psychologypsychotherapy

(Tina Sui) #1

Katz, Nathan, ed. Buddhist and Western Psychology. Boulder, Co.: Prajna Press, 1983.


Contents: The Meeting of Buddhist and Western Psychology (Chögyam Trungpa Rinpoche);
Defense Mechanisms According to Psychoanalysis and the Pali Nikayas; Psychological
Observations on the “Life of Gautama Buddha”; The Concept of Citta in Some Early Buddhist
Texts and Jung’s Analytical Psychology; Mind/Cosmos Maps in the Pali Nikayas; The Ideational
Content of the Buddha’s Enlightenment as Selbstverwirklichung; Emotions and Therapy: Three
Paradigmatic Zones; Illusion and Human Suffering: A Brief Comparison of Horney’s Ideas with
Buddhistic Understanding of Mind; The Meaning of Death in Psychoanalysis, Existential
Phenomenology and Dogen Zen; The Human Situation and Zen Buddhism; Prasanga and
Double-Bind; Paratantra and Parikalpita as Epistemological Concepts in Yogacara Buddhism
and Holographic Psychology; Buddhist rDzogs-chen Thought and Western “Daseinsanalyse”; On
the Phenomena of the “Feminine” According to Tantric Hagiographical Texts and Jungian
Psychology


Kaza, Stephanie, ed. Hooked! Buddhist Writings on Greed, Desire, and the Urge to Consume.
Boston: Shambhala, 2005.


Kenghe, C. T. Yoga as Depth-Psychology and Para-Psychology. 2 vols. Bharata Manisha
Research Series No. 5. Varanasi: 1975-1976.


Kirschner, S. Zen meditators: A clinical study. Dissertations Abstracts International, 1976,
36(7-B):3613-3614.


Kowalski, Reinhard. The Only Way Out Is In: Yoga, Ayurveda and Psychology. Jon Carpenter
Publishing, 2001.


From the publisher: “A practical guidebook for spiritual seekers that provides a bridge between
the best in Western psychology and the most relevant in yogic spirituality. It provides maps for an
inner journey. Meditation, breathing techniques, mantra and devotion are presented as practical
psychological tools to change our thoughts, emotions and deep-seated conditionings.”


Krishnamacharya Yoga Mandiram in collaboration with Vijay Human Services. Teaching
Yoga to the Children with Special Needs. Contact Krishnamacharya Yoga Mandiram, 31 (old no.
13) Fourth Cross Street, Ramakrishna Nagar, Chennai-600 028, India, tel.: + 91 (0)44 4933092,
fax: + 91 (0)44 4613341, email: [email protected], URL: http://www.kym.org.


“The KYM in collaboration with Vijay Human services (VHS)—an institution specializing in
handling children with special needs—started introducing yoga to these children and has
witnessed enormous progress in them. KYM now continues this commitment towards helping
these children. An outcome of this commitment is a publication in association with the VHS titled
Teaching Yoga to the Children with Special Needs. The KYM has also sponsored seminars and
trains teachers to handle the mentally handicapped.”


___. Teaching Yogasana to the Mentally Retarded Persons: A Guide Book for
Personnel Serving the Mentally Retarded Persons. Madras, India: Krishnamacharya Yoga
Mandiram: Vijay Human Services, 1988.


Kurtz, Ron. Body-Centered Psychotherapy: The Hakomi Method: The Integrated Use of
Mindfulness, Nonviolence and the Body. Mendocino, Calif.: LifeRhythm, 1990.

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