The road to unity in psychoanalytic theory
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The road to unity in psychoanalytic theory
Jason Aronson, c2007
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. 119-126) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
The theory of psychoanalysis was the breakthrough that defined the intellectual ambience of the 20th century. Two-thirds of the way into the century, the new science peaked and started a steep decline. While many look to external factors, or more recently to internal organizational ones, Dr. Leo Rangell has steadfastly pointed to theoretical fragmentation as the source of the loss of inspiration the discipline previously enjoyed. The Controversial Discussions need to be superseded by Discussions of Controversies. The British attempt at mid-century, with its outcome far from logical or inspiring, had best be followed by reparative discussions throughout the analytic world, with human impediments met and dissolved, for as long as it takes. The ideational issues that divide are few and finite in comparison to the breadth of the consensual base. Dr. Rangell traces the mixture of ideas and people intrinsic to the history of splits, and describes a total, cumulative, composite theory aiming toward internal coherence in the service of survival and the future of the science.
Table of Contents
Chapter 1 The Task Chapter 2 The Tool Chapter 3 The Development Chapter 4 The Early Theory Chapter 5 Splits Chapter 6 The Golden Era Chapter 7 The Crest and the Slope. The Breakup of Theory Chapter 9 The Bad American Chapter 10 The Problem of Lay Analysis Chapter 11 The Problem of Medical Analysis Chapter 12 The Science Chapter 13 The Breakup of Technique Chapter 14 The Solution: Total Composite Psychoanalytic Theory Chapter 15 One Theory, Many Treatments Chapter 16 My Additions Chapter 17 Unity and Reconciliation Within Psychoanalysis
by "Nielsen BookData"