JUMPING FROM THE COUCH |
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Authors: | Jonathan Lear |
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Affiliation: | Committee on Social Thought, The University of Chicago, Chicago, IL 60637, USA - |
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Abstract: | This paper addresses two questions: first, how do phantasies work? Second, how do these mental activities affect a person's overall emotional life? The first question tends to be overlooked since those who accept, for example, projective identification as a basic mental activity tend also to treat it as an explanatory primitive. On this view, there is no further question to ask about how projective identification itself works; rather, other psychological and emotional phenomena are explained in terms of it. By contrast, this paper asks, how does projective identification itself work? The aim is not to provide a reductive explanation but to ask how it is that phantasies have the efficacy they have. To that end, one moment in the analysis of the Rat Man is re‐examined. There is then an attempt to show the difficulties involved in weaving an account of phantasy into the broader‐scale interpretation of emotional life. |
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Keywords: | phantasy emotions projective identification rat man defence swerve break fear development |
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