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A pioneer’s parting
gift The Science of Mental
Healing Human mind is a complex phenomenon. It can be a great source of strength goading one to perform superhuman feats and yet be frail enough to fall victim to assorted emotional traumas and disorders. Often mind and brain are considered synonymous in common parlance. However, while brain is a biological organ, admittedly the most complex, mind is a larger and more sophisticated concept involving one’s will, thoughts and emotions among other things. Therefore, mental disorders invariably present an intractable challenge to psychotherapists who employ techniques largely based on verbal and emotional communication in conjunction with other symbolic behavior. Though scientific understanding and treatment of mental disorders is of comparatively recent origin, already quite an impressive work has been done in this field. Consequently, different streams of this therapy have come into being. For instance, there is psychoanalytic psychotherapy wherein hypnosis plays a vital role. Influenced by French neurologist Jean Martin Charcot the Austrian Physician and founder of psychoanalysis, Sigmund Freud used hypnosis to uncover long forgotten, distressing experiences in the psyche of his neurotic patients. He also used the free association technique while treating them. Carl Jung, Alfred Adler and neo-Freudians like Erich Fromm, Karen Horney and Erik Erikson were some of the noted practitioners of this therapy. Humanistic psychotherapy, Gestalt psychology and behavior psychotherapy are the other forms of treatments for healing assorted mental disorders. The late N. L Dosajh was among the tallest of Indian psychotherapists of his time. He had a long and illustrious career. He performed pioneering work in the field . He synthesised Western and Eastern concepts and practices to heal his patients with remarkable success. The progenitor of ‘D Test’ and New Personality Theory, Dosajh firmly believed that psychotherapy made it imperative to identify the sources of distress. Communication, for him, was the primary means of healing, making the relationship between the therapist and the patient vital. In this volume, his swan song and an invaluable parting gift to his successors in the profession, he has dealt with various theories and aetiology of mental illness, psychosynthesis, psychoneurosis, etc., providing case studies and related information. This book can be a valuable textbook for students of psychotherapy and a handbook for practicing professionals. The value of this tome is enhanced by Dr Kuldip Kumar Dhiman’s able editing. Dhiman has a doctorate in Philosophical Psychology and specialises in Freudian Psychoanalysis and Evolutionary Psychology.
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