
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able activity afraid anxiety neurosis anxious patient appraisal approach arousal attack attitudes automatic thoughts autonomic nervous system avoid Beck becomes behavior therapy believes clinical cognitive distortions cognitive model cognitive therapy concept consequences considered critical danger depressed patient derived desensitization disease distortions disturbance domain emotional disorders emotional response evaluation event examination example experience experienced external fantasy fear felt formulations goals hysteria ideas ideation instance internal interpersonal interpretation kind label lead learning loss maladaptive meaning Meichenbaum mind-body problem negative notion object observations occur pain paranoid person phobias phobic situation physical physiological problems produce psychiatric psycho psychoanalysis psychoanalytic psychological psychophysiological disorders psychosomatic disorders psychotherapy rational-emotive therapy react reactions realistic reality regard rejection reported role rules self-criticisms sense sequence Similarly social somatic somatic disorder specific stimulus stress student studies suicide symptoms systematic systematic desensitization techniques theory therapeutic therapist thinking threat tion treatment unpleasant unrealistic visual woman