Nietzschean Psychology and Psychotherapy: The New Doctors of the Soul
By (Author) Uri Wernik
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Lexington Books
4th April 2016
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Psychological theory, systems, schools and viewpoints
616.8914
Hardback
258
Width 159mm, Height 238mm, Spine 24mm
549g
Friedrich Nietzsche declared himself to be a psychologist who has not his peer. Nietzschean Psychology and Psychotherapy: The New Doctors of the Soul illustrates why he was correct and indicates that he was also a soul doctor who has not his peer. He is usually unknown to psychologists and treated by philosophers as if he was a philosopher who, as such, wrote about some issues relating to the philosophy of mind. This book acquaints psychologists with Nietzsche and introduces him to philosophers in a new light. It presents Nietzsches contributions to psychology, wisdom of life, and psychotherapy dispersed throughout his writings. It hails him the Overturner, demonstrating how he overturned many of our notions about love, crime, happiness, morality, language, consciousness, logic, memory, emotions, happiness, and self-actualizing. He is portrayed as the precursor and champion of action-, chance-, and acceptance-oriented self-help and therapy, far from being, as is often claimed, a proponent of depth-, dynamic- or insight-oriented psychotherapy.
Uri Wernik's fascinating account demonstrates once again not only the complex and controversial richness of Nietzsche's oeuvre but also its virtually limitless capacity for appropriation. In Wernik's psychological take, Nietzsche is transformed into an essentially non-Freudian, health-bestowing doctor of the soul. -- Steven E. Aschheim, author of the The Nietzsche Legacy in Germany, 1890-1990
Uri Wernik has written a wonderful book expressing Nietzsches views on all matters of interest to psychologists and therapists. I found more wisdom in this book than in any book I've read in decades. No better presentation of Nietzsche's radical thoughts on human consciousness, action, self-development, and health (not mental health, but organic health) has been written. Any reader who doesn't come away with a dozen fresh ideas for improved therapy and an improved life has either already discovered Nietzsche, or is dead. -- George Cockroft, aka Luke Rhinehart, author of The Dice Man and nine other books
Uri Wernik captures your mind and heart in his remarkably captivating and loving writing about Nietzsche. He is outstanding in developing Nietzsches largely ignored, but nonetheless monumental, psychology. Personally, I both agree with and am critical of much of Nietzsches profound thinking, but Wernik leaves respectable room when he writes: Nietzsche persons are graduates of the best school of suspicion: they are skeptics . . . Nietzsche persons are not really Nietzsche persons. . . being independently-minded . . . they cannot agree with everything he wrote. . . . [T]hey can still admire Nietzsche, despite some of his problematic ideas, which they tragically disregard and forgive out of gratitude and compassion. Wernik on Nietzsche is a tour de force. -- Israel W. Charny, Institute on the Holocaust and Genocide
Uri Wernik is senior clinical and medical psychologist with his own private practice.