Name: | Description: | Size: | Format: | |
---|---|---|---|---|
2.08 MB | Adobe PDF |
Authors
Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Many patients who show up with depressive and anxious symptomology
have, or have had, interpersonal conflicts that triggered or contributed to the
aggravation of the symptomology herein explained. Clinical experience has
taught us that many people have difficulty in maintaining Faultless Logical
Reasoning (FLR) and, even if FLR is present, they have difficulty in maintaining
Faultless Logical Functioning (FLF). In clinical practice, psychotherapists saw
people that in consequence of their difficulty in FLR/FLF involves in conflicts
that brought them interpersonal problems in relationships, in business, work,
and in other areas of their life. Consequently, these problems will be followed by
anxious and depressive symptomatology. Almost always, this symptomology is
accompanied by intense emotional changes. With this clinical case of a patient
with depression, and its treatment, is demonstrated the importance to investigate
the capacity of patients to function and think, respectively, with FLF and FLR.
This work has proved very exciting because Logic-Based Psychotherapy (LBP)
provide pedagogy to think better, to improve emotional processing, introspection,
and more profound and rigorous analysis and responses. If the responses of the
subject are more logical, it will result in fewer conflicts, less ill will, and fewer
disagreements, which will lead to fewer cases of depression.
Description
Keywords
Psychotherapy Logic-based psychotherapy Logical reasoning Logical functioning Interpersonal relationship