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psychology

Contemporary Psychoanalytic Perspectives on Addiction

Psychoanalysis has somewhat neglected the study of substance use disorders—frequently seeing them as a symptom of “the real problem” and hence not attending closely to addiction and substance use in and of themselves. This post documents a syllabus for a postgraduate seminar I taught on contemporary psychoanalytic perspectives on addiction.

Did Freud really wish he had studied the occult instead of psychoanalysis?

Many authors quote Freud as saying “If I had my life to live over again I should devote myself to psychical research rather than to psychoanalysis.” However, Freud did not exactly say this, and was not as ardent a supporter of the occult as some would like to believe. And do we really need him to be? Do we even want colonial, materialist science to incorporate the occult?

Emotional avoidance, self-coherence, and psychosis: Why affective regulation is a form of relational care

Conventional wisdom holds that avoiding your emotions cuts you off from important data about yourself, but did you know that habitually flinching from feeling can also lead to severe distortions of social cognition, conceptual coherence, and reality testing? In this post, I explore this idea and draw out some of the relational implications of the intimate connection between thinking, self-coherence, and affect.

Jung’s Function Types: 16 Ways of Being in the World

In this post, I outline and use Jung’s basic principles to: (1) define Jung’s four function types of sensation, intuition, thinking, and feeling; (2) elaborate how the functions interact with extraversion and introversion to move us from two basic types to eight; and (3) describe how the functions are organized within a person to bring us from 8 types to 16.

Eight Recommendations for Cultivating Dream Life

To be able to work with dreams, whether psychologically or magically, requires building a relationship with them. Many people are alienated from their dream life. Their dreams are like wild animals that bolt and disappear into the recesses of the wilderness of their psyche almost as soon as they are spotted. Some people even go so far as to say that they do not dream. I doubt very much whether this claim is ever accurate, since I tend toward the position that dream is the default state of waking matter. More likely, various factors conspire to keep dreams hidden in the liminal, underworld places that incubate and animate them. So, in this post, as a preliminary to future posts on dreams, I would like to spell out eight practical suggestions for how to improve your dream recall.

Psychoanalysis, Magic, & the Occult: An Uneasy Shared History

Psychoanalysis emerged during a high tide of interest among scientists and laypeople alike in psychical research and spiritualism. Freud and subsequent psychoanalysts held conflicting, ambivalent attitudes toward the occult. In this post, I explore some of the historical attitudes held toward the occult and divination within the field of psychoanalysis.

Magical Thinking in Cultural Context

A recent New York Times article claimed that “most psychologists agree that astrology’s appeal rests largely on ‘confirmation bias’—the human tendency to seek out, recall and favor information that confirms what we already believe.” This claim reflects a long history within psychology of reducing belief or interest in astrology to error or psychopathology. In doing so, my fellow psychologists fail to do justice to the empirical data and miss an opportunity to deepen our understanding of the meanings and purposes of astrology in people’s lives.