The American Journal of Psychoanalysis

Self-control and responsibility: Interfacing gestalt and behavioral frameworks

William Groman ; W. Nelson ; Kay Davidson
Cognitive Behavioural TherapyResearchExpert opinionEnglish
Artículo de revista académica - Paid access

Abstracts

Compares Gestalt therapy with cognitive-behavioral methods of treatment. The ultimate goal of both is to maximize self-control and the ability of clients to solve their own problems. This requires that clients become aware of their situation and develop the capacity to influence environmental factors. It is argued that behavioristic definitions of awareness limit the usefulness of this concept in understanding the person–environment interaction by overemphasizing external events at the expense of internal perceptual, cognitive, and emotional processes. In contrast, Gestalt therapists define awareness as a totality formed by related processes of sensing, contact, Gestalt formation, and excitement. It is concluded that the Gestalt approach is better for understanding and predicting behavior.

Revista académica
The American Journal of Psychoanalysis
Autor
Editorial
The American Journal of Psychoanalysis
Año de publicación
1980
Volumen
40
Incidencia
1
Número de páginas
33-42,
Numero ISSN
0002-9548
DOI
10.1007/bf01253538

APA citation

Groman, W., Nelson, W., & Davidson, K. (1980). Self-control and responsibility: Interfacing gestalt and behavioral frameworks. The American Journal Of Psychoanalysis, 40(1), 33-42, . https://doi.org/10.1007/bf01253538