Augustine, Divine Agency, and Therapeutic Change

Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 24 (3):257-260 (2017)
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Abstract

Suggesting that underlying some violent behavior is an unhealthy identification of one's self with one's behavior, such that there is no reflective space between the acting self and unwanted or violent action, Alexandra Pârvan echoes many contemporary psychotherapeutic models in suggesting that a central goal of psychotherapy for perpetrators and recipients of violence should be to encourage clients to distance the acting self from the self's experience and behavior. Pârvan observes that this is already a feature of "attachment-informed psychotherapy," but she argues that "the distinction between self and action can only be effectively established from outside strictly psychological perspectives" (p....

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