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Morita therapy views feeling emotions as part of the laws of nature. [2] Morita therapy was originally developed to address shinkeishitsu, [3] [4] an outdated term used in Japan to describe patients who have various types of anxiety. [5] Morita therapy was designed not to completely rid the patient of shinkeishitsu but to lessen the damaging ...
Masatake Morita (森田 正馬, Morita Masatake, 1874–1938), also read as Shōma Morita, was the founder of Morita therapy, a branch of clinical psychology strongly influenced by Zen Buddhism. [1] In his capacity as the head of psychiatry for a large Tokyo hospital, Morita began developing his methods while working with sufferers of ...
The moral treatment movement is widely seen as influencing psychiatric practice up to the present day, including specifically therapeutic communities [18] (although they were intended to be less repressive); occupational therapy [19] and Soteria houses. The Recovery model is said to have echoes of the concept of moral treatment. [20]
Naikan (Japanese: 内観, lit. ' introspection ') is a structured method of self-reflection developed by Yoshimoto Ishin (1916–1988) in the 1940s. [1] The practice is based around asking oneself three questions about a person in one's life: [2]
Jayanta Bhatta, the 9th-century scholar of the Nyaya school of Hindu philosophy and who commented on Tantra literature, stated that the Tantric ideas and spiritual practices are mostly well placed, but it also has "immoral teachings" such as by the so-called "Nilambara" sect where its practitioners "wear simply one blue garment, and then as a ...
Japanese lawmakers are set to decide at a special parliamentary session on Monday whether Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba should stay as the country's premier after his scandal-tarnished coalition ...
The model cited childhood trauma from her mother and classmates as the main culprits behind her self-esteem issues Image credits: nyairin_18 Hirase’s pain comes from a lifetime of abuse that ...
The more immoral the contrasting behavior is, the more likely it is that one's destructive behavior will seem less bad. [1] For example, "the massive destruction in Vietnam was minimized by portraying the American military intervention as saving the populace from Communist enslavement". [21] These so-called exonerating comparisons rely on the ...