Showing posts with label 스콧 펙. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 스콧 펙. Show all posts

2023/10/23

아직도 가야 할 길 | M. 스캇 펙 - The Road Less Traveled 목차 한국어서평

아직도 가야 할 길 | M. 스캇 펙 
The Road Less Traveled : A New Psychology of Love, Traditional Values ​​and Spiritual Growth/Peck, M. Scott M. 스캇


저자 (글))집중돼요(54%의 구매자)====








삶은 고해라는 것을 깨달을 때, 자유를 얻을 수 있다!

『아직도 가야 할 길』은 심리 치료 현장에서 만나 성공적으로 혹은 실패로 끝난 환자들의 사례를 중심으로, 건강한 삶을 향한 진화 과정에 필요한 요소들을 명쾌하게 분석한다. 

이 책에서 저자는 삶이란 온통 개인적 선택과 결정의 연속임을 알아야 하며, 완전히 이것을 받아들일 수 있으면 자유로워 된다고 강조한다. 

출간 후 30여년이 지난 지금까지도 전 세계인의 사랑을 받고 있는 이 책은 삶에서 마주치는 고통과 정면으로

맞서고 
정신과 치료를 받으러 오는 정신질환자를 오히려 의지가 강한, 영적 성장 가능성이 높은 사람으로 본다. 
정신병과 직면하고 전적으로 그에 따른 책임을 지고 그것을 극복하고자 스스로 변화를 일으키는 사람

이야말로 있다..


Internet Archive: The road less travelled, Peck, M. Scott

Internet Archive: Digital Library of Free & Borrowable Books, Movies, Music & Wayback Machine

The road less travelled : the new psychology of love, traditional values and spiritual growth
Peck, M. Scott (Morgan Scott), 1936-2005
1997  508
https://archive.org/details/roadlesstravelle00msco_0/page/n9/mode/2up

Borrowable




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Further along the road less travelled : wisdom for the journey towards spiritual growth
Peck, M. Scott (Morgan Scott), 1936-2005
2010


25



The road less travelled and beyond : spiritual growth in an age of anxiety
Peck, M. Scott (Morgan Scott), 1936-2005

1997   Borrowable

142



The road less travelled : a new psychology of love, traditional values and spiritual growth
Peck, M. Scott (Morgan Scott), 1936-2005
1990  
Borrowable


205



2023/10/22

M. Scott Peck The Road Less Traveled 아직도 가야 할 길

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M. Scott Peck - Wikipedia


Published• Oct 28, 2022
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The Road Less Traveled: Grace, a definition | Radical Reading's


Published• Feb 19, 2019
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The Road Less Traveled: Grace, the miracle of serendipity | Radical Reading's


Published• Feb 19, 2019
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M. Scott Peck - Wikipedia, Psychiatrist, The Road Less Traveled, People of the Lie


Published• Feb 19, 2019
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The Road Less Traveled: A New Psychology of Love, Traditional Values and Spiritual Growth by M. Scott Peck | Goodreads


Published• Feb 19, 2019
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2019/02/19

The Road Less Traveled: Grace, the miracle of serendipity | Radical Reading's

The Road Less Traveled: Grace, the miracle of serendipity | Radical Reading's

The Road Less Traveled: Grace, the miracle of serendipity
Posted on September 21, 2011 by radicalreadings
Standard


What we are talking of here in regard to paranormal events with beneficial consequences is the phenomenon of serendipity.

Webster’s Dictionary defines serendipity as 
“the gift of finding valuable or agreeable things not sought for.”

There are several intriguing features to this definition. 
One is the terming of serendipity as a gift, thereby implying that some people possess it while others don’t, that some people are lucky and others are not.

 It is a major thesis of this section that grace, manifested in part by “valuable or agreeable things not sought for,” is available to everyone, but that while some take advantage of it, others do not. 

By letting the beetle in, catching it, and giving it to his patient, Jung was clearly taking advantage of it. Some of the reasons why and ways that people fail to take advantage of grace will be explored later under the subject heading of “resistance to grace.” 

But for the moment let me suggest that one of the reasons we fail to take full advantage of grace is that we are not fully aware of its presence – that is, we don’t find valuable things not sought for, because we fail to appreciate the value of the gift when it is given us. 

