Divan couches and gurus: The origin and dangers of clinical pseudopsychology

Authors

  • Angelo Fasce University of Valencia (Spain).

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.7203/metode.8.9977

Keywords:

pseudoscience, psychology, psychoanalysis, New Age, psychotherapies

Abstract

Pseudoscience is alarmingly present in the context of clinical psychology and is also very dangerous. As a set of pseudoscientific ideas, clinical pseudopsychology has a peculiar characteristic: it has established an entire tradition parallel to psychology, with numerous branches and interrelated theoretical and practical developments. In this paper we will review that tradition, from pseudoscientific hypnosis to psychoanalysis, and from New Age to present-day neuropseudoscience. We will then review some of the dangers of pseudoscience related to mental disorders.

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Author Biography

Angelo Fasce, University of Valencia (Spain).

Philosopher of science with a neuroscience background. He is currently a doctoral student at the Department of Philosophy in the University of Valencia (Spain). He is an expert on the demarcation problem and the psychological mechanisms that give rise to irrational thinking. He is also an active disseminator of science and its philosophy.

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Published

2018-06-05

How to Cite

Fasce, A. (2018). Divan couches and gurus: The origin and dangers of clinical pseudopsychology. Metode Science Studies Journal, (8), 165–171. https://doi.org/10.7203/metode.8.9977
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