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Modern psychology claims to understand the human person better than any previous age. It diagnoses, categorises, and treats with clinical precision. Yet beneath the scientific surface lies a profound anthropological crisis: a discipline that has forgotten the soul cannot heal the human being who possesses one.
Broken Images is a sweeping Catholic examination of the assumptions, promises, and hidden dangers of secular therapy. Rather than attacking psychology itself, Matthew Sardon exposes the metaphysical fault lines that run through its modern forms-an approach that reduces the person to a brain, redefines conscience as emotion, recasts guilt as pathology, and interprets desire without reference to truth. When therapy denies the soul, it cannot help but damage the very reality it claims to restore.
Drawing from Aquinas, Augustine, Edith Stein, Karol Wojtyla/John Paul II, Joseph Ratzinger, Paul Vitz, Conrad Baars, and Anna Terruwe, this book reveals how psychology became a replacement for the confessional, how the "therapeutic self" replaced the moral self, and why secular therapeutic reasoning consistently misunderstands sin, virtue, suffering, and vocation. With clarity and force, Sardon demonstrates that the pastoral harm often inflicted by modern therapy is not an accident. It flows directly from its anthropology.
Yet this is not simply a critique. Broken Images offers a constructive path forward: a rediscovery of the Catholic vision of the human person-body and soul, intellect and will, passions integrated through virtue, and a destiny rooted in communion with God. Sardon outlines the foundation for an authentically Catholic psychology, one that honours the natural sciences while restoring the moral and spiritual dimensions without which no healing can be complete.
For Catholics discerning therapy, for pastors guiding souls, and for all who sense that something essential has been lost in the modern pursuit of "mental health," Broken Images provides the intellectual clarity and theological grounding needed to navigate today's therapeutic age with wisdom.
This is not a book about rejecting therapy.
It is a book about remembering the person.
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