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Integration misunderstood.

P L Wachtel

    The British Journal of Clinical Psychology
    |June 1, 1983
    PubMed
    Summary
    This summary is machine-generated.

    This study critically examines critiques of integrating psychodynamic and behavioral perspectives, arguing that some criticisms are limited to specific psychoanalytic versions and do not preclude higher-order synthesis for scientific progress.

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    Area of Science:

    • Psychology
    • Psychotherapy Research

    Background:

    • Critiques of integrating psychodynamic and behavioral perspectives exist.
    • Yates (1983) presented specific criticisms regarding this integration.

    Purpose of the Study:

    • To critically examine Yates's (1983) criticisms.
    • To evaluate the applicability of these criticisms to different psychodynamic models.
    • To address the role of tenacious beliefs in scientific progress.

    Main Methods:

    • Critical analysis of existing theoretical arguments.
    • Conceptual examination of psychodynamic and behavioral integration.

    Main Results:

    • Yates's criticisms are primarily applicable to intrapsychic psychoanalysis, not interpersonal psychodynamic perspectives.

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  • Differences between perspectives do not inherently prevent higher-order synthesis.
  • The contention that tenacious beliefs drive scientific progress is challenged.
  • Conclusions:

    • Integration of psychodynamic and behavioral perspectives is possible, particularly with interpersonal models.
    • Yates's arguments do not universally preclude the synthesis of these psychological approaches.
    • Scientific progress relies on empirical evidence rather than solely on tenaciously held beliefs.