Non-technic Aspects of Healing Encountering: Implementation of Anima-caring for Terminal Patients
Abstract
In this study, the nature of Heidegger's reflection on the basis of technology, trying to sense the psychological treatment outside the establishment, set up close to the proper care of terminal cancer patients with soft the skills learned. The origin of this art from the life-world learning non-functional, non-significance of "non-technical", that these skills do not come from close to the patient's goal to reach, but is the patient into the nothingness inside of the Township of multiple dimensions, this study tested the actual operation in order to further explore possible non-technical soft appropriate care, such as "pleasure tone" to the patient listening to the sounds of black with the sound, because sound and harmony, and has nothing to do with meaning; allow patients to unwarranted graffiti, without any let see the like, unrelated to reality; or reminders to promote their dream of thinking and no place to speak of thinking, to promote the profound quiet of its floating appearance. The whole process is the soft phase in the development of appropriate care for dying, so soft and comfortable dying in an atmosphere of death. Based on Heidegger's reflection on the essence of technology, the present study aims at building for terminal ill patients the technics of Anima-care, which goes beyond the constitutional consciousness of modern psychotherapy. This technics derives from life world the "atechnology" which is neither functional nor meaningful. That is, this technics does not accomplish any goal but lets patients entering a multidimensional space of nothing. This study intends to examine several ways of Anima-care, for example, comfortable sound induces the listening of nothingness, which concerns no meaning; Scrabble gives patients a glimpse into senseless image involving no reality; and hypnotized dream speech grants the thought about nowhere. The whole process aims at developing Anima-care for the last stage of terminal patients and bringing them a comfortable way of dying