Become a Readings Member to make your shopping experience even easier. Sign in or sign up for free!

Become a Readings Member. Sign in or sign up for free!

Hello Readings Member! Go to the member centre to view your orders, change your details, or view your lists, or sign out.

Hello Readings Member! Go to the member centre or sign out.

The Grammar of the Unconscious: The Conceptual Foundations of Psychoanalysis
Paperback

The Grammar of the Unconscious: The Conceptual Foundations of Psychoanalysis

$145.99
Sign in or become a Readings Member to add this title to your wishlist.

This book makes an important contribution to understanding the nature and status of psychoanalytic theory by showing how a Wittgenstein-inspired clarification of Freud’s original work dissolves commonplace misunderstandings about the unconscious mind. Its detailed analysis of various aspects of the metapsychology represents an important contribution to deconstruction of empiricist claims on behalf of psychoanalysis. Elder’s apt adaptation of Wittgenstein’s grammatical method to psychoanalysis addresses questions at the core of the debate between hermeneuticists like Ricoeur and Habermas on the one hand and philosophers of science like Grunbaum and Edelson on the other. Elder argues convincingly that the value of psychoanalytic theory lies primarily in its innovative conceptual framework, set of terms, images, and models for the description of human experience. Whether or not one accepts Elder’s conclusions, one must be grateful for his careful and thorough treatment of the subject. -Ernest Wallwork, Syracuse University The Grammar of the Unconscious reads and queries Freud’s understanding of psychical reality using Wittgensteinian ‘grammatical analysis.’ I am convinced that this use provides original and important critiques of Freud’s scientific self-understanding and of influential misreadings of Freud. As it does so, it exemplifies grammatical analysis in lively, moving, and clear language. The reader is invited to think with the author, who becomes a conceptually rigorous, meditative, lyrical, amusing, and honest guide, through the different uses of foundational psychoanalytical terms. In my judgment, this study should define the terms in which the status of Freudian theory is henceforth discussed. -Judith Van Herik, Pennsylvania State University The Grammar of the Unconscious is both an inquiry into certain long-standing conceptual problems and the exemplification of Wittgenstein’s grammatical method. The problems are for the most part those tha

Read More
In Shop
Out of stock
Shipping & Delivery

$9.00 standard shipping within Australia
FREE standard shipping within Australia for orders over $100.00
Express & International shipping calculated at checkout

MORE INFO
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Pennsylvania State University Press
Country
United States
Date
15 September 1994
Pages
272
ISBN
9780271025674

This book makes an important contribution to understanding the nature and status of psychoanalytic theory by showing how a Wittgenstein-inspired clarification of Freud’s original work dissolves commonplace misunderstandings about the unconscious mind. Its detailed analysis of various aspects of the metapsychology represents an important contribution to deconstruction of empiricist claims on behalf of psychoanalysis. Elder’s apt adaptation of Wittgenstein’s grammatical method to psychoanalysis addresses questions at the core of the debate between hermeneuticists like Ricoeur and Habermas on the one hand and philosophers of science like Grunbaum and Edelson on the other. Elder argues convincingly that the value of psychoanalytic theory lies primarily in its innovative conceptual framework, set of terms, images, and models for the description of human experience. Whether or not one accepts Elder’s conclusions, one must be grateful for his careful and thorough treatment of the subject. -Ernest Wallwork, Syracuse University The Grammar of the Unconscious reads and queries Freud’s understanding of psychical reality using Wittgensteinian ‘grammatical analysis.’ I am convinced that this use provides original and important critiques of Freud’s scientific self-understanding and of influential misreadings of Freud. As it does so, it exemplifies grammatical analysis in lively, moving, and clear language. The reader is invited to think with the author, who becomes a conceptually rigorous, meditative, lyrical, amusing, and honest guide, through the different uses of foundational psychoanalytical terms. In my judgment, this study should define the terms in which the status of Freudian theory is henceforth discussed. -Judith Van Herik, Pennsylvania State University The Grammar of the Unconscious is both an inquiry into certain long-standing conceptual problems and the exemplification of Wittgenstein’s grammatical method. The problems are for the most part those tha

Read More
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Pennsylvania State University Press
Country
United States
Date
15 September 1994
Pages
272
ISBN
9780271025674