The Origins of Love and Hate
Title | The Origins of Love and Hate PDF eBook |
Author | Ian Dishart Suttie |
Publisher | Psychology Press |
Total Pages | 304 |
Release | 1999 |
Genre | Family & Relationships |
ISBN | 9780415210423 |
First Published in 1999. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.
The Origins Of Love And Hate
Title | The Origins Of Love And Hate PDF eBook |
Author | Suttie, Ian D |
Publisher | Routledge |
Total Pages | 304 |
Release | 2014-06-23 |
Genre | Medical |
ISBN | 1317853849 |
First published in 1999. The author presents a passionate argument for a therapeutic practice based on the physician's love for the deeply deprived patient. Ian Suttie, a psychiatrist of the Tavistock clinic in the 1930s, advocates a more optimistic view of human nature than traditional Freudian psychology. Hadfield describes the importance of this title by stating that where the reader does not agree with the author they will, nevertheless, have their own thoughts stimulated and their own views clarified.
Love and Hate
Title | Love and Hate PDF eBook |
Author | David Mann |
Publisher | Routledge |
Total Pages | 317 |
Release | 2013-11-12 |
Genre | Psychology |
ISBN | 1317763076 |
Love and hate seem to be the dominant emotions that make the world go round and are a central theme in psychotherapy. Love and Hate seeks to answer some important questions about these all consuming passions. Many patients seeking psychotherapy feel unlovable or full of rage and hate. What is it that interferes with the capacity to experience love? This book explores the origins of love and hate from infancy and how they develop through the life cycle. It brings together contemporary views about clinical practice on how psychotherapists and analysts work with and think about love and hate in the transference and countertransference and explores how different schools of thought deal with the subject. David Mann, together with an impressive array of international contributors represent a broad spectrum of psychoanalytic perspectives, including Kleinian, Jungian, Independent Group, and Lacanian, psychotherapists, psychoanalysts and analytical psychologists. With emphasis on clinical illustration throughout, the writers show how different psychoanalytic schools think about and clinically work with the experience and passions of love and hate. It will be invaluable to practitioners and students of psychotherapy, psychoanalysis, analytical psychology and counselling.
The origins of love and hate
Title | The origins of love and hate PDF eBook |
Author | Ian Dishart Suttie |
Publisher | |
Total Pages | |
Release | 1935 |
Genre | Hate |
ISBN |
The Origins of Love and Hate
Title | The Origins of Love and Hate PDF eBook |
Author | Ian D. Suttie |
Publisher | |
Total Pages | 275 |
Release | 1939 |
Genre | |
ISBN |
Love and Hate
Title | Love and Hate PDF eBook |
Author | Irenaus Eibl-Eibesfeldt |
Publisher | Routledge |
Total Pages | 290 |
Release | 2017-07-05 |
Genre | Social Science |
ISBN | 1351508156 |
The author argues that there are specific turning points in evolution. Structures and behavioral patterns that evolved in the service of discrete functions sometimes allow for unforeseen new developments as a side effect. In retrospect, they have proven to be pre-adaptations, and serve as raw material for natural selection to work upon. Love and Hate was intended to complement Konrad Lorenz's book, On Aggression, by pointing out our motivations to provide nurturing, and thus to counteract and correct the widespread but one-sided opinion that biologists always present nature as bloody in tooth and claw and intra-specific aggression as the prime mover of evolution. This simplistic image is, nonetheless, still with us, all the more regrettably because it hampers discussion across scholarly disciplines. Eibl-Eibesfeldt argues that leaders in individualized groups are chosen for their pro-social abilities. Those who comfort group members in distress, who are able to intervene in quarrels and to protect group members who are attacked, those who share, those who, in brief, show abilities to nurture, are chosen by the others as leaders, rather than those who use their abilities in competitive ways. Of course, group leaders may need, beyond their pro-social competence, to be gifted as orators, war leaders, or healers. Issues of love and hate are social in origin and hence social in consequence. Life has emerged on this planet in a succession of new forms, from the simplest algae to man-man the one being who reflects upon this creation, who seeks to fashion it himself and who, in the process, may end by destroying it. It would indeed be grotesque if the question of the meaning of life were to be solved in this way. In language that is clear and accessible throughout, arguing forcefully for the innate and "preprogrammed" dispositions of behavior in higher vertebrates, including humans, Eibl-Eibesfeldt steers a middle course in discussing the development of cultural and ethical norms while insisting on their matrix of biological origins.
A Philosophical History of Love
Title | A Philosophical History of Love PDF eBook |
Author | Wayne Cristaudo |
Publisher | Routledge |
Total Pages | 157 |
Release | 2017-07-28 |
Genre | Philosophy |
ISBN | 1351534726 |
A Philosophical History of Love explores the importance and development of love in the Western world. Wayne Cristaudo argues that love is a materializing force, a force consisting of various distinctive qualities or spirits. He argues that we cannot understand Western civilization unless we realize that, within its philosophical and religious heritage, there is a deep and profound recognition of love's creative and redemptive power. Cristaudo explores philosophical love (the love of wisdom) and the love of God and neighbor. The history of the West is equally a history of phantasmic versions of love and the thwarting of love. Thus, the history of our hells may be seen as the history of love's distortions and the repeated pseudo-victories of our preferences for the phantasms of love. Cristaudo argues that the catastrophes from our phantasmic loves threaten to extinguish us, forcing us repeatedly to open ourselves to new possibilities of love, to new spirits. Fusing philosophy, literature, theology, psychology, and anthropology, the volume reviews major thinkers in the field, from Plato and Freud, to Pierce, Shakespeare, and Flaubert. Cristaudo explores the major themes of love of the Church, romantic love and the return of the feminine, the conflict between familial and romantic love, love in a meaningless world and the love of evil, and the evolutionary idea of love. With Cristaudo, the reader embarks on a journey not just through time, but also through the different kinds, origins, and spirits of love.