Philosophical Practice

Author:   Lou Marinoff, Ph.D. (The City College of New York, U.S.A.)
Publisher:   Elsevier Science Publishing Co Inc
ISBN:  

9780124715554


Pages:   411
Publication Date:   08 November 2001
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
Limited stock is available. It will be ordered for you and shipped pending supplier's limited stock.

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Philosophical Practice


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Full Product Details

Author:   Lou Marinoff, Ph.D. (The City College of New York, U.S.A.)
Publisher:   Elsevier Science Publishing Co Inc
Imprint:   Academic Press Inc
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.80cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.730kg
ISBN:  

9780124715554


ISBN 10:   0124715559
Pages:   411
Publication Date:   08 November 2001
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Out of Print
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
Limited stock is available. It will be ordered for you and shipped pending supplier's limited stock.

Table of Contents

Reviews

This is a most welcome addition to the small, but growing, literature on philosophical practice. It is aimed at all those who do, or who would like, to apply philosophy as a disciplined professional activity outside of academe. It provides an excellent account of the development of philosophical practice, where it might go next, how to get there and the problems it is likely to face. Informed, engaged, polemical, amusing, concerned and passionate. Read it. It describes not just the small, but growing, world of philosophical practice, but also the large and fragmented wider client communities, which could so much benefit from a dose of applied philosophy. --Alex Howard, author of Philosophy for Counseling and Psychotherapy This book is impressive and very well written. It shows a keen mind, an endless energy, a solid understanding of philosophy, and a genuine capacity to know how to use real philosophy to help with life's issues. There is no question about the excellence and timeliness of this contribution. --Peter Koestenbaum, author of Leadership: The Inner Side of Greatness Philosophical Practice is written with such clarity and vigor that it will appeal not just to philosophers, but to anyone interested in the role of the academy in society. This book is certainly an excellent guide on how to become a philosophical counselor, and many will want to read it for that reason alone. But Marinoff's trenchant criticisms of the profession of philosophy should spur an important debate to which most academics will want to contribute. The resulting fireworks will fascinate anyone who cares about contemporary intellectual life. --Christian Perring, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Philosophy, Dowling College, Editor of Metapsychololgy Online Review Dr. Lou Marinoff is a prominent advocate of the idea that philosophers might actually be good for something. As the author of a successful book on philosophical counseling, Plato, Not Prozac!, Marinoff has captured the attention of the press, and has, thereby, done more than any other American philosopher to advance popular discussion of philosophical counseling. His latest book, Philosophical Practice, moves that cause forward. The earlier book was more for possible clientele; this one is more for the would-be practitioner. It will be a useful book for anyone considering starting a practice as a philosophical counselor, providing an admirable survey of the practical obstacles to be considered. It reviews the history, the politics, the pitfalls, told from the point of view of someone often at the center of controversy. Carving out a place for the counseling philosopher is only one facet of bringing philosophy into the applied world, and this book will get those within and outside of academia thinking creatively about how to mine the discipline. Lou Marinoff's Philosophical Practice is both provocative and constructive. --J. Michael Russell, Ph.D., Research Psychoanalyst, Professor and Chair, Department of Philosophy, Cal State Fullerton


This is a most welcome addition to the small, but growing, literature on philosophical practice. It is aimed at all those who do, or who would like, to apply philosophy as a disciplined professional activity outside of academe. It provides an excellent account of the development of philosophical practice, where it might go next, how to get there and the problems it is likely to face. Informed, engaged, polemical, amusing, concerned and passionate. Read it. It describes not just the small, but growing, world of philosophical practice, but also the large and fragmented wider client communities, which could so much benefit from a dose of applied philosophy. --Alex Howard, author of Philosophy for Counseling and Psychotherapy This book is impressive and very well written. It shows a keen mind, an endless energy, a solid understanding of philosophy, and a genuine capacity to know how to use real philosophy to help with life's issues. There is no question about the excellence and timeliness of this contribution. --Peter Koestenbaum, author of Leadership: The Inner Side of Greatness Philosophical Practice is written with such clarity and vigor that it will appeal not just to philosophers, but to anyone interested in the role of the academy in society. This book is certainly an excellent guide on how to become a philosophical counselor, and many will want to read it for that reason alone. But Marinoff's trenchant criticisms of the profession of philosophy should spur an important debate to which most academics will want to contribute. The resulting fireworks will fascinate anyone who cares about contemporary intellectual life. --Christian Perring, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Philosophy, Dowling College, Editor of Metapsychololgy Online Review Dr. Lou Marinoff is a prominent advocate of the idea that philosophers might actually be good for something. As the author of a successful book on philosophical counseling, Plato, Not Prozac!, Marinoff has captured the attention of the press, and has, thereby, done more than any other American philosopher to advance popular discussion of philosophical counseling. His latest book, Philosophical Practice, moves that cause forward. The earlier book was more for possible clientele; this one is more for the would-be practitioner. It will be a useful book for anyone considering starting a practice as a philosophical counselor, providing an admirable survey of the practical obstacles to be considered. It reviews the history, the politics, the pitfalls, told from the point of view of someone often at the center of controversy. Carving out a place for the counseling philosopher is only one facet of bringing philosophy into the applied world, and this book will get those within and outside of academia thinking creatively about how to mine the discipline. Lou Marinoff's Philosophical Practice is both provocative and constructive. --J. Michael Russell, Ph.D., Research Psychoanalyst, Professor and Chair, Department of Philosophy, Cal State Fullerton


Author Information

Lou Marinoff, a Commonwealth Scholar, earned his doctorate in Philosophy of Science at University College London. After holding Research Fellowships at University College and the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, he became a Lecturer in Philosophy at the University of British Columbia, and was also Moderator of the Canadian Business and Professional Ethics Network at UBC's Center for Applied Ethics. He is currently an Associate Professor, and Chair of the Philosophy Department, at The City College of New York. Lou has been a philosophical practitioner for ten years. He is past president of the American Society for Philosophy, Counseling and Psychotherapy (ASPCP), and founding president of the American Philosophical Practitioners Association (APPA). He is a Fellow of the Institute for Local Government at the University of Arizona, and a Fellow of the World Economic Forum (Davos). He publishes regularly in decision theory, ethics, philosophical practice, and other fields. He is author of an international best-seller, Plato Not Prozac (HarperCollins, NY, 1999), published in twenty languages. His philosophical practice and pioneering of the profession have received national and international media attention. In demand as a speaker to all kinds of groups and organizations, Lou travels far and wide, helping to promote a global philosophical renaissance.

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