Freud's Concept Of The Death Drive And Its Relation To The Superego

Minerva 9:153-176 (2005)
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Abstract

This paper addresses the emergence of the ‘death drive’ in Sigmund Freud’s later work, and thesignificance of this development for his psychoanalytic theory as a whole. In particular, the paper arguesthat the ‘death drive’ is a pivotal concept, articulating a connection between what are commonlyunderstood as the ‘lower’ and ‘higher’ functions of the psyche. Moreover, the death drive is pivotal in asecond sense, in that it articulates a turn away from the strictly empirical realm of science, to a dark andobscure field indicated , but not comprehended, by observable phenomena. Finally, thepaper suggests that as Freud’s departure from his scientific methodology into the wilderness of speculation,the death drive represents his most valuable contribution to psychoanalysis. With the death drive, Freud isable to engender a new perspective of human being: one that is not already encompassed by themechanistic neurological viewpoint from which his researches first issued

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reprint Faulkner, Joanne (2005) "Freud's concept of the death drive and tis relation to the superego". Minerva - An Internet Journal of Philosophy 9(1):

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