Critical Notes on The Psychoanalysts Theorizing
- 1 August 1994
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association
- Vol. 42 (3) , 697-725
- https://doi.org/10.1177/000306519404200302
Abstract
The extant literature on psychoanalytic methodology scarcely addresses the question as to when, or under what conditions, the psychoanalyst's inner activities of theoretical formulation might be resistive to or facilitative of the psychoanalytic process. These notes are a preliminary exploration of what might be at issue in answering such questions. General problems concerning the status of theorizing in contemporary philosophy of science and in psychoanalysis are reviewed, and some elementary ways in which theorizing activity might govern the psychoanalyst's functioning are discussed. It is suggested that there are currently three radically divergent attitudes toward such activity, and these are depicted as the computational, the engaged, and the cadaverized psychoanalyst. It is argued that these attitudes foster or fixate the psychoanalyst's illusions, and are therefore resistive to the psychoanalyst's radical responsibility to interrogate free-associatively his or her own suppositions and discursive maneuvers.Keywords
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- Quantum PhilosophyScientific American, 1992
- Experimental studies of higher cortical functions that proceed without conscious awarenessPsychoanalytic Inquiry, 1992
- Nonconscious acquisition of information.American Psychologist, 1992
- ProloguePsychoanalytic Inquiry, 1990
- ProloguePsychoanalytic Inquiry, 1989
- The Four Psychologies of Psychoanalysis and Their Place in Clinical WorkJournal of the American Psychoanalytic Association, 1988
- ProloguePsychoanalytic Inquiry, 1987
- Thinking about persons.Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1984
- The Relation Between Psychoanalytic Theory And Psychoanalytic TechniqueJournal of the American Psychoanalytic Association, 1984
- The psychological unconscious: A necessary assumption for all psychological theory?American Psychologist, 1980