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| Towards a Buddhist Psychotherapy  |
| An effort at showing the relevance of Buddhism to western psychotherapy, especially existential therapy.
http://www.ship.edu/~cgboeree/buddhapsych.html |
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| Was the Buddha the First Humanist?  |
| The Buddha's concept of Abidhamma appears as a supremely naturalistic and psychological one. It refers to the representation within the human mind of the external order of things and events. It is the logical system for organizing and interpreting experience that is constructed by human mental capacities during the process of experiencing external phenomena: the instrument that regulates the mind.
http://www.humanists.net/pdhutcheon/humanist%20articles/buddha.htm |
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| Why Meditation isn’t Psychotherapy  |
| Essay by Patrick Kearney regarding the confusion between Buddhist meditation and modern psychotherapy.
http://www.buddhanet.net/crazy.htm |
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| Working with Delusional Emotions  |
| Tibetan approaches to dealing with delusional emotions, using tough life examples but also providing helpful suggestions.
http://buddhism.kalachakranet.org/delusionintro.html |
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| Zen and Western Psychotherapy: Nirvanic Transcendence and Samsaric Fixation  |
| An argument that both the ends and the means of Buddhist practice far exceed the limitations of Western psychotherapy in its dominant forms. This claim is substantiated by examining the underlying views of human nature in the broader context of cosmic Nature, as these reflect the assumed nature of the therapeutic task.
http://sino-sv3.sino.uni-heidelberg.de/FULLTEXT/JR-BJ001/sandra1.htm |
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| Zen Dynamics  |
| Offers a personality test and meditation subjects based on Chinese elements and Buddhist psychological theory.
http://www.zendynamics.com/ |
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