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Imprint: Triarchy Press
Published: 1st Feb. 2016 184pp. ~ 15.2 x 22.9 cm ~ Paperback ISBN: 978-1-909470-91-0 Price: £15 Tags: Psychotherapy, Buddhism, not-knowing. Read more:
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The Wisdom of Not-Knowing
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Readership
Read in any order, on waking, before sleeping or when in doubt… they will be of interest to anyone who has ever sat in either chair in a psychotherapist’s or counsellor’s room – as well as anyone troubled or intrigued by what it takes to live comfortably and well in a condition of not knowing all (or even any) of the answers.
Reviews
John Del Bagno at Buddhist Door:
"The Wisdom of Not-Knowing approaches [not-knowing] from a number of viewpoints. We find our way in through the reflections of Buddhists and non-Buddhists, therapists and clients, activists and those who seek higher consciousness through the natural world. What I found most exceptional was the personal stories and experiences of those who have tried to come to grips with the same discomfort I have felt in periods of not knowing. ... Jason P. Ranek’s contribution highlights the front and back of our ego structure when we come into contact with the unknown. There are many references from the Buddha himself through quotes from the Buddhist canon. However, such disparate people as Emily Brontë, Donald Rumsfeld, and an ayahuasca shaman are also mentioned, opening up unexpected avenues. As a layperson, I am not familiar with many of the therapists whose models and theories are quoted in the book, but their presence does not dominate the discussion. In fact, I was pleased that the language of psychotherapy was spoken in a couple of the essays, such as Rosemary Lodge’s 'Sometimes We Don’t Know What We Know' which calls on therapists to reflect on their own willingness for emotional connection in therapy in order to better facilitate a client’s own self-discovery. Caroline Brazier’s excellent essay, 'Buddhist Psychology, Therapy and Not-Knowing,' speaks well of the benefits of holding the place of not-knowing but also warns that it can become an excuse to not move forward... She also goes on to precisely summarize the place of not-knowing for the Buddhist: 'In following the Buddhist Path, we hold the place of not-knowing lest we are drawn into the false creations of certainty which congeal into the defensive edifice of the ordinary psyche.' We hear more on false certainty in Bob Chisholm’s work. Although the known knowns in one’s life may give a sense of stability, they may also become fixations that block a fuller awareness. They may not actually be false, but they can still mislead one into believing that they are the only things that matter.'” Read the full review at Buddhist Door "This book particularly appealed to me as an artist, writer and teacher, as not knowing is a key concept in Art School education, and what appears to set it apart from many other areas of study.
If you are a reader of popular psychology and philosophy this book tackles some currently popular themes in a thorough, well researched an in-depth manner. So definitely step two if you are looking for a fuller, more academic text to further your inquiry. My only negative and what would make me give this book 4.5, rather than 5 stars, for a book of this sort is the disappointing cover. This book deserves a cover which sets it apart from other collections of essays." A Addison on Amazon |
Cristalle Hayes in Self & Society – An International Journal of Humanistic Psychology, Vol. 44, 2, 2016
The book is a refreshing balance of personal, philosophical and theoretical explorations of not-knowing, providing an insightful and stimulating read. The essays are relevant to anyone who grapples with the experience of not-knowing, whether therapists or practising Buddhists. Discussions and explorations of theory and philosophy are accessible and add insight to existing writing around therapy and Buddhism. The personal reflections on either client work or life experience bring the theory and philosophy to life, adding a much-needed sense of humility to psychotherapeutic discourse. The personal accounts do make the book more interesting and it is often a delight to read how others experience this very human stance of not-knowing. The book does justice to the complexity of human experience as well as the complexity of the concept of not-knowing. Writers demonstrate that they have ‘lived’ their ideas and ‘lived’ unknowing and have experienced and thought about this wisdom in not-knowing. This quality of engagement makes for a book that seems unique to the literature around psychotherapy – neither modelling a perfect way of unknowing, nor turning not-knowing it into a theory. Read the full review from Self & Society Dr. Laura Colucci-Gray in Education in the North, Vol 23, 2
