@article{oai:sgul.repo.nii.ac.jp:00000651, author = {葛西, 俊治}, issue = {93}, journal = {札幌学院大学人文学会紀要 = Journal of the Society of Humanities}, month = {Feb}, note = {Body psychotherapy was created in 1930s by Wilhelm Reich, and was developed by his successors such as Gerda Boyesen, Alexander Lowen, etc., concerning the embodied body-mind tension named “muscular armor”, but was suffering from a long downward trend in the late 20th century. A world-wide cultural shift, so-called the Third Wave, towards the computerized and highly developed information society in the 21st century was hypothesized to be one of main reasons for its decline: The “parano” culture and its persistent neurotic body-mind in the previous century turned down gradually by the predominant “schizo” culture where the split body-mind is common. Despite this problem, new approaches in body psychotherapy are expected to widen its applicable areas: One is the systems approach as in the family therapy using the conceptualization of Gregory Bateson's “double-bind” relationship among family members where the nonverbal and implicit communication of the body is disregarded. The other is the discovery of “mirror neuron”, functioning in the human brain to “mirror” neurologically the other people's movement just by watching. Apart from these approaches, recent studies about the predominant information channel showed that the double-bind relationship might be caused by a mismatch of predominant channel between two people because the limited number of people uses the body feeling as predominant channel. Discussions were made about the developments of systems approach and its influences to body psychotherapy by interpreting Milton Erickson's hypnotherapy cases from the viewpoint of de-coupling between the body-system and mind-system, which poses a new therapeutic approach in contrast with the historical Freudian's idea of “abreaction” to cure., Bulletin, 論文}, pages = {59--82}, title = {身体心理療法の現状とシステムズ・アプローチとしての展開}, year = {2013} }