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Classical theory, the Enlightenment Vision, and contemporary psychoanalysis

Chapter

Classical theory, the Enlightenment Vision, and contemporary psychoanalysis

DOI link for Classical theory, the Enlightenment Vision, and contemporary psychoanalysis

Classical theory, the Enlightenment Vision, and contemporary psychoanalysis book

Classical theory, the Enlightenment Vision, and contemporary psychoanalysis

DOI link for Classical theory, the Enlightenment Vision, and contemporary psychoanalysis

Classical theory, the Enlightenment Vision, and contemporary psychoanalysis book

ByMorris N. Eagle
BookThe Second Century of Psychoanalysis

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Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2011
Imprint Routledge
Pages 27
eBook ISBN 9780429483134

ABSTRACT

Paralleling the Enlightenment perspective that goes as far back as Plato, according to the classical psychoanalytic view of human nature, we are beset by the ongoing conflict between the demands of peremptory, instinctually derived passions and the voice of reality-testing and reason. Modifications of the near exclusive emphasis on interpretation and insight began to appear in the classical psychoanalytic literature, some of which were presumably made necessary by the “expanded scope” of psychoanalysis in treating more disturbed patients. For example, Eissler suggested that modifications in psychoanalytic technique and approach—parameters—were often necessary with more disturbed patients. The scepticism within the psychoanalytic community towards the Enlightenment belief that self-knowledge and learning truths about oneself are liberating was but one expression of larger cultural-philosophical trends. One of the most influential philosophical critics of the “Enlightenment Vision” has been Rorty who has attacked the idea that theories possess truth value, that they constitute “mirrors of nature”.

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