
by Aaron T . Beck (Author), Brad A . Alford (Author)
This volume presents a comprehensive statement of cognitive theory and maps the dynamic evolution of cognitive therapy into a multidimensional approach applicable to an impressive range of problems. The authors also show how cognitive therapy meets the aims and criteria of the current psychotherapy integration movement, incorporating as it does elements of interpersonal, behavioral, and psychodynamic approaches.
Format: Paperback
Pages: 197
Edition: 1
Publisher: Guilford Press
Published: 16 Oct 1998
ISBN 10: 1572303964
ISBN 13: 9781572303966
Tim Beck is to dynamic psychotherapy as Mikhail Gorbachov is to Soviet Russia: both promised reform and improvement, but effectively swept away the old order. But whereas Gorbachov did not manage to pursue a leadership role in the new Russian Federation, Tim Beck effortlessly sweeps all before him --and applies his creative intelligence to fresh problems in our subject. --Sir David Goldberg, Maudsley Hospital, London
A broad-ranging, sophisticated, and fascinating text. The authors tackle some of the most difficult issues in cognitive therapy head on. The nature of causation in cognitive therapy, prospects and pitfalls of psychotherapy integration, the relation between conditioning and cognitive models, developments in theory and treatment of personality disorders and psychoses, and many other important topics are thoughtfully addressed. Anyone interested in cognitive therapy is likely to find this book a veritable treasure trove. --David M. Clark,
D. Phil, Professor of Psychiatry, Oxford University
This is a very thoughtful, scholarly and comprehensive monograph which successfully integrates the past development, the present status and the future of cognitive-behavioral approaches into a single, cohesive theory of psychopathology and the psychotherapeutic process. Only the brilliant and creative innovator of cognitive and behavioral therapy, Dr. Aaron Beck, could have written this monograph with as much insight, knowledge and scholarship that has gone into this very important work. In some ways, this monograph is long overdue, since it provides a sound theoretical basis of the development of this very important empirically proven psychotherapeutic technique and extends into an understanding of all human psychopathology. It is a prodigious work, which interestingly uses two examples in the cognitive behavioral therapy, that of panic disorder and schizophrenic delusions, not as commonly identified with the cognitive behavioral approach as the depressive disorders. This book is a 'must read' for serious students, trainees, and practitioners of cognitive and behavioral therapy and I would recommend it to all who are interested in this very important psychotherapeutic approach to the management of mental disorders, which has now become standard practice in our field. Alford and Beck are to be congratulated for undertaking this intellectually challenging integrative task in the development of a comprehensive theory of psychopathology and psychotherapeutic change based upon the cognitive-behavioral model. --Lewis L. Judd, M.D., Mary Gilman Professor; Chair, Department of Psychiatry, University of California, San Diego