Cover image for Logics of the Mind : A Clinical View.
Logics of the Mind : A Clinical View.
Title:
Logics of the Mind : A Clinical View.
Author:
Ahumada, Jorge L.
ISBN:
9781849403061
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (195 pages)
Contents:
COVER -- CONTENTS -- ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS -- FOREWORD -- PREFACE -- Introduction: The crisis of culture and the crisis of psychoanalysis -- Chapter 1. What is a clinical fact? Clinical psychoanalysis as inductive method -- Chapter 2. The analyst as "base" -- Chapter 3. On the transposition of self and object -- Chapter 4. The unconscious delusion of "goodness" -- Chapter 5. Perverse and symbiotic organizations in narcissistic object relationships -- Chapter 6. On narcissistic identification and the shadow of the object -- Chapter 7. Trauma, identification, evolution -- Chapter 8. On the limitations and the infiniteness of analysis -- Epilogue: The role of writing and psychoanalytic writings -- REFERENCES -- INDEX.
Abstract:
This collection of papers, spanning the last 15 years, presents a spirited defence of Freud's clinical method, considering the "crisis of psychoanalysis" in the wider context of a crisis of reflective thought in society as a whole. Expressing the wish to "clarify and polish the glass through which we see the psychoanalytic experience", Jorge Ahumada seeks to redefine the functions of psychoanalysis for the era of mass media, in which the classic Freudian neuroses have mostly been replaced by what he terms "pathologies of peremptory gratification".'The Logics of the Mind considers the impact on psychoanalytic theory and practice of the current shift from a culture of the written word to one of 'visual power'; induction, empiricism, and the possibility of establishing a "clinical fact"; acculturation via the media as a spurious substitute for the nuclear family; and television as a pervasive provider of "autistic forms". It discusses a topography of the mind which builds on the work of Wilfred Bion, and the "apparently benign delusion" of one's own goodness.Rather than focusing on theory, Ahumada stresses throughout the logic underlying clinical method, which he sees as the central grounding of psychoanalysis, and the primary source of genuine advances in theory itself. He makes a strong case that "the clinical and conceptual honing of the analytical instrument should be kept firmly away from cultural or intellectual fashions," which can be detrimental to actual clinical practice.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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