This book presents self-organization as a common theoretical foundation for a variety of therapy styles. New models and conceptual tools that describe and explain some of the crucial features of psychotherapy are discussed. In contrast to other highly theoretical and technical discussions of the subject, this book gives a wider audience an understanding of recent developments.By Way of Introduction: Can We Make a Non-Classical Psychology?.- A Metaphor from Quantum Physics and from Phenomenology.- The Weakness of the Inside Tradition: the Method Fades Out.- The Weakness of the Outside Tradition: the Object Fades Out.- Object-Method Complementarity and the Relation between both Traditions.- The Domain of a Non-Classical Psychology.- The Inaccessibility of Psychotherapy to Research.- Second Order Cybernetics and Self-Organizing Systems.- Self-Organization in Psychotherapy.- References.- Life, the Multiverse and Everything; an Introduction to the Ideas of Humberto Maturana.- Life: Love and Languaging.- Conversations as Structural Perturbations.- The Multiverse: Expanding the Universe through the Ontology of the Observer.- Problems with Perception: How is it that We Make Mistakes?.- Operations of Distinction.- Brief Example: The Family as a System.- And Every Thing is Structure.- Implications of Maturanas Theory for Psychotherapy.- Concluding Comments.- References.- Gestalt Psychology, Gestalt Therapy and the Theory of Autopoiesis.- Definition of Gestalt.- Gestalt Theory and the Theory of Autopoiesis.- The Goal of Gestalt Therapy.- The Gestalt Therapy Process.- The Relation Client Therapist.- References.- Toward a More Detailed Understanding of Self-Organizing Processes in Psychotherapy.- A Framework for the Description of Change in Psychotherapy: The Selective Activation Model.- The Enactment of a Cognitive System: The Transition From its Inert to its Active Form.- The Formation of New Possibilities.- Self-Referential Experiences.- How does the Enacted Functionl#²