The Art of Change: Strategic Therapy and Hypnotherapy Without TranceWiley, 26 gen 1993 - 146 pagine The Art of Change provides practitioners with in-depth information on the theory and practice of strategic therapy, presenting an innovative approach to conceptualizing and solving human problems. This book, the English translation of the highly regarded Italian book, L'Arte del cambiamento, provides clinical examples and practical guidelines revealing how to apply specific, goal-directed, and time-saving therapeutic techniques in practice.Giorgio Nardone and Paul Watzlawick offer an overview of the historical development of strategic therapy approaches, and they look at the conceptual differences of the most important authors and scholars on strategic therapy. The authors show how, as opposed to traditional therapeutic approaches, the strategic therapy intervention can be a swift, well-planned process whose initiation, direction, objectives, and duration can be fairly clear from the beginning. And they demonstrate how, to be truly effective in obtaining solutions to specific clinical problems, the therapist needs to combine a knowledge of systemic techniques with inventiveness and versatility.This book gives a detailed account of techniques and specific interventions for working with clients suffering from anxiety, phobia, and obsessive-complusive problems. Demonstrating the efficacy and the speed of this approach, Nardone presents a systematic, thorough evaluation of the results he obtained by applying these techniques to a large and varied group of subjects over two years. |
Sommario
If You Desire to See Learn How to Act | 1 |
Heresies of the Strategic Approach | 17 |
The Development of the Strategic Approach | 32 |
Copyright | |
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Parole e frasi comuni
achieved actions anxiety apeutic apist Arezzo asked attempted solutions Bateson behavior prescriptions believe causality Chapter classical clinical communication concept concrete context described dysfunctional effect efficacy end of therapy Erickson evaluation example experience explain fact family therapy fear feel Fisch Foerster Garfield goals Gregory Bateson Haley havior Heinz von Foerster hypnosis hypnotherapy ical important injunctive interaction interpersonal language logical maintains the problem mental Obsessive Disorders Oscar Wilde Palo Alto panic attacks paradoxical patient patient's problems Paul Watzlawick perception person perspective phobic disorders positive possible present prob procedures psychiatrist psychological psychotherapy reactions reality redefinition reframing relapses relationship resistance resolve rigid rituals situation social solve specific stage strategic approach strategic therapy symptom prescription symptoms techniques tegic theoretical theory ther therapist things tient tion tive trance University of Siena usual Watzlawick Weakland week woman Younger brother

