One of the most sophisticated books I have read in a long time is The Neuroscience of Psychotherapy: Healing the Social Brain. Psychotherapy books in the 1970's (a long time ago when I was in graduate school) were often criticized as being "pop psychology." This is anything but. It is not easy reading for the layman. But for the sophisticated reader, it can't be beat as a way of understanding how psychotherapy relates to brain functioning. The book tackles the problem of integrating two very different paradigms, or heuristics--psychotherapy metaphors and neuroscience concepts. Both are important.
There is at least one more paradigm which has to be integrated with these two, which is the spiritual paradigm.
I once had a patient, a computer programmer, tell me that he had been reading about how computers can be described as operating at seven different levels. I'm no computer wizard, but I can imagine what he means: the atomic level, the circuit board level, the basic machine language level, the macro language level such as A++, the final interface level with the human operator, etc. The same is true of humans. Their functioning can be described at many different levels, and it is hard to integrate all of these together. It will be a long time before we can integrate all of them. But in the meantime, Louis Cozolino has made a really great start in this book.
No comments:
Post a Comment