PSYCHOANALYSIS QUOTES III

quotations about psychoanalysis

Psychoanalysis quote

Psychoanalysis is unlikely to be repealed; people are not going to go back to reading novels in order to understand themselves and their lives.

GEOFFREY NUNBERG

The Decline of Grammar


In reality, psychoanalysis can only have the effect of bringing to the surface, by making it clearly conscious, all the content of these "bottoms" of being which form what is called the "subconscious"; This being, moreover, is already psychically weak by hypothesis, since, if it were otherwise, he would have no need to resort to a treatment of this kind; It is therefore the less capable of resisting this "submersion", and it is very likely to sink irretrievably into this chaos of dark forces imprudently unleashed; If, nevertheless, he succeeds in escaping it, he will at least retain, throughout his life, an imprint which will be in him an ineffaceable "defilement".

RENE GUENON

Articles Et Comptes Rendus


If Freud turns to literature to describe traumatic experience, it is because literature, like psychoanalysis, is interested in the complex relation between knowing and not knowing, and it is at this specific point at which knowing and not knowing intersect that the psychoanalytic theory of traumatic experience and the language of literature meet.

CATHY CARUTH

Unclaimed Experience


As in all infant sciences, the universal habit of the human mind - to take a partial or local truth, generalise it unduly and try to explain a whole field of nature in its narrow terms - runs riot here (in psychoanalysis).

SRI AUROBINDO

Integral Yoga

Tags: Sri Aurobindo


Psychoanalysis provides truth in an infantile, that is, a schoolboy fashion: we learn from it, roughly and hurriedly, things that scandalize us and thereby command our attention. It sometimes happens, and such is the case here, that a simplification touching upon the truth, but cheaply, is of no more value than a lie. Once again we are shown the demon and the angel, the beast and the god locked in Manichean embrace, and once again man has been pronounced, by himself, not culpable.

STANISLAW LEM

His Master's Voice