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Eastern philosophy in clinical psychology
Application of Eastern philosophies in the field of clinical psychology From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Eastern philosophy in clinical psychology refers to the influence of Eastern philosophies on the practice of clinical psychology.
Historical clinical psychologists
- Carl Jung read the German translations by Richard Wilhelm of The Secret of the Golden Flower, the I Ching.
- Karen Horney studied Zen-Buddhism.[1]
- Fritz Perls also studied Zen Buddhism.[2]
- Erich Fromm collaborated with D. T. Suzuki in a 1957 workshop on "Zen Buddhism and Psychoanalysis";[3] wrote the foreword to a 1986 anthology of Nyanaponika Thera's essays.[4]
- Akhilananda explain Mental health through Eastern Philosophy.[5]
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Contemporary clinicians
- Marsha M. Linehan incorporates mindfulness techniques (particularly Zen practices) in her Dialectical Behavioral Therapy (DBT) which has been found to be particularly effective with Cluster-B personality disorders.[6]
- Jon Kabat-Zinn incorporates Buddhist mindfulness techniques in his Mindfulness Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) program.[7] Kabat-Zinn describes the program in his book Full Catastrophe Living.[8]
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Techniques used in clinical settings
- Vipassana - trains one to perceive the momentary arising and dissipating of all phenomena, nurturing the calm, detached recognition of all things' impermanence and interdependence.
See also
References
Further reading
External links
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