Toward a Kierkegaardian critique of psychoanalysis: Can we come to psychoanalytic terms with death?

Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 27 (1-4):219 – 223 (1984)
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Abstract

There are religious thinkers of Kierkegaard's ilk who concede that their belief in an afterlife is the expression of a wish and an offense to the understanding. Freud could not agree more. The collision that this essay plots comes when a Freud and a Kierkegaard try to decide what the individual is to do with such inherently human, unrealistic desires. Freud urges us to forsake all wish?fulfilling thoughts of everlasting life; however, this requires nothing less than the acceptance of imminent, everlasting death. This is a difficult thought to think I half argue, half insist. The question is raised as to whether or not psychoanalysis can help us come to terms with the reality it compels us to face. A negative conclusion is reached

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Gordon Daniel Marino
St. Olaf College

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