Freud, Alder, and Jung: Discovering the Mind

Routledge (1992)
  Copy   BIBTEX

Abstract

Walter Kaufmann completed this, the third and final volume of his landmark trilogy, shortly before his death in 1980. The trilogy is the crowning achievement of a lifetime of study, writing, and teaching. This final volume contains Kaufmann's tribute to Sigmund Freud, the man he thought had done as much as anyone to discover and illuminate the human mind. Kaufmann's own analytical brilliance seems a fitting reflection of Freud's, and his acute commentary affords fitting company to Freud's own thought. Kaufmann traces the intellectual tradition that culminated in Freud's blending of analytic scientific thinking with humanistic insight to create "a poetic science of the mind." He argues that despite Freud's great achievement and celebrity, his work and person have often been misunderstood and unfairly maligned, the victim of poor translations and hostile critics. Kaufmann dispels some of the myths that have surrounded Freud and damaged his reputation. He takes pains to show how undogmatic, how open to discussion, and how modest Freud actually was. Kaufmann endeavors to defend Freud against the attacks of his two most prominent apostate disciples, Alfred Adler and Carl Gustav Jung. Adler is revealed as having been jealous, hostile, and an ingrate, a muddled thinker and unskilled writer, and remarkably lacking in self-understanding. Jung emerges in Kaufmann's depiction as an unattractive, petty, and envious human being, an anti-Semite, an obscure and obscurantist thinker, and, like Adler, lacking insight into himself. Freud, on the contrary, is argued to have displayed great nobility and great insight into himself and his wayward disciples in the course of their famous fallings-out.

Links

PhilArchive



    Upload a copy of this work     Papers currently archived: 91,386

External links

Setup an account with your affiliations in order to access resources via your University's proxy server

Through your library

Similar books and articles

Discovering the mind.Walter Arnold Kaufmann - 1980 - New Brunswick (U.S.A.): Transaction Publishers.
Freud and Psychoanalysis. [REVIEW]E. S. G. - 1961 - Review of Metaphysics 15 (2):343-343.
Freud and Jung on religion.Michael Palmer - 1997 - New York: Routledge.
Charles Taylor, Mikhail Epstein and ‘minimal religion’.Ian Fraser - 2015 - International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 77 (2):159-178.
A New Model for the Human Psyche.Marcia Ricci Pinheiro - 2014 - Journal of Research in Humanities and Social Science 2 (5):61-65.
Accessibility of the subliminal mind: Transcendence vs. immanence.Tao Jiang - 2005 - Continental Philosophy Review 38 (3-4):143-164.

Analytics

Added to PP
2022-04-20

Downloads
4 (#1,599,757)

6 months
3 (#1,002,413)

Historical graph of downloads
How can I increase my downloads?

Citations of this work

No citations found.

Add more citations

References found in this work

No references found.

Add more references