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PHILOSOPHICAL COUNSELLING
What is Philosophical Counselling?
Philosophical counselling is an approach to counselling that uses
philosophical insights and techniques to help you think about your life.
Your problems are not seen as illnesses to be cured. Instead your counsellor
will engage with you in a dialogue whose aim is to help you think and
feel more clearly and deeply about your issues.
Philosophical counselling uses philosophical dialogue to help individuals
reflect on their lives and deal with "problems in living" such as relationship
issues and career dilemmas. It may perhaps most accurately be classified
as a branch of both applied philosophy and counselling; what distinguishes
it from other branches of applied philosophy is that it involves philosophising
about concrete personal issues; what separates it from other approaches
of counselling is the extent to which it embraces both a philosophical
attitude and philosophical methods and insights.
Philosophical counselling may be a recent development (Gerd Achenbach
opened the first practice in 1981) but the idea that philosophy can
help with living goes back at least as far as Socrates, who arguably
practised a type of philosophical Counselling in the Greek marketplace.
The practical application of philosophy through "spiritual exercises"
continued in Greece and Rome through the Stoics and Epicurians, amongst
others, who practised "philosophy as a way of life"
For articles about philosophical counselling see the journal Practical
Philosophy.
If you think you would like a philosophical counsellor please consult
the Register
to find one or email Sam Brown
for more information
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