Psychoanalysis as a Spiritual Discipline
English


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About The Book

<p>The great existential psychiatrist Ludwig Binswanger famously pointed out to Freud that therapeutic failure could only be understood as the result of something which could be called a deficiency of spirit. Binswanger was surprised when Freud agreed asserting Yes spirit is everything. However spirit and the spiritual realm have largely been dropped from mainstream psychoanalytic theory and practice. </p><p>This book seeks to help revitalize a culturally aging psychoanalysis that is in conceptual and clinical disarray in the marketplace of ideas and is viewed as a theory in crisis no longer regarded as the primary therapy for those who are suffering. The author argues that psychoanalysis and psychoanalytic psychotherapy can be reinvigorated as a discipline if it is animated by the powerfully evocative spiritual moral and ethical insights of two dialogical personalist religious philosophers—Martin Buber a Jew and Gabriel Marcel a Catholic—who both initiated a Copernican revolution in human thought. </p><p>In chapters that focus on love work faith suffering and clinical practice Paul Marcus shows how the spiritual optic of Buber and Marcel can help revive and refresh psychoanalysis and bring it back into the light by communicating its inherent vitality power and relevance to the mental health community and to those who seek psychoanalytic treatment.</p>
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