Basic Psychoanalytic Concepts on the Theory of Instincts

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Basic Psychoanalytic Concepts
Category=JMAF
clinical instinct theory evolution
component
Component Instincts
death
Death Instinct
Destructive Instinct
Dual Instinct Theory
ENT
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erotogenic
Erotogenic Masochism
Erotogenic Zone
Follow
Freud's Instinct Theory
Freudian drive theory
freuds
Hampstead Child Therapy Clinic
human aggression research
Infantile Sexual Life
Instinct Theory
introductory
lectures
libido development
masochism and sadism
Moral Masochism
Normal Sexual Aim
Obsessional Neurosis
Passive Aim
pleasure
Primary Masochism
principle
psychoanalytic metapsychology
repetition compulsion analysis
Scopophilic Instinct
Secondary Masochism
Self-preservative Instincts
sexual
Sexual Component Instinct
Sexual Instinct
Urethral Erotism
Young Men
zone

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138964419
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 20 Jun 2016
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Originally published in 1970, this volume describes in condensed but detailed form Freud’s development of the theory of instincts. As is well known, Freud reformulated and amplified his theory of instincts at several points during his lifetime. Such periodical amplifications and reformulations were made necessary by a number of factors, for as Freud gained experience he not only developed fresh insights but also was faced with the problem of explaining an increasing amount of clinical phenomena that offered itself for examination under the psychoanalytic microscope.

There can be no doubt that Freud considered his theory of instincts as one of the corner stones of psychoanalysis and yet at the same time he recognised that it was an area where many of his formulations were necessarily of a tentative character and open to discussion and modification.

In this volume the reader will be able to follow the development of Freud’s thought from his initial discovery of the duality of ‘sexual’ and ‘ego’ instincts and his recognition of the fundamental importance of the aggressive forces in human nature and behaviour, to the formulation of his theories regarding life and death.