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Click Here for: Part VI
Click Here to Read: Dreaming by the Book: Freud’s Interpretation of Dreams and the Psychoanalytic Movement by Lydia Marinelli and Andreas Mayer reviewed by Arnold D. Richards.
This article has been previously published
Richards, Arnold (2007, Summer). Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association 55(3), 1085-1090 and appears here with the requisite rights and permissions.
“I would even go so far as to muse that this conference was born partly from a covert agenda to punish the American–not to bring us together really, but rather to stabilize and strengthen the fact of our separateness. Some may even hope to do harm to the American, to weaken its influence.”
This ecumenical conference was my idea, and I would like to assure all of you that punishment and exclusion were not part of my agenda. Quite the opposite. So I would like to set the record straight with a brief history.
Our field has been fractious from the beginning. Those in Freud’s inner circle who dared to disagree were cast out; they formed their own factions and the battles began. While some feel energized by adversity and debate, I prefer to seek the security of unity. My wish is for all of the groups to join together, to derive strength in their combined numbers. We need not agree on everything, but we must respect one another’s positions.
For years I have experienced the competition of institutes and umbrella groups, oft times ignoring each other’s existence. For instance, there has been little, if any, cooperation between the 5 IPA institutes in
Click Here to Read: An Interview with Charles Brenner by Edward Nersessian on June 30 1985.
Click Here to Read: More about Charles Brenner and his important work, Beyond the Ego and The Id, Revisited. International Universities Press, Inc. and the Journal of Clinical Psychoanalysis, in collaboration with FreudNet, the web site of the A.A. Brill Library of The New York Psychoanalytic Institute, are pleased to announce the latest installment of a debate first sparked by the online presentation of Dr. Charles Brenner’s article, “The Mind As Conflict And Compromise Formation” (originally published in the Journal, volume 3 number 4).
To The Editor NY Science Times
The thrust of Benedict Carey’s article on dreams is that dreams have to do with memory and cognition, not, as Freud proposed, with emotional motivation. However, the findings presented in this article do not address adequately the fuller context of our knowledge about the nature of dreams, or about their meaning and their use in psychoanalysis. Mark Solms, for example, has assembled a very persuasive body of neuroscientific studies supporting the view that dreaming has to do with motivation and desire as well as cognition. Carey cites Allen Hobson without noting that Hobson, along with most of his research colleagues, has abandoned his original theory that dreams are the product of random neural firings. A hundred years of psychoanalytic research and experience show that much can be learned about people’s mental and emotional lives through dream interpretation and other psychoanalytic methods. Time Magazine had it right. Freud is NOT dead.
Arnold D. Richards
Click Here to Read the New York Science Times Article
To the Editor:
I would like to add to the article Patching Up the Frayed Couch recognition of the contribution to psychoanalytic scholarship made by members on the New York Psychoanalytic Society The editors of two of the most important journals in psychoanalysis the Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association and the Psychoanalytic Quarterly were for decades members of NYPSI.
Just as the venerable New York Times has been reinventing it self the article points out for me the need for NYPSI and psychoanalysis to reinvent ourself for a new time.
Arnold Richards
Member NYPSA
Former Editor JAPA
Click here for Link to the New York Times Article: Patching-up the Frayed Couch
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/09/09/nyregion/thecity/09anal.html?pagewanted=1&_r=1&ref=thecity