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Psychoanalysis Scientific Method and Philosophy

Book

Psychoanalysis Scientific Method and Philosophy

DOI link for Psychoanalysis Scientific Method and Philosophy

Psychoanalysis Scientific Method and Philosophy book

Psychoanalysis Scientific Method and Philosophy

DOI link for Psychoanalysis Scientific Method and Philosophy

Psychoanalysis Scientific Method and Philosophy book

Edited BySidney Hook
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 1990
eBook Published 31 March 2020
Pub. Location New York
Imprint Routledge
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9780429338403
Pages 381
eBook ISBN 9780429338403
Subjects Behavioral Sciences
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Hook, S. (1990). Psychoanalysis, Scientific Method and Philosophy (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780429338403

ABSTRACT

This by now well-known pioneering dialogue on Freudian analysis is concerned not with therapeutic implications, individual or social, of psychoanalysis or of any other brand of psychology, but solely with the status of psychoanalysis as a scientific theory. Matching talents with a distinguished group of philosophers and social scientists, psychoanalysts made their claims and willingly subject them to the methodological scrutiny common to the sciences and the philosophy of science. This book records one of the few times in the United States that a distinguished group of psychoanalysts met with an equally distinguished group of philosophers of science in a free, critical interchange of view on the scientific status of the field. While a sense of the event’s excitement is captured here, it also had clear results, such as an expanded notion of psychoanalysis as a scientific theory, and a clear realization that certain elements in psychoanalysis are substantially beyond the boundaries of causal inference or the rules of logic.

Two opening statements by Heinz Hartmann and Ernest Nagel set the tone for the debate and discussion that followed. These are followed by social scientific statements of Abram Kardiner, Ernest van den Haag, and Alex Inkeles, followed by the philosophers Morris Lazerowitz, Donald C. Williams, and Anthony Flew. Such distinguished scholars as Adolf Grunbaum, Michael Scriven, Gail Kennedy, Arthur Pap, Philipp Frank. Arthur C. Danto, Max Black and others, round out this pioneering effort in the literature of intellectual combat.

Sidney Hook applies to his vision of psychoanalysis the same compelling rigor he applied to other would-be advocates of a science beyond ordinary scientific method or safeguards. He nonetheless points out that even therapeutic success is not the last word, but must itself be tested on a variety of measures: statistical no less than analytical. This remains a courageous and disturbing work, one that commands attention among practicing psychiatrists, psychoanalysts—and their would-be patients.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

part Part I|77 pages

Psychoanalysis and Scientific Method

chapter 1|35 pages

Psychoanalysis As a Scientific Theory

ByHeinz Hartmann

chapter 2|19 pages

Methodological Issues in Psychoanalytic Theory

ByErnest Nagel

chapter 3|21 pages

Psychoanalysis and Scientific Method

ByLawrence S. Kubie

part Part II|51 pages

Psychoanalysis and Society

chapter 4|23 pages

Social and Cultural Implications of Psychoanalysis

ByAbram Kardiner

chapter 5|13 pages

Psychoanalysis and Its Discontents

ByErnest van den Haag

chapter 6|13 pages

Psychoanalysis and Sociology

ByAlex Inkeles

part Part III|67 pages

Psychoanalysis and Philosophy

chapter 7|24 pages

The Relevance of Psychoanalysis to Philosophy

ByMorris Lazerowitz

chapter 8|23 pages

Philosophy and Psychoanalysis

ByDonald C. Williams

chapter 9|18 pages

Philosophy and Psychopathology

ByAntony Flew

part Part IV|166 pages

Discussion, Criticism, and Contributions by other Participants

chapter 10|11 pages

Psychoanalysis As Scientific Method*

ByJacob A. Arlow

chapter 11|13 pages

Science and Mythology in Psychoanalysis

BySidney Hook

chapter 12|1 pages

Remarks on Dr. Kubie’s Views

ByAdolf Grünbaum

chapter 13|26 pages

The Experimental Investigation of Psychoanalysis

ByMichael Scriven

chapter 14|16 pages

Psychoanalytic Theory and Evidence

ByWesley C. Salmon

chapter 15|1 pages

An Observation by an Experimental Psychologist

ByHoward H. Kendler

chapter 16|13 pages

Psychoanalysis: Protoscience and Metapsychology

ByGail Kennedy

chapter 17|1 pages

Comments

ByPercy W. Bridgman

chapter 18|15 pages

On the Empirical Interpretation of Psychoanalytic Concepts

ByArthur Pap

chapter 19|7 pages

On the Structure of Psychoanalysis

ByFrancis W. Gramlich

chapter 20|3 pages

Psychoanalysis and Scientific Method

ByRobert E. Silverman

chapter 21|6 pages

Psychoanalysis and Logical Positivism

ByPhilipp Frank

chapter 22|5 pages

Meaning and Theoretical Terms in Psychoanalysis

ByArthur C. Danto

chapter 23|5 pages

Psychoanalysis and Suggestion: Metaphysics and Temperament

Byc. J. Ducasse

chapter 24|5 pages

The Status of Freud’s Ideas

ByCharles Frankel

chapter 25|7 pages

Psychoanalysis: Science and Philosophy

ByRaphael Demos

chapter 26|22 pages

Philosophy and Psychoanalysis

ByJohn Hospers

chapter 27|2 pages

Comments on Professor Lazerowitz’s Paper

ByMax Black

chapter 28|5 pages

Misunderstanding One Another

ByCampbell Crockett
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