Joseph Schwartz

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Joseph Schwartz



Average rating: 3.88 · 918 ratings · 86 reviews · 57 distinct worksSimilar authors
Einstein for Beginners

3.86 avg rating — 790 ratings — published 1979 — 44 editions
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Cassandra's Daughter: A His...

3.65 avg rating — 34 ratings — published 1999 — 17 editions
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The Five Primary Kinetic Ch...

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3.85 avg rating — 13 ratings2 editions
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The Creative Moment

3.57 avg rating — 7 ratings — published 1992 — 8 editions
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Applied Anatomy for Yoga Th...

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The Broken Coil: Thomas Ber...

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Poetry Meaning and Form

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Wilder Fire: Thomas Berenfo...

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Blood Daggers: Thomas Beren...

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“Psychoanalysis has suffered the accusation of being “unscientific” from its very beginnings (Schwartz, 1999). In recent years, the Berkeley literary critic Frederick Crews has renewed the assault on the talking cure in verbose, unreadable articles in the New York Review of Books (Crews, 1990), inevitably concluding, because nothing else really persuades, that psychoanalysis fails because it is unscientific. The chorus was joined by philosopher of science, Adolf Grunbaum (1985), who played both ends against the middle: to the philosophers he professed specialist knowledge of psychoanalysis; to the psychoanalysts he professed specialist knowledge of science, particularly physics. Neither was true (Schwartz, 1995a,b, 1996a,b, 2000).
The problem that mental health clinicians always face is that we deal with human subjectivity in a culture that is deeply invested in denying the importance of human subjectivity. Freud’s great invention of the analytic hour allows us to explore, with our clients, their inner worlds. Can such a subjective instrument be trusted? Not by very many. It is so dangerously close to women’s intuition. Socalled objectivity is the name of the game in our culture. Nevertheless, 100 years of clinical practice have shown psychoanalysis and psychotherapy not only to be effective, but to yield real understandings of the dynamics of human relationships, particularly the reality of transference–countertransference re-enactments now reformulated by our neuroscientists as right brain to right brain communication (Schore, 1999).”
Joseph Schwartz, Ritual Abuse and Mind Control: The Manipulation of Attachment Needs

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