‘Character Disturbance’ at Psychology, Philosophy and Real Life, Page 19

The following articles are related to ‘Character Disturbance’ at Psychology, Philosophy and Real Life.

Neurosis vs. Character Disorder: Levels of Awareness

By Dr George Simon, PhD | 15 September 2008

When I politely but firmly stopped accepting “I don’t know” for an answer from my character-disturbed clients, I was astonished at how easily I began to get more straightforward answers that actually made sense.

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What is a Character Disorder?

By Dr George Simon, PhD | 10 September 2008

Personality and character disorders are not the same thing. Our personality defines the stylistic way we tend to interact, while our character is defined by the level of social conscientiousness and virtue in our personality. When personality or character traits present major obstacles to functioning in a healthy way, they might constitute a disorder.

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Disturbances of Character

By Dr George Simon, PhD | 8 September 2008

Almost all the principles of traditional psychology are based upon the attempts of various theorists to explain a phenomenon rare for its time and almost totally unheard of in modern times. Character disturbance — not neurosis — is the pressing psychological reality of our day and simply can’t be understood or dealt with using traditional paradigms.

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