Centers of Power

The Convergence of Psychoanalysis and Kabbalah

By (author) Joseph H. Berke, Stanley R. Schneider

Publication date:

28 December 2007

Length of book:

276 pages

Publisher

Jason Aronson, Inc.

ISBN-13: 9780765705006

Kabbalah and psychoanalysis are conceptions about the nature of reality. The former is over two thousand years old. The latter has been formalized less than a hundred years ago. Nonetheless they are parallel journeys of discovery that have forever altered not only what we see, but the very nature of seeing itself. The domain of Kabbalah is the spiritual and material macrocosm. In contrast the concern of psychoanalysis is the microcosm, the innermost recesses of the human mind. However, both are convergent and complementary theories. Kabbalah asserts 'as above so below,' meaning, the Godhead, the source of everything, is reflected in the smallest details of existence. Similarly, psychoanalysis traces the evolution from 'inner objects' to family feuds and social fields.

More than theories, however, Kabbalah and psychoanalysis test the limits of direct experience. They are contemplative, meditative and introspective methods for restoring shattered worlds and fragmented lives. These are material as well as spiritual entities which have been separated from their source, on one hand 'the Godhead' and on the other, 'personal praxis.' The purpose of this study is to explore how Kabbalah and psychoanalysis converge and diverge, complement and conflict with each other, in order to amplify their impact and enable mankind to gain a greater understanding of reality.
This extraordinary book is an attempt to determine man's place in the world, spiritually and metapsychologically, by exploring two disciplines - psychoanalysis and Kabbalah. Joseph Berke and Stanley Schneider, two world-renowned psychoanalysts and authors, attempt to build a bridge between these disciplines which deal with the nature of man's existence and the various forces that affect his life. The erudite interlocution between the multilayered conceptualizations of psychoanalysis and the rich mystical thinking of Kabbalah, sprinkled with moving clinical vignettes from the world of therapy and with marvelous Hassidic tales and anecdotes, makes it an academic achievement as well as a fascinating journey into man's psychic and spiritual world. I highly recommend this book for its originality and scholarship, and for its readability and clarity of exposition.