ABSTRACT

This book provides a detailed examination of the historical roots of psychoanalysis from ancient Greece to the late nineteenth century, focusing on social practices that were related to the founders of psychoanalytic theory and maintained within contemporary treatment. Alongside the reconstruction of an evolutionary accumulation of healing practices, the book includes linked discussions of current issues pertaining to psychoanalytic treatment and its working structure as elaborated by Freud and Lacan. There are vital political consequences for psychoanalytic practice - here articulated with an acknowledgement of these practical derivations of early pre-psychoanalytic treatments of the soul. The book demonstrates that these are neither mere techniques nor concepts of the world and the human subject, but they concern the way the problem of power is articulated. The historical establishment of psychoanalytical practice becomes legible through analysis of the traces of the elements of a political ontology, an account of the roots of those traces and the elaboration of the conceptual structure of psychoanalysis as theory and treatment, a praxis which maintains its own distinctive identity.

chapter ONE|16 pages

The doubt of Ulysses

chapter TWO|14 pages

The return of Empedocles

chapter THREE|19 pages

The act of Antigone

chapter FIVE|46 pages

Taking care of oneself

chapter SEVEN|20 pages

The meditation of Descartes

chapter EIGHT|38 pages

The structure of psychoanalytic treatment

chapter NINE|23 pages

Kant and the pathological

chapter ELEVEN|50 pages

Hegel: the real and its negative

chapter TWELVE|20 pages

Logic and politics in psychoanalytic healing

chapter |8 pages

Conclusion