ABSTRACT

What contribution has “the law” made to the work of analyst and patient in the consulting room? And what insights may be drawn from putting psychology itself on trial? In this ground-breaking book, the use of legal metaphors and the courtroom analogy by Freud, Jung, and psychology more generally are examined in relation to the practice of psychotherapy and analysis. In this way, psychoanalysis and analytical psychology are shown in fresh perspective to be disciplines of truth in the spirit of a trial or court proceeding.

chapter |9 pages

Introduction

chapter Chapter One|29 pages

Law & Order meets Freud & Jung

The Trials of Analysis

chapter Chapter Two|21 pages

Before the Bar of the Notion

chapter Chapter Three|31 pages

Speculative Judgment

chapter Chapter Four|33 pages

From Onslaught to the Witness Box

Repercussions to Truth: Psychology as Counsel for the Defence

chapter Chapter Five|13 pages

Criminality and Psychology

chapter Chapter Six|14 pages

Psychology’s Dream of the Courtroom

In the Light of the Logic of Crime

chapter Chapter Seven|25 pages

Crime and Truth

chapter Chapter Eight|13 pages

Once More the Shine on Binder’s Head

chapter |7 pages

In Lieu of an Afterword