How has a theory of man as a social being to be formulated if we
are to do justice to his individuality, to the subtle ways in which
his love and hate compete within his relations with others and to
the anxieties and resistances he shows when he seeks to change
himself? To answer this question is the task which the author sets
himself. After assessing Freud's basic principles, the author
proceeds to make a uniquely comprehensive review of subsequent
theoretical contributions to psychoanalysis with special emphasis
on the work of Fairbairn and Melanie Klein. From a background of
philosophy, theology and social studies, the author went on to take
a personal psychoanalysis and to become a full time
psychotherapist, and it is from this combination of wide knowledge
and intensive work with people beset by conflicts in their
relations with themselves and others that he evolves his views.
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