Psychodynamics of liberation.
Underneath the apparent separation of individuals there is a level of unity and interconnectedness. True liberation, suggests Kathleen Speeth, involves attaining an awareness of this level. In Part I of this program, Dr. Speeth enters into an intensive dialogue on the nature and meaning of liberatio...
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Format: | Video |
Language: | English |
Language Notes: | In English. Original language in English. |
Published: |
Oakland, CA :
Thinking Allowed Productions,
[2011]
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Series: | Counseling and therapy in video, 2d. edition.
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | Connect to this streaming video (Alexander Street Press) |
Summary: | Underneath the apparent separation of individuals there is a level of unity and interconnectedness. True liberation, suggests Kathleen Speeth, involves attaining an awareness of this level. In Part I of this program, Dr. Speeth enters into an intensive dialogue on the nature and meaning of liberation as viewed in both eastern and western traditions. In Part II, Dr. Speeth focuses on our tendency to sabotage ourselves -- to act against our own best interests. She maintains that a distinction can be drawn between inner weaknesses for which we may forgive ourselves and those inner criminal impulses toward which we must remain forever vigilant. Kathleen Speeth, Ph. D., is a clinical psychologist and co-editor (with Daniel Goleman) of The Essential Psychologies. She is author of The Gurdjieff Work and Gurdjieff: Seeker After Truth. She is a faculty member of the Institute for Transpersonal Psychology in Menlo Park, California. |
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Physical Description: | 1 online resource (1 streaming video file (84 min.)) |
Playing Time: | 01:23:16 |