Choices for Living: Coping with Fear of DyingSpringer Science & Business Media, 11. 12. 2005 - Počet stran: 308 Although many books are written about bereavement, very few are written about the fear of one's own death and most of these focus chiefly on terminal illness. In contrast, this book looks at the ways in which the fear of death operates on a back burner throughout our lives and how it influences the choices we make and the paths that we follow in life. The author presents a `moral hierarchy' of behavior used in coping with the fear of death and dying. |
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... Becker's Pulitzer prize-winning book The Denial of Death. I was struck by the fact that Becker focused on killing or wielding power over others as a major mode of coping with the fear of death. Killing others created the illusion of ...
... Becker's Pulitzer prize-winning book The Denial of Death. I was struck by the fact that Becker focused on killing or wielding power over others as a major mode of coping with the fear of death. Killing others created the illusion of ...
Strana vii
... Becker. Copyright © 1973 by The Free Press, a Division of Simon & Schuster, Inc. Reprinted with permission of the publisher. Excerpts from Revolution in Psychiatry by Ernest Becker. Copyright © 1964 by The Free Press, a Division of ...
... Becker. Copyright © 1973 by The Free Press, a Division of Simon & Schuster, Inc. Reprinted with permission of the publisher. Excerpts from Revolution in Psychiatry by Ernest Becker. Copyright © 1964 by The Free Press, a Division of ...
Strana 7
... Becker (1973) focus on the repression of death (but disagree on the source of this repression). While repression as a method of coping with death is involved to some extent in all the other coping mechanisms, it is discussed in detail ...
... Becker (1973) focus on the repression of death (but disagree on the source of this repression). While repression as a method of coping with death is involved to some extent in all the other coping mechanisms, it is discussed in detail ...
Strana 8
... Becker's (1973) four “levels of power and meaning, the Personal (which he sees as self-obsession and pure narcissism), the Social (focused on family, and thus somewhat limited), the Secular (allegiance to humanistic abstractions, such ...
... Becker's (1973) four “levels of power and meaning, the Personal (which he sees as self-obsession and pure narcissism), the Social (focused on family, and thus somewhat limited), the Secular (allegiance to humanistic abstractions, such ...
Strana 10
... Becker (1973) refers to sources of meaning for the individual. Belonging to a group—the family, state, nation, club, university, sports team (or identifying with some larger group as a “reference group,” even though one is not a member) ...
... Becker (1973) refers to sources of meaning for the individual. Belonging to a group—the family, state, nation, club, university, sports team (or identifying with some larger group as a “reference group,” even though one is not a member) ...
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activity adults aggressive alters amnesia animals anomie anxiety Becker become believe called child childhood choice Clinton cognitive dissonance Companionate love compulsive coping modes counterphobic behavior creative culture dead death and dying death fear death instinct defense Delbanco denial of death depression described discussed disorder dissociation drugs early emotional especially evil example father fear of death fear of dying feeling Freud function gambling girl goals human humor illusion immortality individual intellectualization involved Jews joke killer killing later living look loss man’s means mechanism mother motivation movie murder nation O. J. Simpson obsession one’s Ozymandias pain parents patient physical political probably problem protection psychological psychopathy psychotherapy quoted religion religious role Romantic love Satan says seems self-esteem sexual abuse skydiving social society Sogyal Rinpoche Spiegel suicide survival Sybil term therapist tion unconscious usually values victim women Woody Allen