Moving away from the longstanding debate over the scientific status of Freudian theory, The Analytic Freud discusses the implications of Freud for philosophy in four clear sections: Philosophy of Mind, Ethics, Sexuality, Civilization. The essays discuss both the problems Freudian theory poses for contemporary philosophy and what philosophy can ask of Freudian theory. An international team of contributors explores the tensions and dialogue between psychoanalysis and philosophical theories on emotion, will, self-deception, sexuality, love, humor, morality and social interaction demonstrating how…mehr
Moving away from the longstanding debate over the scientific status of Freudian theory, The Analytic Freud discusses the implications of Freud for philosophy in four clear sections: Philosophy of Mind, Ethics, Sexuality, Civilization. The essays discuss both the problems Freudian theory poses for contemporary philosophy and what philosophy can ask of Freudian theory. An international team of contributors explores the tensions and dialogue between psychoanalysis and philosophical theories on emotion, will, self-deception, sexuality, love, humor, morality and social interaction demonstrating how productive and mutually enhancing the relationship between philosophy and Freudian theory can be.
Contributors Acknowledgements Introduction: how right does psychoanalysis have to be? PART I: Mind 1. Psychoanalysis metaphor and the concept of mind 2. How far down does the will go? 3. Freudian wish-fulfilment and sub-intentional explanation 4. Keeping time: Freud on the temporality of mind 5. Subject object world: some reflections on the Kleinian origins of the mind 6. Freud's Theory of Consciousness PART II: Ethics 7. Aristotelian akrasia weakness of will and psychoanalytic regression 8. Emotional agents 9. Moral authenticity and the unconscious PART III: Sexuality 10. Freud on unconscious affects mourning and the erotic mind 11. Love and loss in Freud's Mourning and Melancholia: a rereading 12. Lucky in love: love and emotion PART IV: Civilization 13. Sublimation love and creativity 14. Freud and the rule of law: from Totem and Taboo to psychoanalytic jurisprudence 15. The joke the 'as if' and the statement Author Index Subject Index
Contributors Acknowledgements Introduction: how right does psychoanalysis have to be? PART I: Mind 1. Psychoanalysis metaphor and the concept of mind 2. How far down does the will go? 3. Freudian wish-fulfilment and sub-intentional explanation 4. Keeping time: Freud on the temporality of mind 5. Subject object world: some reflections on the Kleinian origins of the mind 6. Freud's Theory of Consciousness PART II: Ethics 7. Aristotelian akrasia weakness of will and psychoanalytic regression 8. Emotional agents 9. Moral authenticity and the unconscious PART III: Sexuality 10. Freud on unconscious affects mourning and the erotic mind 11. Love and loss in Freud's Mourning and Melancholia: a rereading 12. Lucky in love: love and emotion PART IV: Civilization 13. Sublimation love and creativity 14. Freud and the rule of law: from Totem and Taboo to psychoanalytic jurisprudence 15. The joke the 'as if' and the statement Author Index Subject Index
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