In other words, serendipitous events occur to all of us, but frequently we fail to recognize their serendipitous nature; we consider such events quite unremarkable, and subsequently we fail to take full advantage of them.

Peck, M. Scott. (1978). The Road Less Traveled. p. 257-258

===
The Road Less Traveled: Grace, a definition | Radical Reading's

The Road Less Traveled: Grace, a definition


Standard
I have described a whole variety of phenomena that have the following characteristics in common:
(a) They serve to nurture – support, protect, and enhance – human life and spiritual growth.
(b) The mechanism of their action is either incompletely understandable (as in the case of physical resistance and dreams) or totally obscure (as in the case of paranormal phenomena) according to the principles of lateral law as interpreted by current scientific thinking.
(c) Their occurrence is frequent, routine, commonplace and essentially universal among humanity.
(d) Although potentially influenced by human consciousness their origin is outside of the conscious will and beyond the process of conscious decision-making.
Although generally regarded as separate, I have come to believe that their commonality indicates that theses phenomena are part of or manifestations of single phenomenon: a powerful force originating outside of human consciousness which nurtures the spiritual growth of human beings. For hundreds and even thousands of years before the scientific conceptualization of such things as immune globules, dream states, and the unconscious, this force has been consistently recognized by the religious, who have applied to it the name of grace. And have sung its praise. “Amazing grace, how sweet the sound…”
What are we to do – we who are properly skeptical and scientific-minded – with this “powerful force originating outside of human consciousness which nurtures the spiritual growth of human beings?”  We cannot touch this force. We have no decent way to measure it. Yet it exists. It is real. Are we to operate with tunnel vision and ignore it because it does not fit in easily with traditional scientific concepts of natural law? To do so seems perilous. I do not think we can hope to approach a full understanding of the cosmos, of the place of (WO)man within the cosmos, and hence the nature of (WO)mankind itself, without incorporating the phenomenon of grace into our conceptual framework.
Yet we cannot even locate this force. We have said only where it is not: residing in human consciousness. Then where does it reside? Some of the phenomena we have discussed, such as dreams, suggest that grace resides in the unconscious mind of the individual. Other phenomena, such as synchronicity and serendipity, indicate this force to exist beyond the boundaries of the single individual. It is not simply because we are scientists that we have difficulty locating grace. The religious, who, of course, ascribe the origins of grace to God, believing it to be literally God’s love, have through the ages had the same difficulty locating God. There are within theology two lengthy and opposing traditions in the regard: one, the doctrine of Emanance, which holds that grace emanates down from an external God to (WO)men; the other, the doctrine of Immanence, which holds that grace immanates out from the God within the center of (WO)man’s being.
Peck, M. Scott. (1978). The Road Less Traveled. p. 260-261



** M. Scott Peck - Wikipedia, The Road Less Traveled, People of the Lie 아직도 가야 할 길




M. Scott Peck - Wikipedia

M. Scott Peck
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
-------------
M. Scott Peck
Born Morgan Scott Peck
May 22, 1936
New York City , New York
Died September 25 , 2005 (aged 69)
Connecticut
Occupation Psychiatrist , writer
Nationality American
Notable works The Road Less Traveled , People of the Lie



Morgan Scott Peck (May 22, 1936 – September 25, 2005) was an American psychia book The Road Less Traveled , published in 1978.
-------

Contents

7Bibliography
8References
9Further reading
10External links


Early life

Peck was born in New York City , the son of Zabeth (née Saville) and David Warner Peck, an attorney and judge. [1] His parents were Quakers . [2] [3] Peck was raised a Protestant (his paternal grandmother was from a Jewish family, but Peck's father identified himself as a WASP [4] and not as Jewish). [5] [6] [7]

His parents sent him to the prestigious boarding school Phillips Exeter Academy in Exeter, New Hampshir e , when he was 13. [8] In his book, The Road Less Traveled , [9] he confides the story of his brief stay at Exeter, and admits that it was a most miserable time. Finally, at age 15, during the spring holiday of his third year, he came home and refused to return to the school, whereupon his parents sought psychiatric help for him and he was (much to his amusement in later life) diagnosed with depression and recommended for a month's psychiatric hospital (unless he chose to return to school). He then transferred to Friends Seminary (a private K-12 school) in late 1952, and graduated in 1954, after which he received a BA from Harvard in 1958, and an MD from Case Western Reserve University in 1963. [8]

