The following is my abstract for an invited address to the forthcoming Second World Congress of Existential Therapy
in Buenos Aires, Argentina May 8-11, 2019.
This is the
second world-wide and unprecedented gathering of existential therapists
featuring their latest contributions to the field. For those interested,
here is the link to the Conference:: http://www.2docongresomundialdeterapiaexistencial.com
And here is my Abstract:
The capacity for profound, intimate experience is
in jeopardy. We
have an emerging youth culture that is “glued” to their smartphones;
devices like Alexa and Siri are providing instant, computerized
assistance; and apps are replacing teachers and psychotherapists.
Facebook
is replacing face-to-face friendships and corporations are manipulating
what we see, think and feel--as well as how we vote and get our news.
In short, we, in much of the industrialized world, are losing our
capacity for presence, discernment, and psychospiritual depth. We
experience an ever contracting range of personal engagement and we seek
after the instant and neatly packaged. In this talk, I will address
this “quick fix,” “machine-mediated” model for living. But I will go on
to point out how the existentially and spiritually based sensibility of
“awe” or humility and wonder, sense of adventure toward living may be a
key counterbalance to the latter.
This counterbalance could mean the
difference between a kind of “living death” and a personal and
collective aliveness that sustains us through all our technocratic
changes. I will give concrete examples of the latter both from my own
life and that which I’ve gathered from my inquiries.
I hope that some Psychology Today readers decide to attend the
congress, as the relevance of existential therapy for our age becomes
strikingly clear. See for example the recent article in the Atlantic
Magazine online: https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2019/01/existential-therapy-you-can-ask-big-questions/579292/?
ABOUT AUTHOR
Kirk J. Schneider, Ph.D., is a licensed psychologist and current editor of the Journal of Humanistic Psychology.
ABOUT AUTHOR
Kirk J. Schneider, Ph.D., is a licensed psychologist and current editor of the Journal of Humanistic Psychology.
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