Thought inhabits diverse fields of activity. It can be philosophical, scientific or religious. But, unless it renounces the theoretical exigency underlying it, it cannot invest the domain of clinical work. How should the mode of rationality arising from psychoanalytic practice be qualified? How is the work of thought involved in the experience of the treatment to be accounted for? Andr Green shows how it is possible to introduce the concept of clinical thinking into psychoanalysis. He analyzes, in particular, the ...
Read More
Thought inhabits diverse fields of activity. It can be philosophical, scientific or religious. But, unless it renounces the theoretical exigency underlying it, it cannot invest the domain of clinical work. How should the mode of rationality arising from psychoanalytic practice be qualified? How is the work of thought involved in the experience of the treatment to be accounted for? Andr Green shows how it is possible to introduce the concept of clinical thinking into psychoanalysis. He analyzes, in particular, the modification of the clinical pictures on which Freuds work was constructed, contributing innovations and answers that the father of psychoanalysis could not foresee.
Read Less
Add this copy of Psychoanalysis: a Paradigm for Clinical Thinking to cart. $274.97, new condition, Sold by Just one more Chapter, ships from Miramar, FL, UNITED STATES, published 2005 by Free Association Books.