Career

Peck served in administrative posts in the government during his career as a psychiatrist. He also served in the US Army and rose to the rank of lieutenant colonel

His Army assignments included stints as chief of psychology at the Army Medical Center in Okinawa , Japan , and assistant chief of psychiatry and neurology in the office of the surgeon general in Washington, DC [8] He was the Medical Director of the New Milford Hospital Mental Health Clinic and a psychiatrist in private practice in New Milford, Connecticut . [8] 

His first and best-known book, The Road Less Travele d, sold more than ten million copies.

Peck's works combined his experiences from his private psychiatric practice with a distinctly religious point of view. 

In his second book, People of the Lie , he wrote, "After many years of vague identification with Buddhist and Islamic mysticism, I ultimately made a firm Christian commitment – ​​signified by my non-denominational baptism on the ninth of March 1980.[age 44].. (Peck, 1983/1988, [10] p11).

 One of his views was that people who are evil attack others rather than face their own failures. [9]

In December 1984, Peck co-founded the Foundation for Community Encouragement (FCE), a tax-exempt, nonprofit, whose stated mission is " to teach the principles of community to individuals and organizations." FCE ceased day-to-day operations from 2002 to 2009. In late 2009, almost 25 years after FCE was first founded, the organization offering community building and training events in 2010. [8]

Personal life

Peck married Lily Ho in 1959, and they had three children. In 1994, they jointly received the Community of Christ International Peace Award . In 2004, they were separated and later divorced . Peck then married Kathleen Kline Yates. 

Peck's writings emphasized the virtues of a disciplined life and delayed gratification , his personal life was far more turbulent. [8] For example, in his book In Search of Stones , [11] Peck acknowledged having extramarital affairs children.

===




===
Death

Peck died at his home in Connecticut on September 25, 2005, after suffering from Parkinson's disease and pancreatic [8] and liver duct cancer . Fuller Theological Seminary houses the archives of his publications, awards, and correspondence


======

The Road Less Traveled

The Road Less Traveled, [9] published in 1978, is Peck's best-known work, and the one that made his reputation. 

It is, in short, a description of the attributes that make for a fulfilled human being , based largely on his experiences as a psychiatrist and a person.

The book consists of four parts. 

The Road Less Traveled: by M. Scott Peck | Reviews Goodreads

The Road Less Traveled: A New Psychology of Love, Traditional Values and Spiritual Growth by M. Scott Peck | Goodreads



The Road Less Traveled: A New Psychology of Love, Traditional Values and Spiritual Growth
by M. Scott Peck
4.05 · Rating details · 74,657 ratings · 2,000 reviews


316 pp. "Psychotherapy is all things to all people in this mega-selling pop-psychology watershed, which features a new introduction by the author in this 25th anniversary edition. His agenda in this tome, which was first published in 1978 but didn't become a bestseller until 1983, is to reconcile the psychoanalytic tradition with the conflicting cultural currents roiling the 70s. 

In the spirit of Me-Decade individualism and libertinism, 
he celebrates self-actualization as life's highest purpose and 
flirts with the notions of open marriage and therapeutic sex between patient and analyst

But because he is attuned to the nascent conservative backlash against the therapeutic worldview, Peck also cites Gospel passages, recruits psychotherapy to the cause of traditional religion (he even convinces a patient to sign up for divinity school) and 
insists that problems must be overcome through suffering, discipline and hard work (with a therapist.) 

Often departing from the cerebral and rationalistic bent of Freudian discourse for a mystical, Jungian tone more compatible with New Age spirituality, 
Peck writes of psychotherapy as an exercise in "love" and "spiritual growth," asserts that "our unconscious is God" and 
affirms his belief in miracles, reincarnation and telepathy. 

Peck's synthesis of such clashing elements (he even throws in a little thermodynamics) is held together by a warm and lucid discussion of psychiatric principles and moving accounts of his own patients' struggles and breakthroughs. 

Harmonizing psychoanalysis and spirituality, Christ and Buddha, Calvinist work ethic and interminable talking cures, this book is a touchstone of our contemporary religio-therapeutic culture." 

