ABSTRACT

From Dualism to Oneness in Psychoanalysis: A Zen Perspective on the Mind-Body Question focuses on the shift in psychoanalytic thought, from a view of mind-body dualism to a contemporary non-dualistic perspective. Exploring this paradigm shift, Yorai Sella examines the impact of the work of psychoanalysts and researchers, such as Winnicott, Bion, Daniel Stern and Kohut, and delineates the contributions of three major schools of psychoanalytic thought in which the non-dualistic view is exemplified: (1) intersubjective; (2) neuro-psychoanalytic; and (3) mystically inclined psychoanalysis.

Reaching beyond the constraints of dualism, Sella delineates the interdisciplinary approaches leading to psychoanalysis's paradigm shift. Focusing on the unique contribution of Zen-Buddhism, the book draws on Ehei Dōgen's philosophy to substantiate the non-duality of subject and object, body and mind - ultimately leading from alienation and duality to what Bion has termed "at one-ment". The way in which psychoanalytic theory and practice may develop further along these lines is demonstrated throughout the book in a variety of clinical vignettes.

This book will inform the practice of all psychoanalysts, mental health professionals, psychotherapists and clinicians interested in mind-body issues in psychotherapy, in the philosophy of psychoanalysis, and in East-West dialogue.

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

part I|104 pages

The quest

chapter 1|27 pages

A mysterious leap

chapter 2|18 pages

Mysterious leaps

From psychosomatics to the psyche-soma

chapter 3|19 pages

The ascension of the body

Representation and presentation

chapter 4|20 pages

Unitive experience and a unitary turn

chapter 5|18 pages

The unitary turn

Overarching conceptual structures

part II|117 pages

‘Body-mind-one’

chapter 6|21 pages

Non-duality in Zen-Buddhism

Implications for the mind-body question in contemporary psychoanalysis

chapter 7|20 pages

The body of the Buddhist ‘body-mind’

chapter 8|24 pages

Embodiment and interpretation – not two

chapter 10|18 pages

From duality to oneness

Zen contributions to psyche-soma meta-theory in contemporary psychoanalysis