"This book... brings a refreshingly new perspective on the idea of knowledge by putting the emphasis on ‘not-knowing’. As the editors declare in their opening introduction: “if knowledge represents power and makes any exercise of power possible, not-knowing might seem to amount to little more than a confession of ignorance” (p. 7). A certain irony characterises each contribution in the book. How could the negative statement of ‘not-knowing’ give rise to any knowledge at all? The writers are all practicing counsellors and psychotherapists with years of experience of clinical practice. Each chapter recounts moments of clinical experience during which practitioners and clients were confronted with the recognition of ‘not-knowing’ as a necessary moment of change and transformation. Far away from the seeking of answers and the anticipation of solutions, “every successful course of psychotherapy – recount the editors – hinged on an event that could not have been predicted beforehand” (p.7). Hence, interesting questions are being posed. First of all, what is ‘not-knowing’ and how can we know about it; secondly, and most importantly, what is the value of ‘not-knowing’ and thirdly, can the experience of ‘not-knowing’ be just as rich and meaningful for other fields of endeavour? A certain sense of surrendering and letting go permeates the writings concerned with ‘not-knowing’. Knowledge is not ‘gained’ or even ‘produced’; rather, it seems to surge and flow through the body expanding and flowing in and out of differential states of change and personal awareness. Yet, while the book is set to make a distinction between the personal, existential ‘not-knowing’ and the more conventional, objective ‘knowing that’, many examples are given by the contributors to illustrate points of contact between the different ways of knowing. ...The book provides a rich array of symbols and images for understanding one’s own practice. The ‘via negativa’ of Jeff Harrison; ‘the path’ of Manu Bazzano and also the ‘dance’ proposed by Owen Okie, that is, the on-going movement of stepping inside and outside the boundaries of one’s experience, one’s belief and one’s perspective. The suspension of judgement; the questioning of assumptions or even the breaking of habit-patterns are all aspects of this dance which the psychotherapists are skilled at recognising. ‘Not-knowing’ enables the ‘not-knowing’ of a subject from every possible perspective. Read the full review from Education in the North |
Contents
Introduction
Margaret Meyer ~ Thresholds, Play, and Other Dangerous Things: Liminality and the Therapeutic Encounter
Rosemary Lodge ~ Sometimes We Don’t Know What We Know: The Importance of Emotional or Hidden Knowledge
Caroline Brazier ~ Buddhist Psychology, Therapy and Not-Knowing
Bob Chisholm ~ Known Unknowns
Jeff Harrison ~ Therapy as Via Negativa
Manu Bazzano ~ Planting an Oak in a Flowerpot
Alex Buchan ~ Beginner’s Mind
Mia Livingston ~ Ghosts
Ian Finlay Whatever You Think, it’s More Than That
Andy Paice ~ Collective Not-Knowing and its Innate Potential
Owen Okie ~ The Dance of Knowing and Not-Knowing in Herbal Medicine
Paul Christelis ~ An Ally in the Jungle: Everything I Ever Wanted to Not-Know About Ayahuasca
Jason P. Ranek ~ The Art of Not-Knowing: From Archetypal Encounter to Psychological Integration
Margaret Meyer ~ Thresholds, Play, and Other Dangerous Things: Liminality and the Therapeutic Encounter
Rosemary Lodge ~ Sometimes We Don’t Know What We Know: The Importance of Emotional or Hidden Knowledge
Caroline Brazier ~ Buddhist Psychology, Therapy and Not-Knowing
Bob Chisholm ~ Known Unknowns
Jeff Harrison ~ Therapy as Via Negativa
Manu Bazzano ~ Planting an Oak in a Flowerpot
Alex Buchan ~ Beginner’s Mind
Mia Livingston ~ Ghosts
Ian Finlay Whatever You Think, it’s More Than That
Andy Paice ~ Collective Not-Knowing and its Innate Potential
Owen Okie ~ The Dance of Knowing and Not-Knowing in Herbal Medicine
Paul Christelis ~ An Ally in the Jungle: Everything I Ever Wanted to Not-Know About Ayahuasca
Jason P. Ranek ~ The Art of Not-Knowing: From Archetypal Encounter to Psychological Integration