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Humanity’s Dark Side: Evil, Destructive Experience, and Psychotherapy 1st Edition, Kindle Edition

4.8 4.8 out of 5 stars 6 ratings

Human destructiveness can take many forms, from the everyday "little" ways in which we hurt each other to atrocities like genocide and slavery. The capacity for such destructiveness is often referred to as humanity's "dark side." Although an abundance of literature considers possible origins of humanity's dark side, most of it ignores how psychotherapists conceptualize and deal with the dark side in therapy.

In this book, prominent writers on psychotherapy present different, sometimes opposing views on humanity's dark side and consider how these views impact their clinical practice. Must therapists address the dark side in order to help people grow constructively? Or can they work to develop clients' positive features without addressing the dark side at all? How does one help a victim of "evil" cope in therapy, and what if the client is a perpetrator?

Additional chapters address broader implications, such as whether psychology is a fundamentally moral enterprise, whether human negativity is necessarily immoral, and how organizations that strive for virtue might instead perpetuate vice.

Complete with engaging case studies, this book will stimulate dialogue on important philosophical issues that impact clinical practice and broader social interactions.

Editorial Reviews

Review

Intellectually rigorous and profoundly important, this book is highly recommended to clinicians and readers willing to grapple with difficult but fascinating questions about evil and destructiveness. --New England Psychologist

There is hardly a more profound issue in psychology or philosophy than the nature of evil and how to deal with it in psychotherapy. And there are hardly more astute and well-informed editors than Bohart, Held, Mendelowitz, and Schneider and their carefully chosen authors to write about it. This outstanding volume is bound to have an outsized personal impact on readers who are willing to consider its implications for both therapists and patients in the conduct of therapy. --Stanley B. Messer, PhD, Dean and Professor II, Graduate School of Applied and Professional Psychology, Rutgers University, Piscataway, NJ

As intellectually exciting a book as I ve read in a decade or more...an incredibly smart, all-star cast of psychologists and philosophers of various theoretical persuasions offer wise, provocative, and downright enjoyable views of the nature of our dark side, including a terrific chapter on the epitome of the dark side himself, Darth Vader. This book is replete not only with profound philosophical and moral questions but also with fascinating ideas about how confronting our clients darker inclinations may affect and improve clinical work. --Barry A. Farber, PhD, Professor of Psychology and Education, Clinical Psychology Program, Teachers College, Columbia University, New York, NY

This edited volume provides a welcome counterweight to the oversimplified approaches that have dominated cultural conversations (especially in the United States) about goodness, virtue, and all things positive. The contributors do not all agree, but they share a deep engagement in messy and complicated questions about the dark side of human nature. Those interested in theory and its role in clinical work, in the practice or experience of therapy, or in ongoing public discourse about human nature will find this a rich and refreshingly wide-ranging source of ideas, argument, and compelling examples from a diverse set of expert authors. --Julie K. Norem, PhD, Hamm Professor of Psychology, Wellesley College, Wellesley, MA

There is hardly a more profound issue in psychology or philosophy than the nature of evil and how to deal with it in psychotherapy. And there are hardly more astute and well-informed editors than Bohart, Held, Mendelowitz, and Schneider and their carefully chosen authors to write about it. This outstanding volume is bound to have an outsized personal impact on readers who are willing to consider its implications for both therapists and patients in the conduct of therapy. --Stanley B. Messer, PhD, Dean and Professor II, Graduate School of Applied and Professional Psychology, Rutgers University, Piscataway, NJ

About the Author

Arthur C. Bohart, PhD, is Professor Emeritus at California State University, Dominguez Hills. He is best known for his work on the client's role as an active self-healing agent in psychotherapy. He has published a number of chapters and articles on this theme, including the book How Clients Make Therapy Work: The Process of Active Self-Healing (with Karen Tallman; 1999). His earlier work focused on the role of empathy in psychotherapy (e.g., Empathy Reconsidered: New Directions in Psychotherapy, coedited with Leslie S. Greenberg; 1997). He coedited Constructive and Destructive Behavior: Implications for Family, School, and Society (with Deborah J. Stipek; 2001). He has also published a number of papers and chapters on psychotherapy integration.
 
Barbara S. Held, PhD, is the Barry N. Wish Professor of Psychology and Social Studies at Bowdoin College in Brunswick, Maine. Her work focuses on the theoretical, philosophical, and practical aspects of movements in psychology and psychotherapy and the epistemology and ontology of human/mental kinds.
 
She is the author of
Back to Reality: A Critique of Postmodern Theory in Psychotherapy (1995), in which she provides theoretical and philosophical analysis of the postmodern linguistic turn in psychotherapy, and of Psychology's Interpretive Turn: The Search for Truth and Agency in Theoretical and Philosophical Psychology (2007), in which she examines recent hermeneutic, neopragmatic, and constructionist trends in the ontological and epistemological underpinnings of psychological inquiry.
 
