| Gay Watson - 1998 - 340 pages
Presents Buddhist philosophy and practice as a resource for psychotherapy which is responsive to the needs for a three-way dialogue between Buddhism, psychotherapy and ... | |
| Gay Watson - 2014 - 176 pages
We often view emptiness as a negative condition, a symptom of depression, despair, or grief—an assessment furthered by authors like Franz Kafka or the existentialists, Jean ... | |
| Gay Watson, Stephen Batchelor, Guy Claxton - 2012 - 472 pages
The Buddhist view of the mind - how it works, how it goes wrong, how to put it right - is increasingly being recognised as profound and highly practical by scientists ... | |
| Gay Watson - 2017 - 224 pages
If there is one thing we are short on these days, it’s attention. Attention is central to everything we do and think, yet it is mostly an intangible force, an invisible thing ... | |
| John Pickering - 1997 - 280 pages
The decline of mechanism and positivism offers new opportunities to bring together Western and Buddhist views of the mind and its relationship to its surroundings. The purpose ... | |
| Seth Robert Segall - 2003 - 230 pages
Practicing psychologists explore the mutual impact of Buddhist teachings and psychology in their lives and practice. | |
| Jason M. Stewart - 2014 - 312 pages
If you are a psychodynamic therapist interested in the growing mindfulness movement, you may be looking for resources to help you enhance your practice. More and more ... | |
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