Miles Groth

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Dr. Miles Groth (born 1946) is a Professor Emeritus in Psychology at Wagner College who has written on philosophy and psychotherapy.

Background[edit]

Groth has described himself as an existential analyst or daseinsanalyst.[1] Educated at Franklin and Marshall College, Duquesne University and Fordham University, he has taught psychology and philosophy at St. Vincent College (Latrobe, Pennsylvania) and Wagner College (Staten Island, New York), where he is Professor Emeritus (2019).

Advocacy[edit]

In 2013 Miles Groth gave a lecture at a conference at the University of Toronto titled "Caring About University Men - Why We Need Campus Men’s Centres in a Time of Crisis". He is co-editor of Engaging College Men: Discovering What Works and Why (2010; 2nd rev. ed, 2019).

Authorship[edit]

Groth is the author of several chapters in books on psychotherapy, and numerous articles and book reviews in psychology and philosophy journals. He is the author of After Psychotherapy (2017; 2nd ed. 2018) and Pericopes (a privately printed collection of poems).

Groth has also produced three books about Martin Heidegger and a related study of Medard Boss. Groth believes that many of the existing English translations of Heidegger are inadequate and incomprehensible.

Groth claims that in contrast with many existing English translations Heidegger's works are "quite clear and concise."

His Heidegger books are titled Preparatory Thinking in Heidegger's Teaching (1987), The Voice that Thinks: Heidegger Studies (1997; rev and expanded ed. 2016)[2] Translating Heidegger (2004; 2nd ed. 2017),[3] and the related Medard Boss and the Promise of Therapy (2020).[4]

Editorship[edit]

As founding editor of Thymos: Journal of Boyhood Studies and general editor of the International Journal of Men's Health, he has advanced the interdisciplinary area known as male studies. He has lectured on the topic of boys' and men's well-being in Australia and Canada, and Germany as well as the United States. He is founding editor of New Male Studies: An International Journal.

References[edit]

  1. ^ "The Miles Groth Ereignis Interview".
  2. ^ Francis F Seeburger, review of The Voice that Thinks: Heidegger Studies (1997) in The Review of Metaphysics, Sept. 1999, vol. 53, no. 1, pp. 165-167.
  3. ^ WorldCat Miles Groth publication list at WorldCat. Accessed 28 Sept. 2012.
  4. ^ Groth, Miles (5 March 2020). Medard Boss and the Promise of Therapy: The Beginnings of Daseinsanalysis. ISBN 9781911383369.