Birth of the Living God: A Psychoanalytic StudyUtilizing both clinical material based on the life histories of twenty patients and theoretical insights from the works of Freud, Erikson, Fairbairn, and Winnicott, Ana-Maria Rizzuto examines the origin, development, and use of our God images. Whereas Freud postulated that belief in God is based on a child's idea of his father, Rizzuto argues that the God representation draws from a variety of sources and is a major element in the fabric of one's view of self, others, and the world. |
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... integrate these observations into a theory of the developmental process involved in the belief in God . Furthermore , no theory had relevant data about unconscious processes in the private world of the child , which , as Freud suggested ...
... integrate these observations into a theory of the developmental process involved in the belief in God . Furthermore , no theory had relevant data about unconscious processes in the private world of the child , which , as Freud suggested ...
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... integrating it with new conceptual elaborations in psychoanalytic theory . In 1914 , to celebrate the founding of his high school , he delivered a paper that was later printed as " Some Reflections on a Schoolboy Psychology . " There he ...
... integrating it with new conceptual elaborations in psychoanalytic theory . In 1914 , to celebrate the founding of his high school , he delivered a paper that was later printed as " Some Reflections on a Schoolboy Psychology . " There he ...
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... integration . To understand the processes uncovered by the study , I had to develop a theoretical frame within which to confirm , comple- ment , or correct Freud's statements about the formation of the God represen- tation and in which ...
... integration . To understand the processes uncovered by the study , I had to develop a theoretical frame within which to confirm , comple- ment , or correct Freud's statements about the formation of the God represen- tation and in which ...
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Contents
Freud | 13 |
Beyond Freud | 41 |
The Representations of Objects and Human Psychic Functionings | 54 |
Introduction to the Clinical Research | 87 |
A God without Whiskers | 93 |
A God in the Mirror | 109 |
God the Enigma | 130 |
God My Enemy | 149 |
Conclusions | 177 |
Epilogue | 212 |
Appendix | 213 |
Notes | 221 |
231 | |
240 | |
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Common terms and phrases
adult ambivalence aspects behavior belief Bernadine Fisher Bernadine's cathected cathexis child childhood clinical complex components concept conscious context contributed created Daniel Miller death defensive described developmental Devil Douglas O'Duffy ego-syntonic elaboration emotional epigenetic existence experienced fantasy fear feel felt formation Freud frustration function God representation God's grandmother hated human husband idea idealized identification illusion imaginary companion important individual individual's integrated intense internal later libidinal maternal representation memory mental representation mirroring mnemic Moses and Monotheism mother narcissistic never notion object relations object representations object-related oedipal oedipal conflict Oedipus complex oneself parental imago patient perception person preconscious present primal father primeval psychic psychoanalytic psychological reality relationship religion repressed seems self-representation sense sexual sublimation superego symbol talking theory of object therapist tion totem transformation transitional object unconscious understanding Weston La Barre Winnicott wishes