Existential Essay

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    sages, poets, philosophers – and many others – have struggled to answer the existential question, “Who am I?” Even The Who, a famed rock band, dared to ask, “Who are you?” Today, that quest can be fulfilled through a series of short questions through various oracles: Myer-Briggs Personality test, Kinsey Scale test, VAK learning styles, People Styles at Work, What Color is My Parachute – and many others. Currently, this existential quest has been extended, in light of the poor performance of American schools

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    become the weapon that killing itself and all other living things. The word where there is slavery, a world where power distributed and bullies rule the world. This is an era of what Anthony Lewis, a columnist for The New York Times, has called “existential blindness.” Many Americans know lots of facts about the world, but they cannot tell their meaning or their implications. Language itself is a weapon. It is weaponized

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    Charles Van Doren’s case from the Existential Therapy perspective. Existential psychotherapy emphasizes that individual’s confrontation with “existence” causes mental health problems. Irvin Yalom (existential therapist) recognizes four “givens of existence” or ultimate human issues that all people struggle with: freedom and responsibility; isolation; meaninglessness; and death. The goal of existential therapy is to assist the client in their exploration of the existential “givens of life.” This approach

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    Participants in the debate about `ontological commitment' would benefit from distinguishing two different ways of understanding the notion. If the question at issue is `what is said to be' by a theory or `what a theory says there is', we are debating `explicit' commitment, while if we ask about the ontological costs or preconditions of the truth of a theory, we enquire into `implicit' commitment. I defend a conception of ontological commitment as implicit commitment; I also develop and defend an

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    Describe the tasks in the development of psychoeducational groups. When developing a psychoeducational group many tasks and goals will need to be established and completed. However, the first task would be to agree upon what will be the subject of the group and to whom the group will target. Next, the organization and plan for the how the session will proceed should be outlined. The number of sessions will be established and the space in which to have the group will be determined. Within the plan

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    a. Three core values of person-centered counseling 1. Unconditional positive regard. Unconditional Positive Regard is a theory by Carl Rogers applicable both for psychotherapy and in interpersonal relations. It recognizes a universal need for positive regard by others to all persons under various situations. It requires that all individuals as counselors should respect, accept and appreciate others without judgments. It is somehow different from unconditional love since it doesn’t require care for

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    Adolf Eichmann: The Existential Failure

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    In her report of Nazi SS member Adolph Eichmann's trial in Jerusalem, first published as a series of articles in The New Yorker, Hannah Arendt managed to spark great controversy, both in the academy and among the general public. The primary attack on Arendt was that she seemed to “blame the victim”, in this case the Jews, for their role in their own extermination during the Holocaust. While by no means the focus of her book, this perceived accusation in combination with her portrayal of Eichmann

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    continuing life. Similarly, facing a traumatic event such as EOL adds uncertainty about the future and awareness of human’s temporality. A study of lived experience of son and daughter caregivers seemed potentially helpful to understand EOL existential experience of the caregiver role and potential development of information that strengthens caregiver’s preparedness. Bachner et al. (2011) and Wong and Tomer (2011) discussed the value of death acceptance as a means of coming to terms with death

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    hope to implement once I start providing therapy in the outside world. While writing a paper on existential and behavioral therapy, I found myself agreeing with concepts represented in both methods. Existential therapy is appealing because of its focus on encouraging the client to take responsibility for their actions. Viktor Frankl, a psychologist who made a considerable contribution to existential therapy, once said, “Freedom is only part of the story and half the truth …  That is why I recommend

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    problems… life is more than an absence of suffering," said by Alphons Richert, the author of Integrating Existential and Narrative Therapy: A Theoretical Base for Eclectic Practice (p. 367). In a society that interprets psychological problems and distress in terms of a physical illness that is treated with a variety of pharmaceuticals, the combination of postmodern approaches and existential approaches could help define psychological problems for what the problems really are, and not pass them off

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