Origins of Dr. Aaron Beck's Theory of Depression

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  • Опубліковано 29 лип 2014
  • During a recent Beck Institute Workshop, Dr. Aaron Beck discusses the origins of his theory of depression. He then describes several research techniques he employed to test the psychoanalytic hypothesis that depression is caused by inverted hostility.
    For CBT resources, visit www.beckinstitute.org

КОМЕНТАРІ • 19

  • @mancunian7011
    @mancunian7011 3 роки тому +12

    I really love this man. I'm very lucky not to have stayed with Freud.

  • @LENIN990
    @LENIN990 2 роки тому +4

    Rest in peace, Master! :(

  • @DamianMaia
    @DamianMaia 10 років тому +9

    This was very interesting- thank you for posting!

  • @beckinstitute
    @beckinstitute  10 років тому +6

    In this video from a recent Beck Institute workshop Dr. Aaron Beck discusses the origins of his theory of depression.

  • @lic.marcelogallo
    @lic.marcelogallo 4 роки тому +2

    Thank you!

  • @dr.donitam.lester1947
    @dr.donitam.lester1947 4 роки тому +3

    This is excellent!:)

  • @Gabriel-dm1du
    @Gabriel-dm1du 2 роки тому +1

    I just love this man😁

  • @RayVitoles
    @RayVitoles Рік тому

    When the patient says those words at the end, you know you succeded

  • @10topowerof8
    @10topowerof8 7 років тому +12

    I think Beck is very intelligent, well mannered and diplomatic - however, I don't think he gives Ellis the credit he deserves for CBT. Ellis, despite being confrontational and controversial was a creative genius and for Beck to write in Cognitive Therapy and the Emotional Disorders that he was working on his own theory and that he didn't know about REBT shows a lack of class - Beck didn't arrive with his theory months or even a couple of years later, but roughly 7-9 years after Ellis. Personally, I think Beck took what Ellis did and made it politically correct and was extremely smart in the way he was able to design his approach so that it could be researched. I love Tim Beck, really I do and Prisoners of Hate is a great, great book but cognitive therapy is not all it is cracked up to be although it has its strengths. I don't think people misinterpret reality - I think that is, to use Albert Ellis language, horsesh..

    • @ethanlinton1159
      @ethanlinton1159 7 років тому

      that is right the people do not misinterpret reality intentionally but they tend to have illogical implication in words of Ellis. people not have freedom at all.

  • @muhammedshamil3683
    @muhammedshamil3683 2 роки тому

    Rip

  • @ToThoseWhoVanished
    @ToThoseWhoVanished 2 роки тому +2

    Is depression genetic??

    • @Yavl
      @Yavl Рік тому +1

      No

    • @dalebrennan7615
      @dalebrennan7615 Рік тому +2

      No

    • @louisbail4902
      @louisbail4902 Рік тому

      yes, partially. Quickly look into kendler et al. and you will see that as genetic similarity increase concordance rates for MDD also increase

    • @mollyringwerm9224
      @mollyringwerm9224 3 місяці тому

      no, it's typically characterological

  • @sevgulgiritlioglu2181
    @sevgulgiritlioglu2181 4 роки тому +16

    He's a very good psychologist, however, i don't like how he catogorizes the non depressed patients as 'normals'. this would infer that the depressed pateints aren't normal and this stigmatizes the depressive group...

    • @reptilescientist
      @reptilescientist Рік тому +2

      he means statistically normal, compared to control, it’s science jargon

    • @reptilescientist
      @reptilescientist Рік тому

      @@lamdafinity okay so its a semantics issue. "depressed" isn't a pejorative, it's a disease state. but assuming it somehow is pejorative to imply that being depressed is not normal (statistically it probably is normal to be depressed over a life time), maybe saying neurotypical and neurodivergent would be better? That's what we have nowadays. But even then you're saying that a depressed person is "divergent" and not "typical." Kind of an impractical hill to die on.