ABSTRACT

Whereas Freud himself viewed conscience as one of the functions of the superego, in The Still Small Voice: Psychoanalytic Reflections on Guilt and Conscience, the author argues that superego and conscience are distinct mental functions and that, therefore, a fourth mental structure, the conscience, needs to be added to the psychoanalytic structural theory of the mind. He claims that while both conscience and superego originate in the so-called pre-oedipal phase of infant and child development they are comprised of contrasting and often conflicting identifications. The primary object, still most often the mother, is inevitably experienced as, on the one hand, nurturing and soothing and, on the other, as frustrating and persecuting. Conscience is formed in identification with the nurturer; the superego in identification with the aggressor. There is a principle of reciprocity at work in the human psyche: for love received one seeks to return love; for hate, hate (the talion law).

chapter One|23 pages

The moral ambiguity of psychoanalysis

part I|140 pages

Clinical Realm

chapter Two|19 pages

On the nature and varieties of guilt

chapter Four|19 pages

Self-punishment as guilt evasion

chapter Six|18 pages

Harry Guntrip: a fugitive from guilt?

chapter Seven|12 pages

Two case studies*

part II|130 pages

Cultural Realm

chapter Eight|23 pages

Modernity and its discontents

chapter Nine|24 pages

Psychopathy, evil, and the death drive

chapter |8 pages

Summary