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Phantoms of the Clinic
A01=Mikita Brottman
Anna Von Lieben
Author_Mikita Brottman
Category=JMAF
Charcot
clinical psychology research
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ESP
Independent Replication Experiments
Jean Martin Charcot
Jule Eisenbud
Laing's Thoughts
Laing’s Thoughts
Long Term Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy
Lucky Number
Melanie Klein concepts
Morphic Field
Morphic Resonance
Mundus Imaginalis
National Academy
occult in psychotherapy
Participation Mystique
Primary Process Thinking
psychoanalysis science relationship
Psychoanalytic Dyad
psychoanalytic theory
Psychotic Major Depression
Raymond De Saussure
Rhine Experiments
Richard III
Ted Serios
Telepathic Dreams
transference phenomena
Uncanny Valley
unconscious communication
Vice Versa
Young Man
Product details
- ISBN 9780367107161
- Weight: 453g
- Dimensions: 146 x 229mm
- Publication Date: 14 Jun 2019
- Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Publication City/Country: GB
- Product Form: Hardback
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As Freud predicted, there has always been great anxiety about the place of psychoanalysis in contemporary life, particularly in relation to its ambiguous and complicated relationship to the realm of science. There is also a long history of widespread resistance, in both academia and medicine, to anything associated with the world of the supernatural; very few people, in their professional lives, at least, are willing to admit a serious interest in occult phenomena. As a result, paranormal traces have all but vanished from the psychoanalytic process - though not without leaving a residue. This residue remains, the author argues, in the acceptably "clinical" guise of projective identification, a concept first formulated by Melanie Klein, and widely used in contemporary psychoanalysis to suggest a different variety of transference and transference-like phenomena between patient and analyst that seem to occur outside the normal range of the sensory process.
Mikita Brottman
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