خلاصه ماشینی:
Conference Report International Seminar on Counseling and Psychotherapy: An Islamic Perspective Amber Haque A three-day international seminar jointly organized by the Department of Psychology, International Islamic University Malaysia (IIUM) and the International Institute of Islamic Thought Malaysia (IIITM) was held August 15-17, 1997, in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
Counseling Approaches Based on Early Muslim Philosophers The Moral Therapy of Isfahani (10th Century), Yasien Mohamed, Department of Arabic Studies, South Africa The Criteria of Counseling in Islamic Perspective and Practical Structure for Psychotherapy, S.
Abedi, University of Isfahan, Iran Visual Recognition at Birth: Evidence for the Integration of Visual and Auditory Cues in Early Processing of Information, Fatama Zohra Sai, I/UM Attitude Toward Capital Punishment: An Islamic Perspective, Atay Ahmad, University of Peshawar, Pakistan The Relation of Islamic Beliefs and Practices to Mental Health of University Students, Zahra Habibi, Bu Ali Sina University Ramadan, Iran The Islamic Approach to the Treatment of Post-Traumatic Stress: A Case Study of an Australian Muslim Girl, M.
Another set of papers addressed the issue of human personality from Qur'anic and Islamic perspectives highlighting how the Qur'an describes the physical, spiritual, cognitive, affective, and behavioral aspects of human beings.
Participants agreed that the conference was successful in establishing a network of Muslim psychologists to communicate on issues of counseling and psychotherapy and other issues from the Islamic perspective.