ABSTRACT

Knowledge is never static. It is always open to revolutionary thinking or to evolving development. Similarly an individual’s knowledge is always moving, and indeed if the ability to think about ideas is lost, an important part of the individual is also lost. In this book, a collection of some of the papers and lectures written by Michael Jacobs over a period of thirty or more years, the author shows his own thinking at work, as he challenges himself to look deeper at some important aspects of his discipline – principally psychodynamic psychotherapy, although always with reference to other forms of discourse such as literature and theology. Here the reader will find the writer behind those popular texts such as The Presenting Past, Psychodynamic Counselling in Action, and Shakespeare on the Couch.

chapter Two|14 pages

Our desire of unrest

chapter Three|19 pages

Naming and labelling

chapter Four|21 pages

Optimism and pessimism

chapter Six|13 pages

Parallel process: confirmation and critique

chapter Seven|20 pages

Seeing and being seen

chapter Eight|20 pages

The significance of fame

chapter Nine|18 pages

Have we lost fate?

chapter Ten|18 pages

A maturing professional approach