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Freud, civilization, religion and stoicism

journal contribution
posted on 2006-01-01, 00:00 authored by Douglas Kirsner
Freud's debt to stoicism has been seldom discussed. His attitude toward science had a distinct ethical slant taken from the ancient world, via Freud's humanistic education. Freud's method involved detachment but did not imply moral coldness and indifference any more than stoicism did. The stoics wanted to be therapists of the mind just as physicians cared for the body. For both Freud and the stoics, reason was in battle with the passions and required clear sight to have a chance of prevailing over them. In contrasting religious worldviews with the scientific approach, Freud failed to see his own approach as ethical. Freud made extensive forays at individual and collective levels but in the years since Freud's death, the psychoanalytic vision has narrowed. At 150 years after his birth, the authors can still admire Freud's exceptional ethical courage and recognize that if psychoanalysis is to survive, it needs to regain his cultural range and spirit of critical inquiry

History

Journal

Psychoanalytic psychology

Volume

23

Issue

2

Season

Spring

Pagination

354 - 366

Publisher

American Psychological Association

Location

New Jersey, N.J.

ISSN

0736-9735

eISSN

1939-1331

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2006, American Psychological Association

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