One of the aims of philosophy practice, in general terms, is "distancing" by heaving the patient’s personal problems up to a general human aporia, a step that may cause relief from guilt, shame, and self-belittling. Above all, "distancing" conveys a notion of autonomy and bird’s-eye view on a situation in which the patient has felt constrained. The author introduces Nelson’s philosophy of antirelativism and resistance, exemplified for Nazi-time victims, without mentioning the ample psychiatric evidence-based research from the 1950s to today on trauma experience, which comes to very similar conclusions and recommendations as expressed in Nelson’s philosophy.