She was the 2008–2009 president of the Society for Theoretical and Philosophical Psychology (APA Division 24), of which she is a fellow. She is also the author of numerous scholarly articles and chapters and has served on the editorial board of several journals. Trained as a clinical psychologist, she practiced therapy for 15 years.
 
In her popular book
Stop Smiling, Start Kvetching: A 5-Step Guide to Creative Complaining (2001) and in subsequent scholarly articles, she challenges what she calls the "tyranny of the positive attitude in America" and as a result has become a leading critic of the positive psychology movement. This work has led to extensive national and worldwide media attention, including features in The New York Times, People magazine, and Smithsonian magazine, as well as appearances on NBC's Today show, ABC's World News, National Public Radio's Talk of the Nation and All Things Considered, the BBC, and the CBC. She lives with her husband on the coast of Maine.
 
Edward Mendelowitz, PhD, completed his doctoral studies at the California School of Professional Psychology, where he worked closely with Rollo May. He is on the board of editors for the Journal of Humanistic Psychology and is a contributor to some of the major compendiums of existential/humanistic/depth psychotherapy. He has presented numerous papers on psychology, psychotherapy, and their respective interrelations with the humanities in the United States, Europe, and, most recently, East Asia.
 
His work resides on the gnostic frontiers of psychology in its eloquent blending of art, literature, music, cinema, religion, philosophy, and clinical narrative with the more recognizable fare of theory and scholarship. His collage-like
Ethics and Lao-tzu was called "an extraordinary moral narrative" by Robert Coles and "a remarkable book, a compendium of wisdom from an astonishing variety of sources" by the late psychoanalyst Allen Wheelis.
 
Dr. Mendelowitz is on the faculty of Saybrook Graduate School, is a lecturer at Tufts Medical Center, and Distinguished Visiting Professor at the University of the Rockies. He writes a quarterly online column,
Humanitas, for the Society of Humanistic Psychology and lives and works in Boston.
 
Kirk J. Schneider, PhD, is a leading spokesperson for contemporary existential–humanistic psychology. Dr. Schneider is current editor of the Journal of Humanistic Psychology, vice president of the Existential–Humanistic Institute, and adjunct faculty at Saybrook University and Teachers College of Columbia University.
 
Dr. Schneider has published more than 100 articles and chapters and has authored or edited eight books, including
The Paradoxical Self: Toward an Understanding of Our Contradictory Nature (1999); Horror and the Holy: Wisdom-Teachings of the Monster Tale (1993); The Psychology of Existence: An Integrative, Clinical Perspective (with Rollo May; 1994); The Handbook of Humanistic Psychology: Leading Edges in Theory, Research, and Practice (with James F. T. Bugental and J. Fraser Pierson; 2002); Rediscovery of Awe: Splendor, Mystery and the Fluid Center of Life (2004); Existential–Integrative Psychotherapy: Guideposts to the Core of Practice (2007); Existential–Humanistic Therapy (with Orah T. Krug; 2009; accompanying APA video also available); and Awakening to Awe: Personal Stories of Profound Transformation (2009).
 
In April 2010, Dr. Schneider delivered the opening keynote address at the First International (East–West) Existential Psychology Conference in Nanjing, China.
 

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0098KP882
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ American Psychological Association; 1st edition (September 10, 2012)
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ September 10, 2012
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • File size ‏ : ‎ 925 KB
  • Text-to-Speech ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
  • Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled
  • Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 291 pages
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.8 4.8 out of 5 stars 6 ratings

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  • Reviewed in the United States on October 24, 2013
    Different writers wrote different chapters. Each gave a well thought out and nicely researched topic. A number of writers explored and explained the idea of evil. There did seem to bias that could be described as "psych mumbo jumbo" and "liberal left wing" slants. Many of the writers promoted the idea of treating perpetrators by helping the perpetrators deal with their history and trauma. I would love to see a counter response by Samenow who wrote extensively about perps and therapy; see INSIDE THE CRIMINAL MIND. Their research indicated that many perps thoroughly enjoy emotional psychotherapy, and afterwards went out and enjoyed committing acts of further evil (eg. Rape). Personally I also believe in the psychological treatment of all people who wish to engage in such however, let's not equate that to change or safety. I also felt that these writers don't adequately speak to core issues of evil. One author did mention the biological issue of some criminals (such as frontal lobe issues?) but this was not expanded upon. No one tackled the theological components of evil but many did pooh pooh this as silly or weak which I found belittling and prejudice toward one of the world's oldest and largest faith (Judeo-Christian). I would also liked to have read more about the idea of evil being spiritual, and thinking errors, and the idea that evil doers are often untreatable (if we are being honest) because do all people really believe that "people are basically good, but turn bad or act bad due to hurts and hangups" and "if we can just love and teach better, we could cure this thing"
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