1: Richard Gipps and Michael Lacewing: Introduction: Know
Thyself
I. Intellectual Pre-History
2: Richard Gipps and Michael Lacewing: Intellectual Pre-History:
Introduction
3: Sebastian Gardner: Psychoanalytic Theory: A Historical
Reconstruction
4: Molly Macdonald: From Recognition to Intersubjectivity: Hegel
and Psychoanalysis
5: Andrew Brook and Christopher Young: Schopenhauer and Freud
6: Stella Sandford: From Geschlechtstrieb to Sexualtrieb: The
Originality of Freud's Conception of Sexuality
7: Ken Gemes: A Better Self: Freud and Nietzsche on the Nature and
Value of Sublimation
II. 20th Century Engagements
8: Richard Gipps and Michael Lacewing: Twentieth Century
Engagements: Introduction
9: James Phillips: Merleau-Ponty and Psychoanalysis
10: Donald Levy: Wittgenstein and Psychoanalysis
11: Martin Jay: "In Psychoanalysis Nothing is True but the
Exaggerations": Freud and the Frankfurt School
12: Richard Bernstein: Ricoeur's Freud
III. Clinical Theory
13: Richard Gipps and Michael Lacewing: Clinical Theory:
Introduction
14: Jonathan Lear: Imagination and Reason, Method and Mourning in
Freudian Psychoanalysis
15: Judith Hughes: "A Ritual of Discourse": Conceptualizing and
Re-conceptualizing the Analytic Relationship
16: Agnes Petocz: 1. Symbolism, the primary process, and dreams:
Freud's contribution
17: Tamas Pataki: Wishfulfilment
18: Adam Leite: Integrating Unconscious Belief
19: David Finkelstein: Making the Unconscious Conscious
IV. Phenomenology and Science
20: Richard Gipps and Michael Lacewing: Phenomenology and Science:
Introduction
21: Morris Eagle: Complexities in the Evaluation of the Scientific
Status of Psychoanalysis
22: Jim Hopkins: Psychoanalysis and Neuroscience
23: Michael Lacewing: How Should We Understand the Psychoanalytic
Unconscious?
24: Richard Gipps: A New Kind of Song: Psychoanalysis as
Revelation
25: Thomas Fuchs: Body Memory and the Unconscious
V. Aesthetics
26: Michael Lacewing and Richard Gipps: Aesthetics:
Introduction
27: Damien Freeman: On Richard Wollheim's psychoanalytically
informed philosophy of art
28: Elisa Galgut: Literary Form and Mentalization
29: Damian Cox and Michael Levine: Psychoanalysis and Film
VI. Religion
30: Michael Lacewing and Richard Gipps: Religion: Introduction
31: John Cottingham: Psychoanalysis and Religion
32: Rachel Blass: Psychoanalytic Thinking on Religious Truth and
Conviction
33: Richard Boothby: The No-Thing of God: Psychoanalysis of
Religion After Lacan
VII. Ethics
34: Michael Lacewing and Richard Gipps: Ethics: Introduction
35: Joel Backström: Hiding from Love: The Repressed Insight in
Freud's Account of Morality
36: Edward Harcourt: Human Excellence and Psychic Health in
Psychoanalysis
37: Darcia Narvaez: Evolution, Childhood and the Moral Self
VIII. Politics and Society
38: Michael Lacewing and Richard Gipps: Politics and Society:
Introduction
39: Stephen Frosh: Psychoanalysis, Politics and Society: What
Remains Radical in Psychoanalysis?
40: Michael Rustin: Epistemic Anxiety
41: Louise Gyler: Psychoanalysis in the 21st Century: Does Gender
Matter?
42: Judith Butler: 1. Political Philosophy in Freud: War,
Destruction, and the Critical Faculty
Dr Richard Gipps is a clinical psychologist in private
psychotherapy practice in Oxford, UK, and an associate of the
Philosophy Faculty at the University of Oxford. He convenes the
Philosophy Special Interest Group of the Institute of
Psychoanalysis, the Oxford Interdisciplinary Seminars in
Psychoanalysis, and the Making the Unconscious Conscious seminar
series. His research interests lie in psychoanalysis, psychosis,
existential phenomenology, and Wittgenstein. Dr
Michael Lacewing is a former Vice-Principal Academic and Reader in
Philosophy at Heythrop College, London, an Honorary Reader in
Research Department of Clinical, Educational and Health Psychology
at
University College, London, and a teacher of philosophy and
theology at Christ's Hospital School, Sussex. He has published
widely in philosophy of psychoanalysis, metaethics and moral
psychology, alongside writing textbooks for A level philosophy and
training in Philosophy for Children (P4C).
"Gipps and Lacewing present a rich and well-edited collection that
strengthens the connection, and clarifies the distinction, between
the handbook's two title disciplines. OHPP will be of interest to
both philosophers and psychoanalysts and is apt to inspire further
dialogue between them.
*Sebastian Petzolt, Metapsychology*
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