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Freud - From Individual Psychology to Group Psychology (Hardcover)
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Freud - From Individual Psychology to Group Psychology (Hardcover)
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Freud: From Individual Psychology to Group Psychology, by M. Andrew
Holowchak, explores Freudian psychoanalysis as a full-fledged
science, as it relates psychoanalytically to issues of individual
psychology (Individualpsychologie) and group psychology
(Massenpsychologie). It answers questions such as "How effective
did Freud perceive individual psychology to be?," "What is group
psychology?," "To what extent did Freud think psychoanalytic
investigation of group pathology could be curative of social
ills?," "How seriously did Freud take metapsychological
explanation?," and "How important were auxiliary hypotheses,
borrowed (often uncritically) from other disciplines, in the
formation of group psychology?" In sketching out the development of
individual psychology and group psychology, Holowchak argues that
for Freud, psychoanalysis was always essentially a procedure for
investigating unconscious phenomena that allowed for explication
and understanding of both individual and group issues. Part I of
Freud focuses on individual psychology, traces out the development
of Freud's thought on clinical therapy and analyzing the various
clinical methods and theories Freud employed over the years.
Holowchak critically examines the merit of Freudian psychoanalysis
as a remedy for individual pathology. Part II focuses on group
psychology, starting with an overview of the conditions influencing
Freud's shift to group-psychology issues and moving on to a
psychoanalytic examination of other disciplines-non-sciences and
sciences alike. Finally, Holowchak analyzes the worth of Freudian
psychoanalysis as a remedy for group pathology. Readers are given a
comprehensive depiction as well as a critical analysis of the
development of psychoanalysis in an easy-to-assimilate manner from
Freud's early days in analytic therapy, beginning with his stays
with Charcot and Bernheim in France, to his mature thinking, where
he develops notions such as the death drive and the structural
model (id, ego, and super-ego) to compensate for theoretical
defects in his earlier thinking.
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