AARON T. BECK'S DRAWINGS AND THE PSYCHOANALYTIC ORIGIN STORY OF COGNITIVE THERAPY
In this essay the author challenges the standard origin story of cognitive therapy, namely, that its founder Aaron T. Beck broke with psychoanalysis to pursue a more pragmatic, parsimonious, and experimentalist cognitive model. It is true that Beck broke with psychoanalysis in large measure as a res...
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Veröffentlicht in: | History of psychology 2012-02, Vol.15 (1), p.1-18 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | In this essay
the author challenges the standard origin story of cognitive therapy, namely,
that its founder Aaron T. Beck broke with psychoanalysis to pursue a more
pragmatic, parsimonious, and experimentalist cognitive model. It is true that
Beck broke with psychoanalysis in large measure as a result of his experimental
disconfirmation of key psychoanalytic ideas. His new school of cognitive therapy
brought the experimental ethos into every corner of psychological life,
extending outward into the largest multisite randomized controlled studies of
psychotherapy ever attempted and inward into the deepest recesses of our private
worlds. But newly discovered hand-sketched drawings from 1964 of the schema, a
conceptual centerpiece of cognitive therapy, as well as unpublished personal
correspondence show that Beck continued to think psychoanalytically even after
he broke with psychoanalysis. The drawings urge us to consider an origin story
much more complex than the one of inherited tradition. This new, multifaceted
origin story of cognitive therapy reaches beyond sectarian disagreements and
speaks to a broader understanding of the theoretical underpinnings of cognitive
therapy. |
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ISSN: | 1093-4510 1939-0610 |
DOI: | 10.1037/a0023892 |