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Utgivning, distribution etc. Routledge , New York, NY : 2005
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Elektronisk adress och åtkomst (URI) http://www.loc.gov/catdir/toc/ecip052/2004024752.html
ISBN 0-415-31451-8 (hft.) 0-415-31451-8 0-415-31450-X (inb.) 0-415-31450-X
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Jonathan Lear clearly introduces and assesses all of Freud's thought, focusing on those areas of philosophy on which Freud is acknowledged to have had a lasting impact. These include the philosophy of mind, free will and determinism, rationality, the nature of the self and subjectivity, and ethics and religion. He also considers some of the deeper issues and problems Freud engaged with, brilliantly illustrating their philosophical significance: human sexuality, the unconscious, dreams, and the theory of transference.
Freud is one of the most important introductions and contributions to understanding this great thinker to have been published for many years, and will be essential reading for anyone in the humanities, social sciences and beyond with an interest in Freud or philosophy.
Acknowledgements p. xi Chronology p. xii Introduction: The peculiar conversation p. 1 Bringing Freud back from the dead p. 1 The democratic impulse p. 8 Reflection and the idea of freedom p. 10 The fundamental question (and how not to ask it) p. 14 Neurosis and sexuality p. 17 A philosophical introduction p. 20 Interpreting the unconscious p. 23 Analysis of the psyche p. 23 A second mind? p. 24 Fear and trembling and the couch p. 30 The non-mysterious unconscious p. 39 How the unconscious escapes our notice p. 41 The unconscious is timeless p. 44 The unconscious and the fundamental question p. 49 Summary p. 53 Further Reading p. 54 Sex, Eros and life p. 55 What's sex got to do with it? p. 55 How sex hides as physical pain p. 60 Abandoning the seduction theory p. 68 A theory of sexuality p. 70 Infantile sexuality p. 78 Eros and practical wisdom p. 82 Summary p. 86 Further Reading p. 87 The interpretation of dreams p. 88 The royal road to the unconscious p. 88 Principles of dream interpretation p. 90 Freud's self-interpretation p. 93 Dreams as activity p. 101 In dreams begin responsibilities p. 104 Primary process p. 106 The fulfillment of a wish p. 110 The field of dreams p. 113 Summary p. 115 Further Reading p. 116 Transference p. 117 Introduction of the concept p. 117 Dora p. 120 A special class of mental structures p. 122 Transference as the breakdown of a world p. 124 Transference and the interpretation of dreams p. 129 From repeating to remembering p. 132 Summary p. 142 Further Reading p. 143 Principles of mental functioning p. 145 The pleasure principle and reality principle p. 145 Turning away from reality p. 147 Virtue and neurtue p. 151 Beyond the pleasure principle p. 154 Compulsive repetition p. 157 The death drive p. 160 Summary p. 162 Further Reading p. 163 The structure of the psyche p. 165 Plato's division of the soul p. 165 Pathologies of self-regard p. 167 Self and other p. 172 The psychological birth of the infant p. 173 Identification p. 179 The Oedipus complex p. 180 The superego p. 183 Genealogy p. 185 Summary p. 189 Further Reading p. 190 Morality and religion p. 192 The case against morality p. 192 Argument from pathology p. 198 Critique of religious belief p. 203 The illusion of a future p. 209 Primal crime p. 213 Summary p. 217 Further Reading p. 218 Conclusion: Free speech and responsibility p. 220 Notes p. 224 Glossary p. 252 Bibliography p. 259 Index p. 270