Emotion: A Comprehensive Phenomenology of Theories and Their Meanings for Therapy

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Psychology Press, 1999 - 318 páginas
This is Volume XIV of thirty-eight in a series on the General Psychology. Originally published in 1960, this study offers A Comprehensive Phenomenology of Theories and their Meanings for Therapy.
 

Contenido

INTRODUCTION
1
B THE METHOD
9
THE SCOPE AND PLAN
22
EMOTION AS A DISTINCT ENTITY
38
EMOTION AS AN ACCOMPANIMENT
45
EMOTION AND THE UNCONSCIOUS
54
EMOTION AS ENERGY
66
EMOTION AS QUANTITY
81
EMOTION AS SIGNIFICATION
185
EMOTION AS CONFLICT
201
EMOTION AS DISORDER
207
EMOTION AS CREATIVE ORGANIZATION
217
ADDENDA ON EMOTION AND SPIRIT
231
INTEGRATION
241
B THE CONCEPT OF CAUSE
249
CAUSA MATERIALIS
258

EMOTION AS TOTALITY
87
EMOTION AND PHYSIOLOGICAL LOCATION
100
EMOTION AND SITUATION
135
EMOTION AND THE SUBJECTOBJECT RELATION
144
EMOTION AND GENESIS
154
EMOTION AND REPRESENTATIONS
166
E CAUSA FORMALIS
266
F CAUSA FINALIS
276
G CODA
286
SUBJECT INDEX
313
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James Hillman was born in Atlantic City, New Jersey on April 12, 1926. He attended the School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University for two years before joining the Navy's Hospital Corps in 1944. He studied English literature in Paris at the Sorbonne and graduated with a degree in mental and moral science from Trinity College in Dublin. In 1953, he moved to Zurich and enrolled at the C. G. Jung Institute. In 1959, he became the director of studies at the institute and stayed in that position for the next 10 years. He wrote over 20 books including Suicide and the Soul, Re-Visioning Psychology, and The Soul's Code. He died due to complications of bone cancer on October 27, 2011 at the age of 85.

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