Foreword, by Allen Frances, M.D.
Preface and Acknowledgments
Introduction: Coming Back Home from the Study of Genocide to
Everyday Psychopathology
and PsychotherapyPart I: Applying the Concept of Democratic Mind to
Treating Emotional Disorders, Breakdowns of Relationships and
Disorders of Evil
Chapter 1: Democratic Mind: A Different Lens for Understanding and
Treating for Psychological Health
Chapter 2: Understanding Totalitarian Meanings in Relationship
Disorders and Psychopathology
Part II: Psychological Health, the Woes of DSM, and Multiple
Schools of Therapy
Chapter 3: Psychological Health: Protecting and Improving the
Quality of Life: My Own Life and the Lives of Others
Chapter 4: A Basic Question for Psychiatry and Psychology: How Much
Can We Try to Cure the Mind through the Body?
Chapter 5: DSM-Thinking is Oblivious to the Human Condition:
Returning Psychiatry to the Unconscious, Human Relationships, and
Value Choices
Chapter 6: The Wisdom and Tools of Multiple Schools of
Psychotherapy
Afterword
Appendix: Prescriptions for a Free and Democratic Mind
Bibliography
I.W. Charny is retired professor of psychology and family therapy at Hebrew University of Jerusalem.
The argument for freedom of thought in our work and in our lives is
emblazoned in this groundbreaking book for our times. A Democratic
Mind marshals cogent arguments against the social and
psychotherapeutic trends toward the surrender of imposed
constraints on thought and action and toward the suggestion that
rule-bound ideas of mental health and illness will suffice. If you
long for a unifying call for freedom of thought, read this
book!
*David E. Scharff, M.D., International Psychotherapy Institute and
the IPA Committee on Family and Couple Psychoanalysis*
This compelling book held my interest throughout. It is written by
a man who loves life and speaks with candor, clarity, and courage.
A Democratic Mind is a critical exploration of the limits of
contemporary psychotherapy, and a passionate plea to expand its
agenda to not only treat the individual, but also the impact that
he/she has on his/her family, community, and world. Israel Charny
stresses the necessity of cultivating open, compassionate, and
engaged people who embrace life. Charny’s writing is lucid and
interesting; his work is passionate and lively.
*Michael Berenbaum, American Jewish University; former director,
U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum Research Institute*
The release of A Democratic Mind could not be at a better time, as
the world contends with polarizing forces that pit tribal populism
against global democratic principles. Israel W. Charny offers a
metaphor of the ‘Fascist versus Democratic Mind’ as a new framework
with which to understand symptoms and direct treatment. Like Albert
Bandura’s Moral Disengagement, Charny offers readers an approach to
assessment and psychotherapy that is firmly grounded in democratic,
life-affirming values, and that emphasizes the choice between good
and evil. He expands assessment of the rigid, fascist mind—how we
humans hurt ourselves—to how we also hurt others. The addition of
these relational considerations is critical for a full
understanding of the human condition. To be mentally healthy in the
twenty-first century is to cultivate calm in the midst of
uncertainty, to embrace and learn from diversity, and to hold our
own and others’ behaviors accountable as life-affirming. Charny
offers an empowering and integrative psychotherapy to achieve these
goals. We need this approach now more than ever.
*Susan McDaniel, University of Rochester Medical Center*
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