-- Publishers Weekly
Keywords: MIND & BODY PSYCHOLOGY SOCIOLOGY RELIGION (less)
----

Paperback, 316 pages
Published December 31st 1978 by Simon & Schuster (first published 1978)



Feb 01, 2011Chris Wolfe rated it really liked it
It gets four stars for the simple truth of the opening lines:

"Life is difficult. This is a great truth, one of the greatest truths. It is a great truth because once we truly see this truth, we transcend it. Once we truly know that life is difficult--once we truly understand and accept it--then life is no longer difficult. Because once it is accepted, the fact that life is difficult no longer matters."

It amazes me how much damage I have done by expecting life to be something other than difficult and how much easier my life is when I accept that it is difficult and that I will be uncomfortable.
(less)
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Nov 14, 2014Sanjay Gautam rated it really liked it · review of another edition
The author has delved deep into, with profound insights, on what really causes unhappiness in our life. He asserts that it is precisely in avoiding our problems and hurdles that we suffer in our life; it is the pain and suffering caused by difficulties in life that we have to meet in order to grow mentally and spiritually. We cannot solve life's problems except by solving them.



The following were the key-takeaways:

* LIFE IS DIFFICULT. This is a great truth, one of the greatest truths. It is a great truth because once we truly see this truth, we transcend it. Once we truly know that life is difficult--once we truly understand and accept it--then life is no longer difficult. Because once it is accepted, the fact that life is difficult no longer matters.

* Without discipline we can solve nothing. With only some discipline we can solve only some problems. With total discipline we can solve all problems.

* A person who has the ability to delay gratification has the key to psychological maturity, whereas impulsiveness is a mental habit that, in denying opportunities to experience pain, creates neuroses.

* Most large problems we have are the result of not facing up to earlier, smaller problems, of failing to be 'dedicated to the truth'. The great mistake most people make is believing that problems will go away of their own accord. (less)
flag92 likes · Like · 11 comments · see review



Aug 08, 2010Birdie Passaro rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
An extraordinary book about Life and the art of Living. It was the most complete and indepth book about personal development from which one become much more aware of the nature of all kinds of relationships.
This book will help to shape your vision of Life!
Please, just read it. Your perspective about things will never be the same. Notable, indeed!
flag83 likes · Like · 4 comments · see review



Sep 28, 2007Laura rated it did not like it
Shelves: non-fiction
"Dr." Peck's first doorstop. Inexplicably, this sorry waste of time and paper remained on the NYT Bestseller list for something like ten years. (I don't know why I'm surprised, actually -- this is the same country that elected George W. Bush twice, not to mention the vulgar talking yam who now sits in the Oval Office.) If you were unfortunate enough to buy this, or have it given to you as a gift, do yourself a favor now: put this one the shelf right beside that other pop-pseudo-psychology piece of shit Michelle Remembers. Leave them both within spitting distance, and leave room next to them for anything written by "Dr." Fool. Do not open any of them, ever. (less)
flag42 likes · Like · see review



Nov 28, 2009Juliane Roell rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
Shelves: love, psychology, relationships, spirituality

Probably the most important book on love, psychological and spiritual development that I have ever read. 

Clear, straightforward, concise, very accessible. 
Don't be put off by the criticism of the numerous references to "God" and "grace" in the later chapters: I found them useful and "open" (in the sense that "God" might be substituted by "universe", "energy", "oneness" or whatever you might want to call it. 

There is no need to believe in a deity.) If you do find the reference to concepts of oneness or "God" problematic, just read the first parts and leave the rest for another time. It's well worth it. (less)
flag33 likes · Like · 5 comments · see review



May 11, 2007Jonathan Ridenour rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
Recommends it for: anyone
Shelves: psychology, spirituality
This book is by now a classic in the field of psychology. Yet, it's written for a mainstream audience and goes through some of the basic tenets of psychological theory (e.g. attachment, individuation, boundaries, delayed gratification) but does so through the lense of spiritual growth. Peck is an excellent writer and fine therapist who is sensitive to the issues of spirituality. The case examples and stories in the book really bring his concepts and ideas together. This is a book that I would recommend to therapy clients who are wanting to understand how their religious beliefs are inline with the goals of psychotherapy. (less)
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Feb 16, 2008Cole rated it did not like it
I initially picked up this book because I was told that this author was the inspiration for a women's retreat I went to a couple years ago. 
However, I found no connection to the theme of the retreat and this book.

