The Religious and Romantic Origins of Psychoanalysis: Individuation and Integration in Post-Freudian Theory

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Cambridge University Press, Feb 23, 1996 - Social Science - 254 pages
This book considers the cultural and religious sources of contemporary psychoanalytic theories of the development of the self, and demonstrates that they are distinctively Western cultural constructions that tell a story in terms of a narrative pattern derived from biblical and Neoplatonic sources. Thus, religious themes and values still influence how modern psychologists make sense of the human condition, and Dr. Kirschner raises provocative questions about the status of psychoanalytic theories as knowledge and as science.

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