Philosophies | |
Psychotherapy as Ethics | |
article | |
Richard G. T. Gipps1  | |
[1] Blackfriars Hall, University of Oxford | |
关键词: ethics; virtues; psychotherapy; therapeutic relationship; dignity; recognition; psychoanalysis; individuality; forgiveness; individuality; | |
DOI : 10.3390/philosophies8020042 | |
学科分类:内科医学 | |
来源: mdpi | |
【 摘 要 】
Talk of matters ethical is, in the psychotherapeutic context, typically relegated to therapy’s preconditions and setting, i.e., to its ‘frame’. What goes on within that frame, i.e., therapeutic action itself, gets theorised in psychological rather than ethical terms. An explanation for this is the frequent therapeutic imperative to extirpate self-directed moralising. Moralising, however, constitutes but a phoney pretender to the ethical life. A true ethical sensibility instead shows itself in such moments of life as involve our offering humane recognition to one another and to ourselves. Being offered such recognition not only allows a patient to internalise it as a remoralising dignity or healthy pride. It also enables the patient to know herself by animating within herself a range of virtue concepts—courage, probity, repentance, etc.—which can then function as regulative ideals for a well-functioning psyche. Inchoate anxiety now takes shape as intelligible guilt. Repentance and the repair of damaged relationships now replace blame’s repression or projection. Conscience now becomes a motor for therapeutic change. In such ways, ethical concern constitutes not merely the frame but the living flesh of the therapeutic project.
【 授权许可】
CC BY
【 预 览 】
Files | Size | Format | View |
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RO202307010002729ZK.pdf | 209KB | download |