This is a book about hope. Part 1 is a compact but necessarily limited attempt to describe the actual structure and concrete forms of hope and hopelessness; Part 2 is an exploration of a psychology of hope, the beginning of an investigation of what psychic forms and dynamisms move most toward hope and against hopelessness; and Part 3 is an analogous effort to suggest the outlines of a metaphysics of hope.
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"While [Lynch] is learned enough about the literature that my field (psychiatry) has accumulated during its brief history, scholarship alone cannot account for his remarkable effectiveness in this volume. So, I must begin with a statement, which because of its simplicity is difficult to make cleanly: Father Lynch is genuinely devoted to our calling. In fact, I suspect he is more devoted than many of its practitioners who tend, understandably, to be more quickly discouraged by its deficiencies. In these days of fashionable get-togethers between religion and psychiatry, I am impelled to add that he has no wish to proselytize or be proselytized. In other words, he is the rarest of human beings--the outsider who can speak as a friend."--American Journal of Psychiatry
"Images of Hope, issued out of a harrowing personal experience of severe mental breakdown, [is] still a classic in the field of psychological healing. [The Reverend William F.] Lynch knew what it meant to rise from the dead." --Commonweal
"For those directly involved with the care of the mentally ill, Father Lynch offers many valid insights, including the fact that honest self-disclosure can be infinitely helpful to the patient who is mesmerized by a perfectionistic or independence ideal carried to its extreme. It is a thoughtful book from which emanates concern." --Journal of Religion and Health "While [Lynch] is learned enough about the literature that my field (psychiatry) has accumulated during its brief history, scholarship alone cannot account for his remarkable effectiveness in this volume. So, I must begin with a statement, which because of its simplicity is difficult to make cleanly: Father Lynch is genuinely devoted to our calling. In fact, I suspect he is more devoted than many of its practitioners who tend, understandably, to be more quickly discouraged by its deficiencies. In these days of fashionable get-togethers between religion and psychiatry, I am impelled to add that he has no wish to proselytize or be proselytized. In other words, he is the rarest of human beings--the outsider who can speak as a friend." --American Journal of Psychiatry This is a book about hope. Part 1 is a compact but necessarily limited attempt to describe the actual structure and concrete forms of hope and hopelessness; Part 2 is an exploration of a psychology of hope, the beginning of an investigation of what psychic forms and dynamisms move most toward hope and against hopelessness; and Part 3 is an analogous effort to suggest the outlines of a metaphysics of hope. The Reverend William F. Lynch (1931-2003) was the author of nine books, including The Integrating Mind: An Exploration into Western Thought and The Image Industries."About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.
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Paper Back. Condition: New. The dawn of the twenty-first century caused us to hope that somehow, as awaking from a nightmare, we could leave behind the multiple horrors of the twentieth. Alas, new ones arise to take the place of the old, and require us to listen anew to those voices of the past generation or two who were able to speak of hope and exalt it even in the blackest darkness. Variously brilliant and revealing the mainspring of human morality and sanity, Josef Pieper sketched a theology, Gabriel Marcel a philosophy, and in this book, William Lynch a psychology of hope. Lynch, a literary critic and theologian rather than a psychotherapist, yet was thoroughly conversant with the discipline and its modern theorists, and believed that arousing and nourishing hope were fundamental to restoring the mentally stricken to health. Those of us who currently fit into the category of the ''well'' should pay attention to his claims, says Lynch, because just as the ''mentally ill'' maintain islands of sanity in their being, so the sane, likewise, harbor measures of insanity. Lynch's insights on the nature and mechanisms of hope, the recognition of hopelessness as a necessary dimension of existence to be creatively transcended, are constantly astonishing. Put another way (oh so prosaically) Lynch teaches us how to ''think outside the box'': Yes, there is a box, but there is also an ''outside.'' 319 pp. Seller Inventory # 12675
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