The Identity of Psychoananalysis and Psychoanalyts by Arnold Richards and Arthur Lynch

THE AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR PSYCHOANALYSIS

Of the Karen Horney Psychoanalytic Center

329 East 62nd Street, New York, NY 10065

212-838-8044 www.aipnyc.org

SCIENTIFIC MEETING

Thursday, May 1, 2008 at 8:00 PM

THE IDENTITY OF PSYCHOANALYSIS

AND PSYCHOANALYSTS

Psychoanalysis has been in a constant uninterrupted debate about its identity as a discipline and as a social institution. This paper considers the place of science in psychoanalysis, on the one hand, and the hermeneutic nature of our discipline, on the other. The aim is to articulate a typology of psychoanalytic knowledge that characterizes psychoanalysis as a form of therapy, an intellectual movement, and a theoretical system. This typology considers psychoanalysis as a thought collective that influences its members by exchanging and maintaining ideas. To a well-rounded psychoanalytic thinker or practitioner one must be able to move easily among three realms of knowledge – the humanities, the social sciences and the natural sciences. Each realm has its own criteria of truth and the challenge is to know when to employ which criteria.

Presenters:

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ARNOLD D. RICHARDS, M.D., Training and Supervising Analyst, New York Psychoanalytic Institute; former Editor of JAPA (1994–2003), and The American Psychoanalyst (1989–1994); Faculty, NYU and Mount Sinai Medical Schools, Departments of Psychiatry; member, APA Division 39, Section I, New York Freudian Society; honorary member, American Institute for Psychoanalysis and the New Jersey Psychoanalytic Society.

 

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ARTHUR A. LYNCH, D.S.W., Senior faculty member and Supervising Analyst, American Institute for Psychoanalysis; Adjunct Professor, Columbia University School of Social Work. Coauthor (with Richards) of numerous articles on comparative and historical psychoanalysis including “Merton Gill: A View of His Place in the Freudian Firmament,” “From Ego Psychology to Contemporary Conflict Theory: An Historical Overview,” and most recently, the Identity of Psychoanalysis and Psychoanalysts.

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KAREN HORNEY CLINIC AUDITORIUM