ABSTRACT

This book begins with an exploration of the relationship between mind and brain. It then examines various psychoanalytic models of the mind and moves to the task of the analyst to discover the unconscious models that shape his or her patients' picture of him/herself and others. The familiar models are mainly drawn from psychoanalytic practice but are supplemented from myths, religion, and literature. Developments in adjacent scientific fields such as quantum biology and new ideas about evolution are discussed that suggest cellular genetic modification can take place as a consequence of interaction with the outside world. This gives hope perhaps to the idea that not only the mind can learn from experience but also the brain.

chapter ONE|8 pages

Between mind and brain

chapter TWO|5 pages

Does the mind matter?

chapter THREE|6 pages

Is there a system in the system Ucs.?

chapter FOUR|14 pages

Natural history of the mind

chapter FIVE|9 pages

Natural, unnatural, and supernatural beliefs

chapter SIX|10 pages

Models of the mind and models in the mind

chapter SEVEN|10 pages

Myths as models

chapter EIGHT|10 pages

The triangular model

chapter NINE|12 pages

Religious fanaticism and ideological genocide

chapter TEN|9 pages

The severance of links

chapter ELEVEN|11 pages

What made Frankenstein's creature into a monster?

chapter TWELVE|17 pages

The preacher, the poet, and the psychoanalyst

chapter |3 pages

Conclusion