Shlomit C. Schuster

Shlomit C. Schuster
Shlomit Schuster in 2013
Native name Hebrew: שוסטר שלומית
Born (1951-07-19) July 19, 1951
Suriname
Died February 15, 2016(2016-02-15) (aged 64)
Israel
Nationality Israeli
Occupation Philosophical Counselor

Shlomit C. Schuster (Hebrew: שוסטר שלומית ; born 19 July 1951 in Suriname and died 15 Feb 2016 in Israel) was an Israeli Philosophical Counselor,[1] and considered a pioneer in the Philosophical counseling field.[2] Her first book is considered a source of learning and teaching Philosophical counseling .[3]

Schuster was born in Suriname on 19 July 1951. She immigrated to Israel in 1976 and started philosophy academic studies in the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.

Schuster got to the philosophical practice field following a newspaper article. She trained under the Dutch philosophical counselor Ad Hoogendijk, a colleague of Gerd B. Achenbach. In 1989 she opened the philosophical practice center in Israel, "Center Sophon" in Jerusalem. In 1990 she opened the philosophical First-Aid Line, "Philosophone", for persons with existential problems and ethical challenges. In 2000 she received her Ph.D. degree. Her thesis, conducted by Marcel-Jacques Dubois and Maurice S. Friedman, described the life of central philosophers in order to find ways to help people by their autobiography.[4]

She was an Editorial board member of the Journal of Radical Psychology,[5] the International Journal for Philosophical Practice,[6] and Journal of Humanities Therapy [7]

She died in Jerusalem on 15 February 2016, after a serious illness.

Books

  • Philosophy Practice: An Alternative to Counseling and Psychotherapy (1999), Translated to Dutch (2001), Italian (2006) and Chinese (2007). This book is considered as a source of learning and teaching philosophy practice.[3]
  • The Philosopher's Autobiography: A Qualitative Study (2003)[4]

References

  1. "In Memoriam: Dr. Shlomit C. Schuster".
  2. https://m.facebook.com/groups/177645392279868?view=permalink&id=1135964659781265
  3. 1 2 "Philosophy Practice".
  4. 1 2 "The Philosopher's Autobiography".
  5. "Radical Psychology Editors".
  6. "Editorial Board - NPCA".
  7. "Humanities Therapy Project".
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