03959nam 2200673 a 450 991045553450332120210921031132.01-282-75197-297866127519741-4008-2136-31-4008-1379-410.1515/9781400821365(CKB)111056486503546(EBL)581667(OCoLC)700688709(SSID)ssj0000158465(PQKBManifestationID)11155351(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000158465(PQKBWorkID)10149757(PQKB)10036123(MiAaPQ)EBC581667(OCoLC)51575505(MdBmJHUP)muse35946(DE-B1597)446087(OCoLC)979954260(DE-B1597)9781400821365(Au-PeEL)EBL581667(CaPaEBR)ebr10035790(CaONFJC)MIL275197(EXLCZ)9911105648650354619940314d1994 uy 0engurnn#---|u||utxtccrFreud's wishful dream book[electronic resource] /Alexander WelshCourse BookPrinceton, N.J. Princeton University Pressc19941 online resource (158 p.)Description based upon print version of record.0-691-03718-3 Includes bibliographical references (p. 139-145).Front matter --CONTENTS --PREFACE --CHAPTER ONE. "A Dream Is the Fulfilment of a Wish" --CHAPTER TWO. "Dreams Really Have a Secret Meaning" --CHAPTER THREE. "So Far as I Knew, I Was Not an Ambitious Man" --CHAPTER FOUR. "It Had Been Possible to Hoodwink the Censorship" --CHAPTER FIVE. "The Only Villain among the Crowd of Noble Characters" --INDEX OF WORKS CITEDAlthough it is customary to credit Freud's self-analysis, it may be more accurate, Alexander Welsh argues, to say that psychoanalysis began when The Interpretation of Dreams was published in the last weeks of the nineteenth century. Only by going public with his theory--that dreams manifest hidden wishes--did Freud establish a position to defend and embark upon a career. That position and career have been among the most influential in this century. In August 1899, Freud wrote to Wilhelm Fliess of the dream book in terms reminiscent of Dante's Inferno. Beginning from a dark wood, this modern journey features "a concealed pass though which I lead the reader--my specimen dream with its peculiarities, details, indiscretions, bad jokes--and then suddenly the high ground and the view and the question, Which way do you wish to go now?" Physician that he is, Freud appoints himself guide rather than hero, yet the way "you" wish to go is very much his prescribed way. In Welsh's book, readers are invited on Freud's journey, to pause at each concealed pass in his seminal work and ask where the guide is taking them and why. Along the way, Welsh shows how Freud's arbitrary turnings are themselves wishful, intended to persuade by pleasing the reader and author alike; that his interest in secrets and his self-proclaimed modest ambition are products of their time; and that the book may best be read as a romance or serial comedy. "Some of the humor throughout," Welsh notes, "can only be understood as a particular kind of fine performance." Welsh offers the first critical overview of the argument in Freud's masterpiece and of the author who presents himself as guide.Dream interpretationPsychoanalysisElectronic books.Dream interpretation.Psychoanalysis.154.6/34Welsh Alexander163690MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910455534503321Freud's wishful dream book2461420UNINA04132nam 2200493I 450 991079992550332120230814230638.01-351-74075-X1-315-18765-51-351-74074-1(CKB)4100000007321203(MiAaPQ)EBC5622572(OCoLC)1079433917(FlBoTFG)9781315187655(EXLCZ)99410000000732120320190122h20182002 uy 0engur||| |||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierEarly Ethical Writings of Aurel Kolnai /by Francis DunlopFirst edition.Boca Raton, FL :Routledge,[2018].©2002.1 online resource (230 pages)Routledge revivalsAshgate Translations in Philosophy, Theology and Religion1-138-73346-6 Includes bibliographical references and index.Contents: Translator's introduction; Translator's preface; Ethical value and reality: Preface; List of works consulted; Introduction: the problem of a completely valid ethics and the limits of morality: Ethical Value: Primary data of ethics; The phenomenological ethic of values; The bearer of value and the ethical end; The special place of ethical value; Conflict between ethical values; The Limits of the Ethical End: The presuppositions of adopting an end; Ideal and reality; The moral suppression of need; Ethical reform; Rsum on limitation; The Gradation of Ethical Value-Emphases: The order of values; The nature of emphasis and gradation; Gradations of emphasis and ethical freedom; Gradation in the individual moral act and the stratification of intention; The coming together of value-emphases; Gradation of emphasis and the finitude of the moral world; Some Criticism of One-sided Ethical Approaches: Introduction; The ethic of stoicism; Practical value-monism from Kant to Marx; The ethic of the order of justice and the ethic of regulation; The ethical outlook of psychoanalysis; Gradation in the Types of Value-Experience: Introduction: the opposition of value and reality; The experience of exclusion; The experience of coordination; The experience of incorporation; The experience of directness; Persons and Responsibility: Gradation in conduct; The meaning of responsibility; Personalistic ethics; Concluding remarks: the possibility of an ethics close to reality; The Structure of Moral Intention; Duty, Inclination and "Moral-Mindedness"; Index.This title was first published in 2002: Kolnai's later work in moral philosophy is well-known, and interest in it continues to grow, but his dissertation, Ethical Value and Reality, has received little attention - although Kolnai himself said that it contains the germs of nearly all his subsequent thought. This first English translation of the dissertation and of two related papers from the same period will enable the English-speaking reader to explore Kolnai's ethical work as a whole. In Ethical Value and Reality Kolnai proposes a 'completion' of phenomenological value-ethics which takes account of 'the embeddedness of ethical values in reality'. Kolnai explores moral psychology and offers important perspectives on political activity in its moral dimensions, on the relation between morality and religion, and on the relation between the moral point of view and the psycho-therapeutic. Dunlop's comprehensive introduction to the translation provides the reader with assistance in understanding the text, setting it in its contemporary context, and relating it to Kolnai's subsequent writings.Routledge revivals.Ashgate translations in philosophy, theology, and religion.Ethics, Modern20th centuryEthics, Modern170.904Dunlop Francis1494707FlBoTFGFlBoTFGBOOK9910799925503321Early Ethical Writings of Aurel Kolnai3874835UNINA