The Concept of Dissociation: DSM and Ken Wilber
In 1980, the DSM initiated changes to the phenomenological compartmentalization of psychiatric illnesses to reflect
Paul Kiritsis, PsyD (Clinical psychology), MScMed (Clinical neurophysiology), MA (Western esotericism)
In 1980, the DSM initiated changes to the phenomenological compartmentalization of psychiatric illnesses to reflect
Hysterical neurosis gradually receded from the clinical arena in the early twentieth century and patients
We could probably attribute the differences between the Freudian and Janetian understanding of what constitutes
Everybody is a product of their environment and Sigmund Freud was no exception. His formative
Late in the nineteenth century dissociation paraded under names championed by the French
In contradistinction to the French who worked within defined phenomenological parameters, their maritime rivals, the
The next momentous step in the evolutionary development of the concept of dissociation was made
The name Franz Anton Mesmer (1734-1815) is often evoked with respect to the evolutionary history
The understanding of what constitutes ‘dissociation’ and how it might be defined has changed ample