Reflections on knowledge and experience |
| |
Authors: | Warren Colman |
| |
Affiliation: | , St Albans, UK |
| |
Abstract: | As analysts become more experienced, theoretical knowledge becomes more integrated and implicit and is gradually transformed into the practical wisdom (phronesis) described by Aristotle. While this leads to greater freedom in ways of working, it remains conditional on the consistent disciplined practice represented by the analytic attitude. In the context of my own development as an analyst, I suggest that increasingly the analyst works from the self rather than the ego and link this with Fordham's account of ‘not knowing beforehand’. Some implications for boundaries, enactment and the use of personal disclosure are discussed in relation to clinical material. I compare analysis with the wisdom traditions of religious practice and suggest that analysis is concerned with a way of living rooted in humane values of compassion and benevolence. |
| |
Keywords: | analytic attitude analytic super‐ego boundaries enactment phronesis unknowing wisdom |
|
|