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Good Mood
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About Julian Simon
Table of Contents
Ways to Overcome Depression
Conquering Depression, Enjoying Life
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Good Mood:
The New Psychology
of Overcoming DepressionAppendixBackground Information For Researchers and Practitioners
The book uses
"you" language to
address the depression
sufferer. And some general
readers will find interesting
the information in the
appendices. But the book also
is aimed at psychotherapeutic
professionals, both researchers
and practitioners, with an
additional message: the
contains a new theoretical
understanding of depression,
which implies new ways of
confronting depression. The fundamental idea of
modern psychological therapy
for depression is that
individuals can change their
thinking processes in ways that
will eliminate the patterns
which cause the depression. The
layperson may consider this to
be plain common sense. But when
seen in light of the older
Freudian view, this
common-sense foundation is
revolutionary. And though the
fundamental assumption is
"only" common sense,
the scientific structure
constructed upon it is not at
all obvious. Building upon this
foundation, various researchers
have focused on different
aspects of the thinking
processes which are commonly
faulty among depressives. And
they have shown how altering
the defective thinking can
improve people's moods. This book develops a broader
framework that encompasses all
the major insights of earlier
writers. Within that framework,
it focuses on the key cognitive
channel -- self-comparisons --
through which all the other
influences flow. Philosophers
have understood for centuries
that the comparisons one makes
affect one's feelings. But this
element has not previously been
explored or integrated into
scientific understanding of the
thinking of depressives, or
exploited as the central
pressure-point for therapy.
Instead, the concept
"negative thoughts"
has been used.
Appendix B continues the
theoretical discussion with an
analysis of how this approach
to depression fits with, and
broadly encompasses, the other
modern cognitive psychological
approaches to depression. The
remainder of this Appendix A
adds some theoretical
underpinning to discussions in
early chapters. It also briefly
discusses how this approach,
along with cognitive therapy in
general, has been moving toward
the use of concepts found in
philosophy and other social
sciences, some by borrowing but
even more by independent
invention. In this way,
cognitive therapy moves toward
what may eventually be the the
first application of integrated
social science. In brief, Self-Comparisons
Analysis does the
following:
- It presents a
theoretical framework
which identifies and
focuses on the common
pathway through which
all depression-causing
lines of thought must
pass. This framework
combines and integrates
other valid approaches,
subsuming all of them
as valuable but
partial. All of the
many variations of
depressions that modern
psychiatry now
recognizes as
heterogenous but
related forms of the
same illness can be
subsumed under the
theory except those
that have a purely
biological origin, if
there are such.
- It sharpens each of the other viewpoints
by converting the rather vague notion of "negative thinking"
(1) to a precise formulation of a self-comparison and a negative Mood
Ratio with two specific parts, an assumed actual state of affairs and
a hypothetical benchmark state of affairs. This idea opens up a wide
variety of novel interventions.
- It offers a new line of
attack upon stubborn
depressions, called
here Values Treatment,
which leads the patient
to make a committed
choice to give up
depression in order to
attain more important
deeply-held values.
1.- In the appendix, footnotes
are at the bottom of the page
and the references are named in
the text, in contrast to
previous chapters because of
the likelihood that
professional readers will want
to see them.
The American Psychiatric
Association's publication Depression
and Its Treatment by John
H. Greist and James W.
Jefferson (Washington: Am.
Psychiatric Press, 1984) may be
taken as canonical:
"Depressed thinking
often takes the form of negative
thoughts about one's self,
the present and the
future"
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