The universal quest to create cosmologies to comprehend the
relationship between mind and world - is inevitably limited by the
social, cultural and historical perspective of the observer, in
this instance western psychoanalysis. In this book Michael Robbins
attempts to transcend such contextual limitations by putting
forward a primordial form of mental activity that co-exists
alongside thought and is of equal importance in human affairs.
This book challenges the western assumption that knowledge is
synonymous with rational thought and that the aspect of mind that
is not thought is immature, irrational, regressive and
pathological. Robbins illustrates the central role of primordial
mental activity in spiritual cultures analogous to that of thought
in western culture as well as its significant contributions to
numerous other phenomena including dreaming, language, creativity,
shamanism and psychosis.
In addition to his extensive clinical experience as a
psychoanalyst Robbins draws on first-hand contact with Maori and
other shamanistic cultures. Vividly illustrated by first and second
hand accounts, this book will be of great interest to
psychoanalysts, those with a psychological interest in spiritual
cultures as well as those in the fields of developmental
psychology, cultural anthropology, neuroscience, aesthetics and
linguistics.
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