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Tag Archives: plural nature of things
Paul Gordon on art, complexity & ambiguity
This extract is from a recent acquisition to the library here, ‘The Hope of Therapy’ by Paul Gordon. He describes it as “an argument for… therapeutic freedom” as an essential element of creativity. His premise is that therapy cannot meaningfully be reduced to techniques, … Continue reading →
Posted in cognitive, communication, creativity, cultural questions, external locus, human condition, interconnection & belonging, internal locus of evaluation, meaning, non-directive counselling, organismic experiencing, Palace Gate Counselling Service, Paul Gordon, perception, poetry, political, psychiatry, reality, regulation, relationship, surrender
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Tagged affordable counselling exeter, all things counter, ambiguity, binary, complexity, counselling exeter, counselling regulation, counsellor Exeter, counsellors Exeter, creativity, diagnosis and disorder model, drunkenness of things being various, Ernest Hemingway, external locus, fear, Gerard Manley Hopkins, good and evil, Gustave Flaubert, Hills like white elephants, Hope of Therapy, intention, internal locus, interpretation, judging, Louis MacNeice, low cost counselling exeter, Marcel Proust, mental health model, Milan Kundera, non duality, not knowing, novel as a-philosophic, novels as anti-philosophic, organismic, over simplification, over simplifying, Palace Gate Counselling Service, Palace Gate Counselling Service Exeter, Paul Gordon, person centred counselling exeter, phenomenology, plural nature of things, pluralism, plurality, pre-conceived ideas, pre-interpretation, preconceived ideas, psychiatric model, psychotherapy regulation, purpose of story telling, regulating counselling, regulating psychotherapy, regulation of counselling, regulation of psychotherapy, Sigmund Freud, story-telling, therapeutic freedom, threat response, uncertainty, unconscious, unconsciousness, willingness, willingness not to define, willingness not to know, work of the novel, www.palacegatecounselling.org.uk
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