When Freud first published his theory of the unconscious mind, it was ridiculed by many for being a logically indefensible revision to older foundational theories of subconsciousness. A war zone opened between opponents and defenders of the Freudian concept, and the traditional theory was forgotten.
The Unconscious without Freud
β Scribed by Rosemarie Sponner Sand
- Publisher
- Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
- Year
- 2013
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 189
- Series
- Dialog-on-Freud
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
During the first ten years of his career in psychological medicine, Sigmund Freud espoused a theory of unconsciousness which predated his own. As Rosemarie Sand describes in The Unconscious without Freud, he would evolve this theory over the course of his career and eventually apply it to his own psychological practice. Once Freud's hypothesis of unconscious mental functioning was published, the same professionals who had valued the traditional concept turned against what they considered to be a catastrophic, logically indefensible revision. The scientific investigation of unconscious influences was retarded for decades as a war zone opened between implacable opponents and intransigent defenders of the Freudian concept of unconscious mind. In the din of this battle, the traditional theory, free of the features which Freud's foes could not accept, was forgotten. Sand argues that a return to this original theory, which psychotherapists and experimenters might both espouse, could contribute to a cessation of hostilities and lead to the peaceful development of a theory of the unconsciousβone that is free from the stigma that is currently attached to Freudian theory.
β¦ Subjects
History Psychology Counseling Health Fitness Dieting Psychoanalysis Psychotherapy TA NLP Cognitive Behavioral Sciences Science Math Social New Used Rental Textbooks Specialty Boutique
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