Personality Theories
Outline Part Four
BINSWANGER
- Existential psychology
- Phenomenological method
- Phenomena
- Intentionality
- Bracketing
- Intersubjectivity
- Existence precedes essence
- Dasein
- Care
- Thrownness
- Fallenness
- Understanding
- Project
- Anxiety (dread, angst)
- Guilt (debt, regret)
- Death
- Authenticity
- Inauthenticity
- Existential analysis
- World-view (world-design, Lebenswelt)
- Umwelt
- Mitwelt
- Eigenwelt
- Time and space
- Modes
- Singular
- Plural
- Dual
- Anonymous
- Metaphors
- Therapy
BOSS
- Illumination
- Gelassenheit ("letting go")
- Existentials
- Space and time (see above)
- Mood (attunement)
- Dreams (as illumination)
FRANKL
- Logotherapy
- Conscience
- Existential vacuum
- Anticipatory anxiety
- Hyperintention
- Hyperreflection
- The abyss experience
- Psychopathology
- Anxiety neurosis
- Obsessive-compulsive disorder
- Depression
- Finding meaning
- Experiential values
- Creative values
- Attitudinal values
- Transcendence
- Therapy
- Paradoxical intention
- Dereflection
- Self-transcendence
MAY
- Destiny
- Courage
- Anxiety
- Developmental types
- Innocence
- Rebellion
- Ordinary
- Creative
- The daimonic
- Daimons
- Daimonic possession
- Eros
- Will
- Wishes
- Personality types
- Myths
BUDDHIST PSYCHOLOGY
- Siddhartha Gautama (Buddha)
- Structure of the mind
- The five skandhas
- the body
- sensations and feelings
- perceptions and thoughts
- mental acts (will, attention...)
- basic consciousness
- The six fields ("senses")
- The four noble truths
- 1. Life is (full of) suffering
- 2. Suffering is caused by attachment
- Attachment
- Hatred or avoidance
- Ignorance
- 3. Suffering can be extinguished
- 4. There is a way
- Eightfold path
- Wisdom
- 1. Right view
- 2. Right aspiration
- Moral precepts
- 3. Right speech
- 4. Right action
- 5. Right livelihood
- Meditation
- 6. Right effort
- 7. Right mindfulness
- 8. Right concentration
- Bodhisattvas
- Brahma vihara
- Loving kindness
- Compassion
- Sympathetic joy
- Equanimity
- Emptiness (sunyata)
- Non-dualistic perception and thought
- Koans