ABSTRACT

The papers in this book have been written over a period of fifteen years, and focus in the similarity between psychoanalysis and religion. The author argues that psychoanalysis can be seen as a scientific religion with Freud as the leader of the movement. He examines the various stages of the journey made by a religious leader from "blindness" to "founding an institution" and finds counterparts in the development of psychoanalysis while drawing examples from Buddhism, Christianity and Islam. He invites the reader on a journey with him - to examine the human mind, our society, the process of psychoanalysis, science and philosophy. He successfully uses examples from the consulting room to illuminate his arguments. The author's honest accounts of the search for answers relevant to all of us encourage the reader to think further and deeper than he or she had intended. 'The psychoanalyst examines scientifically the emotional pattern in himself and the other.

chapter One|21 pages

Freud's awakening

chapter Two|8 pages

Was Freud influenced by Brentano?

chapter Three|15 pages

An exegesis of conscience in the works of Freud

chapter Four|3 pages

Freud's truth

chapter Six|18 pages

The unconscious as an amoral construction

chapter Seven|13 pages

Religion and science in psychoanalysis

chapter Eight|15 pages

The nature of reality

chapter Nine|12 pages

Religion and consciousness

chapter Ten|12 pages

The true god and the false god

chapter Eleven|13 pages

Natural spirituality

chapter Twelve|13 pages

An enquiry into the concepts of soul and psyche

chapter Thirteen|9 pages

Religion and spirituality

chapter Fourteen|6 pages

Is psychoanalysis a religion?

chapter Fifteen|9 pages

The murder of Laius

chapter Sixteen|12 pages

Psychoanalysis and human freedom

chapter Seventeen|11 pages

Failure of internalization in modern culture

chapter Eighteen|13 pages

Anti-Semitism: another perspective