Why do you think it's a kind of brainwashing? And why do you think it displaces them to whatever the dominant ideology favours?The notion of "Cognitive Distortions" is related to Cognitive Behavior Theory, which I think is a kind of brain washing, the substitution of an ideology to solve neurotic problems. It solves the immediate manifestations of individual problems, by displacing them with whatever the dominant ideology favors, which sinks their causes deeper into the psyche, IMHO. — Cavacava
Cognitive Distortions — Posty McPostface
Cognitive distortions are thoughts that cognitive therapists believe cause individuals to perceive reality inaccurately. These thinking patterns often are said to reinforce negative thoughts or emotions.[2] Cognitive distortions tend to interfere with the way a person perceives an event. Because the way a person feels intervenes with how they think, these distorted thoughts can feed negative emotions and lead an individual affected by cognitive distortions towards an overall negative outlook on the world and consequently a depressive or anxious mental state.
Here's the Wikipedia definition:
Cognitive distortions are thoughts that cognitive therapists believe cause individuals to perceive reality inaccurately. These thinking patterns often are said to reinforce negative thoughts or emotions.[2] Cognitive distortions tend to interfere with the way a person perceives an event. Because the way a person feels intervenes with how they think, these distorted thoughts can feed negative emotions and lead an individual affected by cognitive distortions towards an overall negative outlook on the world and consequently a depressive or anxious mental state. — Posty McPostface
All our minds are subject to illusions, prejudices, fears, superstitions, habits, ideologies, misunderstandings, misperceptions. How are these different from "cognitive distortions" except in origin? Human minds are imperfect. They're more than imperfect - in order to do the job established by evolution to help us survive, our nervous systems, brains, minds must be structured to give us a simplified, distorted view of the world.
That's not to say that the concept of cognitive distortions isn't worth studying in relation to psychopathology, just that it doesn't seem to me to be anything mysterious or different from our other mental processes. — T Clark
Yes, but that's to do with how it is implemented, not with the method itself.The doctor/patient relationship favors the doctor over the patient, in a power dynamic. The patient's desire to feel better merges with the patient's desire to please the doctor. It biases the choice of goals in favor of the doctor's views of what is normal or not. That is why I think it is a kind of a brainwashing or mind control. — Cavacava
Yes. Many therapists are already moving towards this view anyway. CBT is already old-school, but the popular consciousness doesn't yet realise it.From what I read about ACT it seems to seek the core values of the patient and to use these values to assist the patient in creating goals in line with their core beliefs, which makes sense. — Cavacava
My first question is why you weigh a philosophy (Solipsism) against a branch of psychology science (Cognitive distortion)? — Dzung
"No great philosopher has espoused solipsism" (http://www.iep.utm.edu/solipsis/) that's why it's so difficult to linger about. We need to pick up one author in order to analyze instead of the just so called solipsism. Descartes is obvious because of his influential name and many have attributed the philosophy to him.what's the whole issue — Posty McPostface
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