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==Books== |
==Books== |
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*{{cite thesis |last= Schuster|first= Shlomit Carole|date= 1988|title= The transcendence of marxism : a philosophical study of marxism and Satre’s political thought |degree= M.A.|location= Jerusalem|publisher= Hebrew University of Jerusalem}} |
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* ”Philosophy Practice: An Alternative to Counseling and Psychotherapy” (1999), Translated to Dutch (2001), Italian (2006), and Chinese (2007).<ref name=”Philosophy Practice”/> |
* ”Philosophy Practice: An Alternative to Counseling and Psychotherapy” (1999), Translated to Dutch (2001), Italian (2006), and Chinese (2007).<ref name=”Philosophy Practice”/> |
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* ”The Philosopher’s Autobiography: A Qualitative Study” (2003)<ref name=”abc-clio.com”/> |
* ”The Philosopher’s Autobiography: A Qualitative Study” (2003)<ref name=”abc-clio.com”/> |
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Latest revision as of 14:52, 19 October 2025
Israeli philosophical counselor (1951–2016)
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Shlomit C. Schuster |
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Schuster in 2013 |
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| Born | 19 July 1951 |
| Died | 15 February 2016 (aged 64) |
| Nationality | Israeli |
| Occupation | Philosophical counselor |
Shlomit C. Schuster (Hebrew: שלומית שוסטר; born 19 July 1951 in Paramaribo, Suriname; died 15 February 2016 in Jerusalem, Israel) was an Israeli philosophical counselor,[2] considered a pioneer in the field.[3][4]
Schuster migrated to Israel in 1976 and studied philosophy at Hebrew University of Jerusalem. She trained under the Dutch philosophical counselor Ad Hoogendijk, a colleague of Gerd B. Achenbach. In 1989, she opened the philosophical counseling Center Sophon Jerusalem. In 1990, she launched the philosophical first-aid line “Philosophone”, for persons with existential problems and ethical challenges. In 2000, she received her Ph.D. degree. Her thesis, conducted by Marcel-Jacques Dubois and Maurice S. Friedman, described the life of central philosophers in order to find ways to help people through their autobiography[clarification needed].[5]
She was an editorial board member of the Journal of Radical Psychology,[6] the International Journal for Philosophical Practice,[7] and the Journal of Humanities Therapy.[8]
Schuster died in Jerusalem on 15 February 2016, after a serious illness.[9]



