The Art of Peace and Existential Therapy

Authors

  • Angelina Demilkhanova Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.65828/4dcx0d67

Keywords:

Existential therapy, Aikido, Zen, love, death, dojo

Abstract

We turn to some aspects of Zen Buddhist philosophy and use the examples of Aikido martial arts philosophy to explore what might be in common between psychotherapy and martial arts. We focus on existential therapy, which we see has much in common with the philosophy and spiritual practices of the Far East.

Full text available
Complete access to the full archive of articles is available with SEA membership. Existing members: please log in with your membership password to view full text. Non-members can buy a single article or issue by registering an account on this website, then selecting a padlocked full text button to purchase.

References

Bugenthal, J. (2007). The Science of Being Alive. Moscow: Klass.

Kociunas, R. (2007). The contours of existential therapy. Journal of Existential Tradition: Philosophy, psychology, psychotherapy. 11: 1-14. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1002/9781119311003.ch2

Kornyushchenko-Ermolaeva, N.S. (2006). Kierkegaard on human existence and solitude. Proceedings of the Tomsk Polytechnic University. 309 (8): 245-249.

Manukovsky, V. (2011). Existentials in the philosophy of K. Jaspers. Vestnik (Herald) of VSU Series: Linguistics and intercultural communication. 1: 225-227. DOI: https://doi.org/10.25205/1818-7935

Spektor, M. (2018). Heidegger: The question of Being. Philosophy and Society. 4 (89): 49-70. DOI: https://doi.org/10.5040/9781474238212.ch-010

Suzuki, D. (1993). The Fundamentals of Zen Buddhism. Bishkek: Odissey.

Ueshiba, M. (2001). Budo Rensyu. Moscow: Dobrosvet.

Published

2024-01-01

Cite This Article

The Art of Peace and Existential Therapy. (2024). Existential Analysis: Journal of the Society for Existential Analysis, 35(1), 152-162. https://doi.org/10.65828/4dcx0d67
Download: RIS · BibTeX

Articles by the same author(s)

Related articles

Search for similar articles ›