Remarkable addition to increasing CBT's effectiveness in one of its most challenging areas: dealing with the low frustration tolerance that leads to addictive behavior or avoidance of uncomfortable tasks that block people from achieving their goals. It clearly demonstrates, with case examples, how to identify the self-defeating thoughts (I can't stand it, this is too hard and uncomfortable, it's hopeless and replace them with counter-messages that increase motivation and the likelihood of overcoming emotional blocks to behavioral change. A brilliant book and a truly outstanding expansion of the literature on increasing client motivation.
Janet Wolfe, PhD, former executive director of the Albert Ellis Institute and professor at New York University, currently running a private therapy and consulting practice in New York City
I highly recommend Dr. Elliot Cohen's book, Cognitive-Behavior Interventions for Self-Defeating Thoughts: Helping Clients to Overcome the Tyranny of I Can't. An innovative, scholarly, philosophic, logic-based approach for cognitive-behavioral therapists. Addresses common self-defeating emotional problems, including low self-esteem, anger, intrusive thoughts, phobias, depression, and more!
Dr. Michael R. Edelstein, co-author of Three Minute Therapy
Your new client wants freedom from anxiety, depression, anger, and toxic relationships. However, your client also believes, 'I can't make the personal changes I want to make.' Philosopher Elliot D. Cohen tells how therapists can help clients find and refute such self-defeating fictions by refining their logic-based thinking skills in ways that can also strengthen reason-related neural networks. He integrates key parts of the philosophical, neuroscience, and psychological literature on cognitive, emotion, and behavior systems. His philosophical counseling system is compatible with Albert Ellis' comprehensive rational emotive behavioral therapy and allied, evidence-based cognitive-behavioral approaches. Among his many contributions, Dr. Cohen skillfully shows how to help people disentangle themselves from self-defeating belief systems well beyond what you'd generally find in psychotherapy reference books. That is what makes this book a critical read.
Dr. Bill Knaus, former Director of Postdoctoral Training, Institute for Advanced Study in Rational Emotive Therapy (Albert Ellis Institute), and author or co-author of 25 books, including The Cognitive Behavioral Workbook for Anger
Long before CBT, Albert Ellis fashioned a cognitive-emotive-behavioral approach that conditioned our current age of therapies. Elliot D. Cohen has philosophized this approach with his Logic-Based Therapy and virtue ethics, which has generated a worldwide movement. This volume is a marriage between applied psychology, logic, and what philosophy has to contribute to the behavioral sciences.
Prof. Jon Mills, PsyD, PhD, ABPP, Adelphi University