Bookby Giampiero Arciero, Guido Bondolfi, Viridiana Mazzola.
Summary: This book addresses selected central questions in phenomenological psychology, a discipline that investigates the experience of self that emerges over the course of an individual's life, while also outlining a new method, the formal indication, as a means of accessing personal experience while remaining faithful to its uniqueness. In phenomenological psychology, the psyche no longer refers to an isolated self that remains unchanged by life's changing situations, but is rather a phenomenon (ipseity) which manifests itself and constantly takes form over the course of a person's unique existence. Thus, the formal indication allows us to study the way in which ipseity relates to the world in different situations, in a way that holds different meanings for different people. Based on this new approach, phenomenological psychotherapy marks a transition from a mode of grasping the truth about oneself through reflection, to a mode of accessing the disclosure of self through a work of self-transformation (the care of self) that requires the person to actually change her position on herself. By putting forward this method, the authors shed new light on the dynamic interplay between a person's historicity and uniqueness on the one hand, and the related physiopathological mechanisms on the other, providing evidence from the fields of genetics, cardiology, the neurosciences and psychiatry. The book will appeal to a broad readership, from psychiatrists, psychologist and psychotherapists, to researchers in these fields.
Contents:
Prologue: A User's Manual
Part I: The Crisis. The Natural Sciences and the Unthought Debt
1. On the Care Path
2. Creatures, Technology, and Scientific Psychology
3. "Nemo psychologus nisi physiologus"
Part II: A New Beginning . Formal Indication, Non-Rationalist Psychology, and Phenomenological Psychotherapy
4. The accesses to oneself
5. Self -intimacy and individuation
6. Personal stories and psychotherapy
7. Traces of Oneself and Healing
Part III: The Renewed Pact. Corporeality, Experimentation, and the Care of Self
8. Corporeality and ipseity
9. Corporeality and organisms
10. Organisms and freedom
11. The Care of Self and Psychotherapy
Bibliography
Author Index.