Click Here to Read: An old paper on presidential mental health gets new attention by Sarah Avery And Eric Ferreri, Duke University, on the Medical Xpress website on January 11, 2018.
CC-BY-SA-3.0/Matt H. Wade at Wikipedia
NEW YORK PSYCHOANALYTIC SOCIETY & INSTITUTE PRESENTS The Heinz Hartmann II Lecture
Mind as Text: Freud’s Typographical Model of the Mind
HEINZ HARTMANN II AWARD RECIPIENT AND PRESENTER:
Adele Tutter, M.D., Ph.D.
Introduction by Daria Colombo, M.D.
Tuesday, February 6, 2018 at 8:00 pm
NYPSI’s Marianne & Nicholas Young Auditorium
247 East 82nd Street, NYC
Vincent Van Gogh, Piles of French Novels, 1887
Freud developed the topographical model of the mind at a time when not only literary, but all academic, scientific, medical, and publications-especially Continue reading Mind as Text: Freud’s Typographical Model of the Mind with Adele Tutter at NYPSI
The New York Psychoanalytic Society & Institute invites you to a clinical series: FROM THE CHAIR TO THE COUCH
2017 – 2018
Interested in learning more about psychoanalysis and how to deepen your clinical practice? Please join us for this year’s three part clinical series. Our upcoming and second presentation will continue to address an adult clinical case. Dr. Navah Kaplan will present an analytic case, followed by a discussion with Drs. John Crow and Wendy Olesker. As usual, there will be food and drink and a lively discussion of clinical material. Professionals and students with backgrounds in psychology, psychiatry, and social work are welcome to attend.
Event Date: February 6th, 7-9PM
Please RSVP by January 30th to Hilli Dagony-Clark at hilli@dagony-clark.com. (Location address will be provided when you RSVP). Continue reading From the Chair to the Couch with Navah Kaplan at NYPSI
Click Here to Read: Hebrew University’s Einstein archives set for Asian exhibits: Artifacts to go on display include handwritten pages from the theory of relativity, letters to lovers and even a vinyl record collection By AFP on the Timew of Israel Website on January 11, 2018.
Albert Einstein, during a lecture in Vienna in 1921. (Wikipedia/public domain)