Psyche

Quique Autrey

A psychotherapist explores topics relating to psychotherapy, philosophy, culture, and religion.  

  1. Wittgenstein & the Tikanga of Psychotherapy

    13H AGO

    Wittgenstein & the Tikanga of Psychotherapy

    In this episode of Psyche Podcast, I continue my series on the philosophical foundations of solution-focused therapy by doing a close reading of Nick Drury’s essay “Wittgenstein and the Tikanga of Psychotherapy.” Drawing on Wittgenstein’s later philosophy, Drury challenges the Cartesian and medicalized picture of the person that has shaped so much of modern mental health discourse, and instead invites us into a vision of therapy rooted in language, relationship, ethical responsiveness, and forms of life. He also explicitly connects Wittgenstein’s idea of “disappearing” problems through a changed way of living to solution-focused therapy’s way of working.   I use the episode to explore why solution-focused therapy is so often misunderstood as simplistic when, in fact, it rests on a deeply serious philosophical vision of human life. Along the way, I unpack Drury’s distinction between “know that” and “know how,” his critique of diagnosis-heavy and decontextualized models of care, and his account of therapy as a space where new language-games, new forms of relation, and new possibilities for living can emerge.   I also bring these ideas down to the level of practice with vivid clinical examples, showing how a Wittgensteinian and solution-focused sensibility can shift the way we listen, the way we ask questions, and the way we understand change itself. This is an episode about clarity, humility, and the ethical depth of therapy when it becomes less a laboratory of explanation and more a living conversation in which people can begin to speak and live differently together.

    30 min
  2. Knight of Autonomy

    APR 9

    Knight of Autonomy

    In this episode, I explore Richard Rorty’s essay “Moral Identity and Private Autonomy” from Essays on Heidegger and Others and think through one of the tensions that has been staying with me lately: how to honor private self-creation without letting it collapse into a form of individualism that forgets public responsibility. I reflect on Rorty’s reading of Foucault, his idea of the “knight of autonomy,” and why I find myself deeply resonating with that figure through my own sense of being an otrovert — someone drawn to autonomy, inward authority, and the refusal of borrowed foundations. At the same time, I wrestle with my fear that the private/public distinction can leave democratic life too thin, even as I remain deeply doubtful that a return to shared religious, philosophical, or universal foundations would actually produce the solidarity people imagine. From there, I explore Rorty’s provocative suggestion that people can be humane without being universalists, and I consider how art and culture — including the imperfect but moving example of Apple TV's Shrinking — may help create a shared public vocabulary through empathy, grief, failure, and recognition rather than through doctrine or theory. This is an episode about autonomy, democracy, suffering, self-creation, and the difficult task of trying to remain faithful to one’s own vocabulary while still taking part in the shared work of making the world more decent for others.

    25 min
5
out of 5
16 Ratings

About

A psychotherapist explores topics relating to psychotherapy, philosophy, culture, and religion.  

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