The Routledge international handbook of psychoanalysis and philosophy
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The Routledge international handbook of psychoanalysis and philosophy
(Routledge international handbooks)
Routledge, 2023
- : hbk
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
The Routledge International Handbook of Psychoanalysis and Philosophy provides a rich panoramic view of what philosophy offers or disturbs in psychoanalysis and what it represents for psychoanalytic theory and practice. The thirty-three chapters present a broad range of interfaces and reciprocities between various aspects of psychoanalysis and philosophy. It demonstrates the vital connection between the two disciplines: psychoanalysis cannot make any practical sense if it is not entirely perceived within a philosophical context.
Written by a team of world-leading experts, including established scholars, psychoanalysts and emerging talents, the Handbook investigates and discusses the psychoanalytic schools and their philosophical underpinning, as well as contemporary applied topics. Organized into five sections, this volume investigates and discusses how psychoanalysis stands in relation to leading philosophies such as Wittgenstein, Heidegger, Nietzsche, and Kant; philosophical perspectives on psychoanalytic schools such as Freud, Klein, Bion, Kohut, and Lacan; how psychoanalysis addresses controversial topics in philosophy such as truth, language and symbolism, ethics, and theories of mind. The last section addresses contemporary applied subjects in psychoanalytic thought: colonialism, gender, race, and ecology.
This Handbook offers a novel and comprehensive outlook vital for scholars, philosophers, practicing psychoanalysts and therapists alike. The book will serve as a source for courses in psychoanalysis, philosophy of science, epistemology, ethics, semiotics, cognitive science, consciousness, gender, race, post-colonialism theories, clinical theory, Freud's studies, both in universities and psychoanalytic training programs and institutes.
Table of Contents
Introduction Part I - Philosophical Traditions and Psychoanalysis 1. Freud's Theory of Freedom: Between Kant's Faith and Schopenhauer's Pessimism 2. Hegel's Contributions to Psychoanalysis: Theory of Mind, Dialectics, and Projective Identification 3. Nietzsche, Psychoanalysis, Nihilism 4. Psychoanalysis Finds a Home: Emotional Phenomenology 5. Bridging Philosophy and Psychoanalysis: A Hermeneutic Pathway Between the Disciplines 6. Wittgenstein: Disciple of Freud? 7. Freud and the Legacy of Sensory Physiology 8. Trauma and Language Part II - Psychoanalytic Schools 9. Freud and the Unconscious 10. The Foundations of the Psychoanalytic Theories of Freud, Klein and Bion Compared 11. Fairbairn's 'Psychology of Dynamic Structure' and Philosophy 12. From Freud To Winnicott: Aspects of Paradigm Change 13. Kohut's Self Psychology, Ethics, and Modern Society 14. What Is Intersubjectivity: From Phenomenology to Psychoanalysis 15. Subject and Subjecthood: From Philosophy to Psychoanalysis 16. Is Jung a Philosopher of Religion as well as a Psychologist of Religion? Part III - Psychoanalysis, Epistemology, and Truth 17. The Anxieties of Truth in Psychoanalytic and Philosophic Thought 18. Truth and Psychoanalysis 19. Metaphors and the Question of Truth in Psychoanalytic Language 20. Facts and Sensibilities: What Is a Psychoanalytic Innovation? 21. Psychoanalytic Evidence: The Old and the New Part IV - Philosophical Debates 22. The Psychoanalytic das Ich: Lost in Translation 23. Subjectivity in Philosophy, Psychoanalysis and Neuroscience - From World-Brain Relation over Neuro-Ecological Self to the Point of View 24. Psychoanalysis, Self-Deception, and the Problem of Teleology 25. A-Rationality: The Views of Freud and Wittgenstein Explored 26. Intersubjectivity and Responsibility in Relational Psychoanalysis and Modern Jewish Philosophy 27. Ethics of Discontent Part V - Applied Subjects 28. What can Psychoanalysis Tell Us about Cyberspace? 29. Psychoanalysis, Race and Colonialism 30. Narcissism in Religion 31. The Missing Signifier and a Malfunctioning Paternal Law: On the Feminine Third as Vital Portal for Sexual Difference and Emancipatory Democracy 32. Ecopsychoanalysis and Climate Psychology 33. The Evolution of Psychoanalytic Thinking About Aesthetics
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