This article sites psychotherapy as a 'dialogue' between polarised opposites: the necessary impossibility of communication between the conscious and unconscious; the exclusion and allure of a strange language; the scientific and the artistic; knowledge and experience; knowing and wondering; assuredness and inarticulacy. It then extends these ideas and makes a link between psychotherapeutic practice (and particularly hypnotherapy) and the 'eternal golden braid' of 'mascirelgic' (religion-magic-science). The conjecture is that the 'imaginative aspects of reason' underlie the creative processes involved in making positive and lasting psychotherapeutic change. The modern bedrock of these ideas is to be found in the philosophy of Wittgenstein wh...
In the present essay we explore a form of linguistic witchery (Wittgenstein) aimed at forging a sens...
In this study, I interview psychiatrists and psychologists (N=40) in order to assess their feelings ...
John M. Heaton’s The Talking Cure: Wittgenstein on Language as Bewitchment & Clarity follows a n...
This article is the first in a series of five which seeks to site scientific psycho-hypnotherapy on ...
Words are speakers for human adventure, but often they difficultly come over in memory’s labyrinth. ...
This essay continues the discussions started in the previous article [P W Jemmer (2007) Intrapersona...
The aim of this article is a comparison between Hegel’s and Phanomenological Psychiatry’s approach ...
Abstract The article is devoted to philosophical consideration of psychotherapeutic discourse in soc...
Language is utilized to create models of reality onto which we map the real-time flow of data mediat...
This article aims to tackle the accusation that psychoanalysis may proceed from magic thought, by ex...
In “The myth of mental illness ” Thomas Szasz challenges the idea that mental illnesses are diseases...
"The article is a guided tour to Alfred Lorenzer's proposal for an 'in-depth hermeneutic' cultural a...
The object of this essay is to discuss Ludwig Wittgenstein's remarks in Philosophical Investigations...
This article presents evidence which shows that the content of self-talk is influenced by an individ...
The psychology, in addition to his youth as a recognized discipline, presents a demarcation of its s...
In the present essay we explore a form of linguistic witchery (Wittgenstein) aimed at forging a sens...
In this study, I interview psychiatrists and psychologists (N=40) in order to assess their feelings ...
John M. Heaton’s The Talking Cure: Wittgenstein on Language as Bewitchment & Clarity follows a n...
This article is the first in a series of five which seeks to site scientific psycho-hypnotherapy on ...
Words are speakers for human adventure, but often they difficultly come over in memory’s labyrinth. ...
This essay continues the discussions started in the previous article [P W Jemmer (2007) Intrapersona...
The aim of this article is a comparison between Hegel’s and Phanomenological Psychiatry’s approach ...
Abstract The article is devoted to philosophical consideration of psychotherapeutic discourse in soc...
Language is utilized to create models of reality onto which we map the real-time flow of data mediat...
This article aims to tackle the accusation that psychoanalysis may proceed from magic thought, by ex...
In “The myth of mental illness ” Thomas Szasz challenges the idea that mental illnesses are diseases...
"The article is a guided tour to Alfred Lorenzer's proposal for an 'in-depth hermeneutic' cultural a...
The object of this essay is to discuss Ludwig Wittgenstein's remarks in Philosophical Investigations...
This article presents evidence which shows that the content of self-talk is influenced by an individ...
The psychology, in addition to his youth as a recognized discipline, presents a demarcation of its s...
In the present essay we explore a form of linguistic witchery (Wittgenstein) aimed at forging a sens...
In this study, I interview psychiatrists and psychologists (N=40) in order to assess their feelings ...
John M. Heaton’s The Talking Cure: Wittgenstein on Language as Bewitchment & Clarity follows a n...