Philosophy of Psychoanalysis
Un pódcast de Nina McIlwain
36 Episodo
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Crystallisation of Discontent
Publicado: 10/7/2021 -
Does Personality Change?
Publicado: 30/6/2021 -
Affect and Individual Differences
Publicado: 24/6/2021 -
Peak Experiences, Memory and Emotions
Publicado: 16/6/2021 -
Mental Time Travel: Emotion and Memory
Publicado: 9/6/2021 -
Telling Stories: Cultural Scaffolding
Publicado: 2/6/2021 -
Narcissism and Shame: Fear of Being Found Wanting
Publicado: 26/5/2021 -
Tracing a Personality Style: The Dark Triad
Publicado: 19/5/2021 -
Defences and Beliefs
Publicado: 12/5/2021 -
Transference, Insight and Inference
Publicado: 5/5/2021 -
The Self, the World and Others
Publicado: 28/4/2021 -
Cascading Constraints of Personality Development
Publicado: 21/4/2021 -
How to let the Data speak: Measuring Personality
Publicado: 14/4/2021 -
Personality in Research: Do numbers equal science?
Publicado: 7/4/2021 -
Cults, Culture and Charisma
Publicado: 31/3/2021 -
Season 2! Personality!
Publicado: 24/3/2021 -
BONUS: Progressive Muscle Relaxation Meditation
Publicado: 19/8/2020 -
BONUS: Dreams
Publicado: 12/8/2020 -
Transitional Relatedness and Art
Publicado: 5/8/2020 -
Creativity and Resilience
Publicado: 29/7/2020
Freud famously said that the aim of psychoanalysis was to enable us to work, love and play with minimum conflict. So what gets in the way of us doing that? Philosophy of Psychoanalysis is an educational course presented at a third-year tertiary education level by A/Prof. Doris McIlwain. The course aims to ground you in the basics: the nature of unconscious processes, repression, sexuality, dreams, morality, grief, gender identity, drives and affects and their implications for perception, memory and creative processes, as well as for certain forms of psychopathology. Then, it considers the wider societal relevance of psychoanalysis to issues of the internet, femininity, charisma, cults, spin doctors, hypocrisy and political power. For the more clinically minded, the course covers an array of post-Freudian perspectives, including Jacques Lacan, Melanie Klein, Object Relations theory, Kohut’s self-psychology, Winnicott, and relational psychoanalysis. You should leave the course with a grasp of the kinds of psychoanalysis that are used currently in clinical contexts. Sadly A/Prof. Doris McIlwain, the course creator, died of cancer in 2015. This podcast is created by her family and friends, with hopes that her curiosity, joy and intellectual playfulness will keep inspiring and informing those who listen.