PMID: 11639298Apr 1, 1994Paper

"Every path will end in darkness" or: why psychoanalysis needs metapsychology

Science in Context
J Brunner

Abstract

This article focuses on the dialectic of metapsychology and hermeneutics in psychoanalysis. By combining the causal language of the former with the intentional terminology of the latter, Freud's discourse continuously transgresses the narrowly conceived boundaries of scientific disciplines and places its stakes in both the humanities and the natural sciences. The argument is made that attempts to reduce psychoanalytic theory to either causal explanation or interpretation of meaning turn it into a closed thought system and rob it of its vitality. It is argued, moreover, that although Freud understood himself to be a scientist, by eschewing the dichotomous reductionism characteristic of both his orthodox followers and critics who tried and still try to turn psychoanalysis into either a natural-science-like discipline or a hermeneutics, Freud demonstrated that his self-understanding was far more sophisticated than admitted by either of these two groups. This argument is supported by a detailed discussion of Freud's epistemological premises, his conception of science and reality, and especially, the place he allocated to metapsychology in his interdisciplinary science. It is claimed that metapsychology served Freud as a double-edge...Continue Reading

References

Jan 1, 1977·Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences·R S Turner
Jan 1, 1977·Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association·P Ricoeur
Jan 1, 1985·Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association·D Ornston
Apr 1, 1973·Annals of Surgery·D Fromm
Sep 1, 1981·The British Journal of Dermatology·R J Rycroft
Jan 1, 1981·Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association·W W Meissner
Jan 1, 1980·Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association·P Mahony
Jan 1, 1980·Journal of the History of Philosophy·D E Leary
Sep 1, 1953·The American Journal of Psychiatry·E D FREUD
Aug 1, 1958·Journal of Experimental Psychology·C V ROMANOW

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