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Full Description
Sigmund Freud's Inner Divisions shows how the limits of Freud's theory are linked to his inner conflicts, particularly those relating to his father.
Ken Fuchsman undertakes a close reading of how what Freud wrote during self-analysis reflected his inner personal divisions. The book explores how Freud's psychological divisions led to intellectual contradictions in his psychoanalytic doctrines, showing that the limits of his theory are rooted in inner conflicts that prevented his science of the unconscious from being truly comprehensive. It also considers how Freud's ideas were shaped by his internal struggles, discoveries, and denials, revealing how these inner tensions permeated his psychoanalytic theories on experience, science, civilization's higher achievements, love, and even the Oedipus complex itself.
Sigmund Freud's Inner Divisions will be of great interest to psychoanalysts in practice and in training, and to academics and scholars of the history of psychology, psychobiography, and intellectual history.
Contents
Acknowledgements
Introduction
PART I
Chapter 1 - Freud and Fathers: Sigmund Freud's Inner Struggles
Chapter 2 - Fathers and Sons: Freud's Discovery of the Oedipus Complex
Chapter 3 - The Evolution of Freud's Views of Parental/Paternal Authority
Chapter 4 - Freud and the Vienna Psychoanalytic Society
PART II
Chapter 5 - Biology and Experience in Freud's Thought
Chapter 6 - Freud, Psychoanalysis, and Science
Chapter 7 Psychoanalytic Mental Structure and Civilization's Higher Achievements
Chapter 8 - The Freudian Psychology of Love
Chapter 9 - What Does Freud Mean by the Oedipus Complex?