Nietzsche and PsychoanalysisThis book presents a reading of the Nietzschean thought of the eternal return of all things and relates it to Freud's psychoanalysis of the repetition compulsion. Nietzsche's eternal return and Freud's repetition compulsion have never before been so seriously compared. The manner in which this study is executed is drastically different from usual Nietzsche scholarship and Freud studies. Chapelle works with his material until it acquires archetypal levels of significance, even while the level of everyday life experience is never abandoned. He returns the theory and practice of psychologizing and philosophizing to the old ground of imaginative poetic and ultimately mythic thought. |
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... . 3. Obsessive - compulsive neurosis . 4. Freud , Sigmund , 1856-1939 . 5. Psychoanalysis — History . I. Title . B3318.E88C43 116 — dc20 1933 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 92-35535 CIP Contents Introduction : A Demonic Thought for a Start 1.
... . 3. Obsessive - compulsive neurosis . 4. Freud , Sigmund , 1856-1939 . 5. Psychoanalysis — History . I. Title . B3318.E88C43 116 — dc20 1933 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 92-35535 CIP Contents Introduction : A Demonic Thought for a Start 1.
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Daniel Chapelle. Contents Introduction : A Demonic Thought for a Start 1 PART I : NIETZSCHE ETERNAL RETURN 1. " What if ... ? " Willing Suspension of Disbelief 17 2. Scientific Disbelief : Attempt at Exorcism ... Thought for a Start What , ...
Daniel Chapelle. Contents Introduction : A Demonic Thought for a Start 1 PART I : NIETZSCHE ETERNAL RETURN 1. " What if ... ? " Willing Suspension of Disbelief 17 2. Scientific Disbelief : Attempt at Exorcism ... Thought for a Start What , ...
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... thought and sigh and everything unutterably small or great in your life will have to return to you , all in the same succession and sequence — even this spider and this moonlight between the trees , and even this moment and I myself ...
... thought and sigh and everything unutterably small or great in your life will have to return to you , all in the same succession and sequence — even this spider and this moonlight between the trees , and even this moment and I myself ...
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... thought of eternal return concretely relevant both as a direct experience and as a thought that shapes experience . The book proceeds in two movements . The first movement uses Nietzsche's writings to show that it is indeed permissible ...
... thought of eternal return concretely relevant both as a direct experience and as a thought that shapes experience . The book proceeds in two movements . The first movement uses Nietzsche's writings to show that it is indeed permissible ...
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Daniel Chapelle. thought to become appropriated . Nietzsche wants his reader to know that eternal return is not a thought any philosopher will automatically arrive at by following familiar rules of reason to their logical conclusion ...
Daniel Chapelle. thought to become appropriated . Nietzsche wants his reader to know that eternal return is not a thought any philosopher will automatically arrive at by following familiar rules of reason to their logical conclusion ...
Contents
What If? Willing Suspension of Disbelief | 17 |
Scientific Disbelief Attempt at Exorcism | 25 |
Inspiration Appropriation Transformation | 35 |
Time and Its It Was | 51 |
Tragedy ApolloDionysus | 69 |
Necessity Amor Fati | 79 |
Zarathustra His Own Worst Enemy? | 87 |
Eternal Return in Everyday Life | 95 |
Thanatos What if Eternal Return were Instinctual? | 143 |
Transference Analysis Healing the Wound of Time | 163 |
The Myth of Archetypal Ontology | 175 |
The Uncanny | 191 |
The Double | 209 |
Soul and Image Archetypal Psychology | 225 |
To Find a Good Book to Live in | 241 |
Abbreviations | 247 |
Eternal Return in Transference | 103 |
Compulsion into Metaphor | 113 |
The Myth of Er Eternal Compulsion into Image | 129 |
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Common terms and phrases
activity affirmation amor fati analysand appears archetypal psychology autonomous becomes begins believe Birth of Tragedy claim compulsion to repeat concrete cosmology of eternal death instinct demon destiny Dionysus discovery double ego's Eros everyday everything existence experience Fort-Da game Freud Gay Science Hades Heidegger Hence Heracleitus Hillman human idea imagination impermanence interpretation involves James Hillman Judeo-Christian life's linear living man's manifestation means metaphor metaphysics myth myth of Er mythic Nachlaß negation neuroses Nietzsche Nietzsche's thought Nietzschean notion ontology paradox passage philosophic Platonism pleasure principle poetic present psychoanalysis question Quixote reality realm recurrence redemption reflection refutation relation repetition compulsion repressed Ricoeur says sense serves shadow Socrates soul speaks spirit Spoke Zarathustra suggests symptoms theory things thinking eternal return thought of eternal tion transformation true world truth turn uncanny unconscious underworld unpleasure wants words writes Zarathustra
Popular passages
Page 1 - Would you not throw yourself down and gnash your teeth and curse the demon who spoke thus? Or have you once experienced a tremendous moment when you would have answered him: "You are a god and never have I heard anything more divine.