ABSTRACT

In Disordered Thinking and the Rorschach, James Kleiger provides a thoroughly up-to-date text that covers the entire range of clinical and diagnostic issues associated with the phenomenon of disordered thinking as revealed on the Rorschach. Kleiger guides the reader through the history of psychiatric and psychoanalytic conceptualizations of the nature and significance of different kinds of disordered thinking and their relevance to understanding personality structure and differential diagnosis. He then moves on to thorough reviews of the respective contributions of David Rapaport, Robert Holt, Philip Holzman, and John Exner in conceptualizing and scoring disordered thinking on the Rorschach. These synopses are followed by an equally fascinating examination of less well known research conceptualizations, which, taken together, help clarify the basic interpretive conundrums besetting the major systems.

Finally, having brought the reader to a full understanding of systematic exploration to date, Kleiger enters into a detailed analysis of the phenomenological and psychodynamic aspects of disordered thinking per se. Even experienced clinicians will find themselves challenged to reconceptualize such familiar categories as confabulatory or combinative thinking in a manner that leads not only to new diagnostic precision, but also to a richer understanding of the varieties of thought disturbances with their equally variable therapeutic and prognostic implications.

With Disordered Thinking and the Rorschach, Kleiger has succeeded in summarizing a wealth of experience pertaining to the rigorous empirical detection and classification of disordered thinking. Equally impressive, he has taken full advantage of the Rorschach as an assessment instrument able to capture the richness of personality and thus capable of providing a unique clinical window into those crucially important differences in the quality of thought that patients may evince.

part 1|42 pages

Introduction to Thought Disorder and the Rorschach

chapter Chapter 1|20 pages

Conceptualizing Disordered Thought

chapter Chapter 2|20 pages

The Rorschach Assessment of Disordered Thinking

part 2|96 pages

Thought Disorder Scoring Systems

chapter Chapter 3|15 pages

The Rapaport Method

chapter Chapter 4|21 pages

Holt's Primary Process Scoring System

chapter Chapter 5|19 pages

The Thought Disorder Index (TDI)

chapter Chapter 6|20 pages

Exner's Special Scores and Schizophrenia Index (SCZI)

chapter Chapter 7|19 pages

Alternative Thought Disorder Scoring Systems

part 3|93 pages

Conceptual and Theoretical Underpinnings

chapter Chapter 9|19 pages

Confabulatory Thinking

chapter Chapter 10|17 pages

Combinative Thinking

chapter Chapter 11|16 pages

Contaminated Thinking

chapter Chapter 12|10 pages

Paleologic Thinking

part 4|123 pages

Differential Diagnosis of Rorschach Thought Disorder

chapter Chapter 13|21 pages

Schizophrenia-Spectrum Disorders

chapter Chapter 14|18 pages

Affective Disorders

chapter Chapter 15|26 pages

Borderline Syndromes

chapter Chapter 16|28 pages

Disordered Thinking Associated with Other Conditions

chapter Chapter 17|18 pages

Creativity or Disordered Thinking?

chapter Chapter 18|10 pages

Final Thoughts