psychologypsychotherapy

(Tina Sui) #1

Rao, R. C. The Development of Psychological Thought in India. 1963.


Rao, S. K. Ramachandra. Development of Psychological Thought in India. Mysore: Kavyalaya
Publishers, 1962.


Raskin, Donna. Yoga Beats the Blues: Boost Your Mood, Energy, and Concentration with Easy
5, 10, and 15-Minute Yoga Routines. Fair Winds Press, 2003.


Reat, N. Ross. The Origins of Indian Psychology. Berkeley, Calif.: Asian Humanities Press,
1990.


Contents: Monism in the Rg Veda; The Vedic concept of afterlife; The Vedic concept of the
human being (Individual identity, Vital faculties, Mental organs and faculties); Yoga and Veda in
the Upanishads; Upanisadic psychology; The fundamentals of Buddhist psychology


Reynolds, David K. The Quiet Therapies: Japanese Pathways to Personal Growth. Honolulu:
University of Hawaii Press, 1982.


Contents: Morita Psychotherapy., Maikan: Introspection Therapy, Shadan: Isolation Therapy,
Seia: Quiet-Sitting Therapy, Zen: Meditation Therapy, Appendix: On Boredom, Brain Waves,


and Bliss


Rhys-Davids, Caroline A. F. Buddhist Psychology: An Inquiry into the Analysis and Theory of
Mind in Pali Literature. London: G. Bell & Sons, 1914.


Contents: Habits of Thoughts; The Psychology of the Nikayas; The Psychology of the Nikayas:
Consciousness and the External World; Feeling; Ideation; Dhamma Pitaka; Psychology in the
Milinda; Some Medieval Developments


___. The Birth of Indian Psychology and its Development in Buddhism. Luzac, 1936.
(A rewritten and enlarged edition of Buddhist Psychology.)


Rockwell, Irini. The Five Wisdom Energies: A Buddhist Way of Understanding Personalities,
Emotions, and Relationships. Boston & London: Shambhala, 2002.


Roland, Alan. In Search of Self in India and Japan: Toward a Cross-Cultural Psychology.
Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1988.


Rösel, R. Die psychologischen Grundlagen der Yogapraxis. Stuttgart, 1928. [In German.]


Rossner, Marilyn Zwaig. Yoga, Psychotherapy, and Children: A New Hope for Children of All
Ages from One of the Most Ancient Human Sciences: Yoga. Montreal, Quebec, Canada: The
International Institute of Integral Human Studies, 1988.


Contents: Introduction to the study: Yoga as an adjunctive therapy to psychoanalysis, behaviour
therapy and/or humanistic therapy in the treatment of emotionally disturbed children; Emotional
disturbance, psychotherapeutic approaches and yoga: Historical background and research; Yoga
as an adjunctive therapy: Ten original descriptive studies; Results of the descriptive studies;
Summary of the study; Specific and general conclusions; Appendix: The Model Yoga Program;
Extensive bibliography

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