Initially I found Peck's theories on discipline appealing. He promoted fundamental ideas of Buddhism, such as life is suffering and only through acceptance of that suffering can we truly live and be free of it. He believes that the pursuit of the truth regardless of the pain involved is fundamental to mental health, and that only through valuing ourselves can we value life and love those around us.

However, while reading examples of cases that Peck has worked on in psychotherapy I felt that his confidence in his prognosis's and what he thought his clients ought to do was rather pretentious. 

Furthermore as I read I got the suspicion that Peck was rather homophobic or at least that he thought homosexuality was a sign of poor mental health. 

First of all, in all his discussions on love and relationships not once does he relate his theories in the context of a homosexual relationship. 
Second he uses examples of actions that his clients took to move toward better mental health including an example of a young homosexual boy summoning the strength to ask a girl out. I was starting to really dislike this author at this point, but it was the next few pages that killed it for me.

Halfway through the book where Peck is saying that love is discipline, he thought it appropriate to use slavery as a metaphor. He states,

"While one should not be slave to one's feelings, self discipline does not mean the squashing of one's feelings into nonexistence. I frequently tell my patients that their feelings are their slaves and that the art of self discipline is like the art of slaving owning"

I can't believe he refers to slave owning as an "art". He continues,

"First of all, one's feelings are the source of one's energy; they provide the horsepower, or slave power, that makes it possible for us to accomplish the task of living. Since they work for us, we should treat them with respect."

It gets worse,

" One type of slave-owner does not discipline his slaves, gives them no structure, sets them no limits, provides them with no direction and does not make it clear whose the boss. What happens, of course, is that in due time his slaves stop working and begin moving into the mansion, raiding the liquor cabinet and breaking the furniture, and soon the slave owner finds he is the slave of his slaves"

Scott Peck author...phycologist...homophobe....racist.....got it. 
I'm done with this book! (less)
flag22 likes · Like · 8 comments · see review



Aug 21, 2007Jamie rated it it was amazing
Shelves: spiritualandpsych-read
A very insightful book authored by a psychologist/psychiatrist who reveals the secrets to fulfilling, healthy, meaningful and lasting relationships. It really makes you see yourself and others in a different light, as well as words and concepts we think we understand. His hallmark argument is that we so often view love as a noun instead of a verb... as something that just happens to us or doesn't happen to us, instead of an ongoing task we must work at...that work, that action-is love. In fact, something I clearly remember is his point that when people feel as though they've "fallen out of love", it is then that the opportunity for true love to grow is at its greatest. Not at all written in a preachy, self-help sort of way. It's very interesting, full of a lot of great anecdotes. (less)
flag21 likes · Like · 2 comments · see review



Sep 27, 2008Mike rated it did not like it
This book starts out extremely engaging and helpful in nature - worthy of four or five stars. But midway through Peck reveals his psychology of teaching his patients and readers to become like God. 

While I'm certain he means no malice in this objective, he seems ignorant of negative psychological aspects of this philosophy. Indeed, the book "Toxic Faith" cites "You can become God" as one of the twenty-one Toxic Beliefs of a Toxic Faith (p.98). Having observed the deleterious effect of this belief among the Mormon population I find Peck's thesis professionally reckless regardless of the popularity of his message. (less)
flag20 likes · Like · 2 comments · see review


Hal J Sandbach
5성급 중 2.0 Interesting, but he lost me with his ideas about god
2018년 1월 20일에 영국에서 리뷰됨
아마존에서 구매
This book was recommended to me, and I found the first half largely interesting. Peck's long history as a therapist enables him to recount very interesting case studies, and these are definitely the strongest aspects of this book. However, when he diver about the collective subconscious, visions of the future and the idea that god is manifest via an individual's subconscious, I'm afraid he lost my trust. Modern neuroscience has enabled a lot of progress to be made regarding how our brains and central nervous system work , and this book, in my opinion, suffers from being written before such advances.

BUT I also think that Peck's overall message is a valid one - we grow by exhibiting real, deep love for ourselves and others. And there's always room for some more love.
한 고객이 이것이 도움이 되었다고 생각합니다.