ABSTRACT

Psychoanalysis and Ethics: The Necessity of Perspective is an attempt to look deeply into the relationship between psychoanalysis and ethics, and in particular into the failure of traditional psychoanalytic thinking to recognise the foundational character of ethical values. 

In recent years, partly because of the climate crisis, the need for an "ethical turn" in our thinking has been recognised with increasing urgency. Using different historical lenses, and with special reference to the thought of the philosopher Emmanuel Levinas and pioneering American psychoanalysts such as Hans Loewald and Stephen Mitchell, the author discusses the perspectives needed in addition to those of science if the facts of "psychic reality" are to be more adequately recognised. In particular, this book emphasises the importance of a coherent account of the role of ethics in shaping the development both of the individual and of society.

Psychoanalysis and Ethics is essential reading for those concerned for the importance of ethics in psychoanalytic practice and theory, and more widely for those seeking to understand the place of ethics and religion in psychological development.

chapter Chapter 1|8 pages

Introduction

chapter Chapter 2|24 pages

The working of values in ethics and religion

chapter Chapter 3|9 pages

Jonathan Lear

Heir to a different legacy 1

chapter Chapter 4|20 pages

Who founded Buddhism?

Notes on the psychological action of religious objects

chapter Chapter 5|17 pages

Dante's two suns

The psychological sources of the Divine Comedy

chapter Chapter 6|12 pages

Dante, duality, and the function of allegory

chapter Chapter 7|15 pages

Freud and idealisation 1

chapter Chapter 8|13 pages

The transcendent in everyday life

chapter Chapter 9|13 pages

Religion as the affirmation of values

chapter Chapter 10|16 pages

Levinas' re-basing of religion