Beschreibung:

/ 1978; 1979; 1980; 1981. 568; 468; 470; 784; 661 u. 574 S.; 23 cm. 6 Originalleinenbände mit Orig.-Schutzumschlägen.

Bemerkung:

Gute Exemplare / 6 BÄNDE; Umschläge stw. mit kl. Läsuren; Fußschnitte gestempelt; innen stw. Bibliotheksstempel u. hs. Besitzvermerke. - Englisch. - Robert Joseph Langs (June 30, 1928 ? November 8, 2014) was a psychiatrist, psychotherapist and psychoanalyst, the author, co-author, and editor of more than forty books on psychotherapy and human psychology. Over the course of more than fifty years, Langs developed a revised version of psychoanalytic psychotherapy, currently known as the ?adaptive paradigm?. This is a distinctive model of the mind, and particularly of the mind?s unconscious component, significantly different from other forms of psychoanalytic and psychodynamic psychotherapy. ... Langs treated psychoanalysis as a biological science, subject to the laws of evolution and adaptation. As with any living species, coping with environmental threats?and the resultant stresses and psychological traumas? must lie at the heart of human life including human psychological life. Langs? research led him to posit the existence of a mental module he termed the ?emotion-processing mind,? a psychic function which evolved to ensure the survival of the species. Langs contended that it had done so at the cost of adaptive failures and with devastating emotional consequences. He maintained that he had identified the assets and limitations of the emotion processing mind clinically and shown how the insights from this approach can help correct adaptive deficits, allowing more fulfilling lives, both individually and collectively. Langs therefore rejects the prevailing belief among psychoanalytic traditions that sexual or aggressive wishes and fantasies, the need for sound relationships with and affirmations from others, or self-actualization are the main issues in emotional life (see psychoanalysis). For Langs, the latter may be significant in any given clinical situation but precisely to the extent that they raise issues associated with emotional adaptation. ... (wiki; engl.) // INHALT (Auszug): COUNTERTRANSFERENCE AND LISTENING -- The Therapeutic Context -- The Functional Properties of the Patient's Associations and the Therapist's Interventions -- The Therapist's Subjective Reactions -- Reformulating -- The Patient's Responses to Interventions -- Further Considerations of the Type C Field -- An Evident Countertransference Problem and the Listening Process -- THE THREE BASIC REALMS OF LISTENING -- Identifying Possible Adaptive Contexts -- Confidentiality and the Listening Process -- Listening in the Cognitive, Object Relational, and Interactional Mechanism Spheres -- Levels of Listening and Levels of Intervening -- Factors in Therapists Who Listen on a Manifest Level -- Listening to the Therapist's Projective Identifications -- // The Standard Environment Some Effects of Altering the Frame -- The Patient's Unconscious Responses to Deviations -- Deviations in a First Session -- A Shift from an Insecure to a Secure Environment -- Establishing the Therapeutic Environment Some Major Alterations in the Setting -- Some Consequences of Deviations for Patient and Therapist -- Medication and the Frame -- // The Nature of Resistances and Interventions Nontransference and Transference Resistances The Structure of Interpretations -- The Influence of Diagnosis on Techniques of Intervening -- The Timing of Interventions The Partially Correct Interpretation The Locus of Interpretive Work Modifying Communicative Resistances Countertransference and Intervening -- // The Framework for Supervision and Therapy -- Some Basic Issues -- Interplay Between the Supervisory and Therapeutic Fields -- A Supervisory Crisis and Its Resolution -- The Patient as Unconscious Supervisor -- A Strategy for Supervision -- // CREATING A THERAPEUTIC BIPERSONAL FIELD -- The Therapeutic Interaction in an Initial Hour -- The Interactional and Intrapsychic Consequences of a Premature Termination and Change in Therapist -- Issues Related to the Framework of the Psychotherapeutic Situation -- Dealing with Intrapsychic and Interactional Resistances -- The Intrapsychic Pathology of the Patient and the Interactional Pathology of the Bipersonal Field -- SOME INTERACTIONAL CONSEQUENCES OF A MODIFIED FRAME -- The Therapist's Anonymity and the Basic Ground Rules of Psychotherapy -- // Some Dimensions of the Therapeutic Relationship Three Forms of Communicative Relatedness -- Therapist or Others: The Level of Greater Meaning -- Designated and Functional Patients and Therapists -- Dealing with Transference and Countertransference -- The Structure of Lie Therapy -- A Therapist's Inattention to a Patient's Therapeutic Efforts -- The Alliance Sector and the Reality in the Relationship -- Noncountertransference and Transference -- (u.a.m.)