Psychoanalysis, man, and value

Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 4 (1-4):53 – 65 (1961)
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Abstract

Psychology does not seek to correlate independent happenings, but to discern in the manifold of a unique life, or of a unique culture, the pervasive sense or meaning which the life or culture expresses. The method is appropriate to the subject: a human being is not a string of lawfully connected events but an embodied meaning, an incarnated value. Psychology is therefore less like physics than it is like the critical interpretation of a work of art. It is psychoanalytical. Some of the traditional objections to psychoanalytic theory disappear in the light of this conception. Others vanish when it is realized that the analytic situation, being personal encounter as well as interpretative analysis, to some extent creates the being it analyzes

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Explanation in psychoanalysis and history.Edward H. Madden - 1966 - Philosophy of Science 33 (3):278-286.

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