Topical Panel 18 from the Evolution of Psychotherapy 2005 - Treating Addictions
Featuring Claudia Black, PhD; Robert Dilts; James Hillman, PhD; and Scott Miller, PhD
Moderated by Betty Alice Erickson, MS
Supervision Panel 03 from the Evolution of Psychotherapy 2005
Featuring James Hillman, PhD; Arnold Lazarus, PhD; and Scott Miller, PhD
Moderated by Ellyn Bader, PhD
Dialogue 02 from the Evolution of Psychotherapy 2005 - Politics and Therapy
Featuring Mary Goudling, MSW, and James Hillman, PhD
Moderated by Jon Carlson, PsyD, EdD
EP00 Dialogue 10 - Critique of Therapy - James Hillman, Ph.D., and Thomas Szasz, M.D.
Given a topic, to become aware of the differing approaches to psychotherapy, and to identify the strengths and weaknesses in each approach.
Moderated by Bernhard Trenkle, Dipl. Pysch.
Topical Panel 13 from the Evolution of Psychotherapy 2000 - Therapeutic Neutrality vs Social Commitment
Featuring James Hillman, PhD, Cloe Madanes, Lic. Psychol., James Masterson, MD, and Thomas Szasz, MD.
Moderated by Betty Alice Erickson, MS, LPC, LMFT
Besides the patient's past history and present intrapsychic complaints, besides his/her interpersonal relations, the patient lives in an aesthetic, spiritual, cultural, economic and environmental world of intimate things, physical places and invisible atmospheres. To focus mainly upon personal subjectivity to the neglect of the non-human factors falsifies the patient's daily actuality and endangers therapy with artificiality. Therapy must therefore bridge into the world.
Topical Panel 10 from the Evolution of Psychotherapy 2000 - The Goal of Therapy
Featuring Bert Hellinger, MA, Dipl. Psych., James Hillman, PhD, Arnold Lazarus, PhD, and Miriam Polster, PhD.
Moderated by Brent Geary, PhD.
"Character is Fate"-this classic idea is coming around again in the new molecular biology that attributes deep-set personality traits to heredity. Can therapists sort out what belongs to development and may be influenced by therapy and what belongs to character and is authentic to the soul? Moreover, if congenital character is a major determinant in case history, then the events of childhood need to be revisioned, not only as traumatic errors but as previews, and even as necessary components of fate.