The Road to Unity in Psychoanalytic Theory
By (author) Leo Rangell
Publication date:
28 December 2006Length of book:
128 pagesPublisher
Jason Aronson, Inc.Dimensions:
238x154mm6x9"
ISBN-13: 9780765705129
The theory of psychoanalysis was the breakthrough that defined the intellectual ambience of the 20th century. Two-thirds of the way into the century, the new science peaked and started a steep decline. While many look to external factors, or more recently to internal organizational ones, Dr. Leo Rangell has steadfastly pointed to theoretical fragmentation as the source of the loss of inspiration the discipline previously enjoyed.
The Controversial Discussions need to be superseded by Discussions of Controversies. The British attempt at mid-century, with its outcome far from logical or inspiring, had best be followed by reparative discussions throughout the analytic world, with human impediments met and dissolved, for as long as it takes. The ideational issues that divide are few and finite in comparison to the breadth of the consensual base. Dr. Rangell traces the mixture of ideas and people intrinsic to the history of splits, and describes a total, cumulative, composite theory aiming toward internal coherence in the service of survival and the future of the science.
The Controversial Discussions need to be superseded by Discussions of Controversies. The British attempt at mid-century, with its outcome far from logical or inspiring, had best be followed by reparative discussions throughout the analytic world, with human impediments met and dissolved, for as long as it takes. The ideational issues that divide are few and finite in comparison to the breadth of the consensual base. Dr. Rangell traces the mixture of ideas and people intrinsic to the history of splits, and describes a total, cumulative, composite theory aiming toward internal coherence in the service of survival and the future of the science.
A prolific writer on psychoanalysis, Rangell has been president of both the American Psychoanalytic Association and the International Psychoanalytic Association. This volume, although an easy read for a broad audience, is a psychiatric insider's effort to reconcile differences among theoretical allegiances via the author's 'total composite theory.' The volume describes historical and current theoretical differences among psychoanalytic perspectives, especially as they have erupted in the national and international organizations. A closing chapter reviews Rangell's contributions to total theory, which include (in the 1960s and 1970s) adding unconscious decision-making to the ego functions and (in 2004) presenting mass psychology as subject to the same explanatory system as individual psychology. Summing Up: Graduate students, researchers, and professionals.