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  • From Oedipus to PACE, using the concepts of shame and guilt as golden thread

    Author(s)
    Beckmann, Klaus Martin
    Griffith University Author(s)
    Beckmann, K. Martin
    Year published
    2016
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    Abstract
    Objectives: To demonstrate that antiquity’s concepts of shame and guilt developed in their meaning over the centuries and can still have practical applicability in psychological therapies these days. Methods: To review shame and guilt in philosophy, history, ethics and psychiatry contexts. Within limitations, a narrative is presented, starting with Oedipus in antiquity, visiting several important philosophical theories and ending in the present time with, for example, Dan Hughes’ PACE model for therapy. Results: The first part expands on selected ideas presented in Melvyn Bragg’s 2007 BBC radio programme entitled ‘Guilt’; ...
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    Objectives: To demonstrate that antiquity’s concepts of shame and guilt developed in their meaning over the centuries and can still have practical applicability in psychological therapies these days. Methods: To review shame and guilt in philosophy, history, ethics and psychiatry contexts. Within limitations, a narrative is presented, starting with Oedipus in antiquity, visiting several important philosophical theories and ending in the present time with, for example, Dan Hughes’ PACE model for therapy. Results: The first part expands on selected ideas presented in Melvyn Bragg’s 2007 BBC radio programme entitled ‘Guilt’; the second part adds selected therapeutic models where concepts of shame and guilt play a role. Conclusions: Shame and guilt are archaic but quintessential concepts that already occupied thinkers in antiquity. Shame and guilt are concepts that preoccupied science and art over the millennia and continue as useful concepts to the present day. Moreover, shame and guilt, as concepts, continue to play a salient role in recent and contemporary psychiatry.
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    Journal Title
    Australasian Psychiatry
    Volume
    24
    Issue
    12
    DOI
    https://doi.org/10.1177/1039856215609759
    Subject
    Biomedical and clinical sciences
    Psychology
    Other psychology not elsewhere classified
    Shame
    Guilt
    Philosophy
    History
    Psychological therapies
    Publication URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10072/99805
    Collection
    • Journal articles

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