ABSTRACT

Metapsychology for Contemporary Psychoanalysis is a complete revision of the theoretical underpinnings of psychoanalysis and psychodynamic psychotherapy. It seeks to replace the traditional drive–defence model of Freudian tradition with an information processing model of the mind. This book argues that the central human need is for self-knowledge, and that drives are best understood as means towards this end.

Richard Sembera begins with a close reading of Freud’s own metapsychological writings, isolating the many unresolved difficulties and inconsistencies which continue to burden psychoanalytical theory today. By returning to the actual observable clinical phenomena in the analytic situation, it is shown that an alternative interpretation is possible that eliminates the theoretical difficulties in question. In the analytic situation, Sembera argues that clinicians do not in fact see individuals struggling against the expression of biological drives, rather they observe individuals struggling to clarify their experience of themselves in the presence of the analyst and put this experience into words. When this process is formalized and expressed in theoretical terms, it is found to consist of three distinct aspects: objectification, imagination, and symbolization. This process as a whole—ascent towards the other, relationship with the other, disclosure of self in the light of the other—is termed the dialectical structure of the self. It is conceptualized as the main accomplishment of the core mental process, the process of contextualization.

This work is distinguished from other attempts at theoretical revision by its fundamental commitment to coherence and clarity as well as its determination to challenge accepted psychoanalytic dogma. It argues for the complete irrelevance of biology and neuroscience to the psychoanalytic enterprise and rejects the theory of drives in its entirety. Instead it affirms the centrality of the traumatic response to mental functioning, emphasises the social matrix in which drives are embedded, re-examines the concepts of free will, accountability, and responsibility, and concludes with an attempt to understand waking life as a creative product analogous to the lucid dream. 

Drawing on major psychoanalytic thinkers including Bollas and Benjamin, and current philosophy of mind, this book provides readers with a clear, updated model of metapsychology. Metapsychology for Contemporary Psychoanalysis will appeal to psychoanalysts and psychotherapists, as well as philosophy scholars and anyone with an interest in the philosophy of psychoanalysis.

chapter |9 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|8 pages

What is metapsychology?

chapter 2|9 pages

Theories and fantasies

chapter 3|7 pages

The practical uses of metapsychology

chapter 4|17 pages

A description of the analytic situation

chapter 5|9 pages

What are resistance and defence?

chapter 6|8 pages

The function of the core mental process

chapter 7|8 pages

The place of the unconscious

chapter 8|10 pages

The revised structural model

chapter 9|10 pages

Primary and secondary experience

chapter 10|9 pages

The work of objectification

chapter 11|11 pages

The work of imagination

chapter 12|9 pages

The work of symbolization

chapter 13|13 pages

The dialectical structure of the self

chapter 14|13 pages

Where do we think?

chapter 15|10 pages

Repetition and trauma

chapter 16|9 pages

The motor of the mind

chapter 17|11 pages

From metapsychology to metaphysics

chapter 18|11 pages

Where do we live?

chapter |1 pages

Epilogue