Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Citation. Fromm, E. (1950). Psychoanalysis and religion. Yale University Press. Abstract. Attempts to show that to set up alternatives of either irreconcilable opposition or identity of interest of psychoanalysis and religion is fallacious and to demonstrate that the relation between them is too complex to be forced into either of these attitudes.

  2. The psychoanalytic study of religion has until now been dominated by a Freudian perspective that views the religious experience as a one-way transference, where the devotee projects his instinctually based childhood wishes, fears, and behaviors onto a religious construct. In this path-breaking book, James W. Jones, a clinical psychologist and ...

  3. 不要以为它道出了真理,它只是为你开启了追寻真理的大门. 这篇书评可能有关键情节透露. 这本薄薄的小册子,一百页都不到,内容却是相当紧凑,你可以从这本书的任何位置切入,阅读的每一行文字都值得你进行深深的思考。. 或许正是因为这个原因,我读的 ...

  4. Erich Fromm. In this classic work a noted psychoanalyst assesses the persistent tension between traditional religion and the underlying philosophy of psychoanalysis, which many believe regards the satisfaction of instinctive and material wishes as the sole aim of life. 128 pages, Paperback. First published January 1, 1950.

  5. “A daring book to have cast into the midst of the world’s excitements, for it will itself breed new excitements. . . . It is not a book to be missed by t...

  6. 4th Session: Finally, we will explore the relationship between psychoanalysis and the religion so often seen as closest to it – Buddhism. In recent years the literature on Psychoanalysis and Buddhism has reached a new level of depth and sophistication and we will explore the latest thinking on the affinities between them, and the differences.

  7. Psychoanalysis and Religion. Review by Kim Han-Kyung, 2001 Fromm, Erich. Psychoanalysis and Religion. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1950. As a social scientist and psychologist, Erich Fromm suggests a somewhat different definition of religion from those definitions generally in use in the field of phenomenology of religion, which are narrower.