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Alasdair MacIntyre argues that Freud's conception of the
unconscious is complicated by his tendency to use the term in two
different ways. MacIntyre shows how Freud uses the term
"unconscious" both as a straightforward description of
psychological phenomena, and as an evaluative notion to explain the
links between childhood events and adult behavior. This
clarification helps to shed light on the many misunderstandings of
psychoanalysis, and to separate out what is and what is not of
lasting value in Freud's account of the unconscious.
Alasdair MacIntyre argues that Freud's conception of the
unconscious is complicated by his tendency to use the term in two
different ways. MacIntyre shows how Freud uses the term
"unconscious" both as a straightforward description of
psychological phenomena, and as an evaluative notion to explain the
links between childhood events and adult behavior. This
clarification helps to shed light on the many misunderstandings of
psychoanalysis, and to separate out what is and what is not of
lasting value in Freud's account of the unconscious.
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