ABSTRACT

Stolorow and his collaborators' post-Cartesian psychoanalytic perspective – intersubjective-systems theory – is a phenomenological contextualism that illuminates worlds of emotional experience as they take form within relational contexts. After outlining the evolution and basic ideas of this framework, Stolorow shows both how post-Cartesian psychoanalysis finds enrichment and philosophical support in Heidegger's analysis of human existence, and how Heidegger's existential philosophy, in turn, can be enriched and expanded by an encounter with post-Cartesian psychoanalysis. In doing so, he creates an important psychological bridge between post-Cartesian psychoanalysis and existential philosophy in the phenomenology of emotional trauma.

chapter |4 pages

Introduction

Existential Analysis, Daseinanalysis, and Post-Cartesian Psychoanalysis

chapter |10 pages

Worlds Apart

Dissociation, Finitude, and Traumatic Temporality

chapter |4 pages

Our Kinship-in-Finitude

chapter |26 pages

Heidegger's Nazism and the Hypostatization of Being

A Distant Mirror *

chapter |4 pages

Conclusions

The Mutual Enrichment of Heidegger's Existential Philosophy and Post-Cartesian Psychoanalysis