Passover Seder at Sigmund Shlomo Freud’s

Click Here to Read: Passover Seder at Sigmund Shlomo Freud’s: Toward the end of his career, the father of psychoanalysis, a secularist who believed religion had fulfilled its role, tried to explain what sets Jews apart and formed a controversial – and unsupported – theory about Moses and the origins of monotheism by Amnon Rubenstein on the Israel Hayon website on March 30, 2018.

Click Here To Read: Leo Baeck Memorial Lecture by Arnold Richards.

Click Here to Read:  Freud’s Need Not to Believe by Arnold Richards.

Click Here  to Read:  Freed’s Jewish Identity by Arnold Richards

Click Here to Read:  Therapy and Ideology: Psychoanalysis and Its Vicissitudes in Pre-State Israel (Including Some Previously Unpublished Letters by Sigmund Freud  and Albert Einstein).  Science in Context. 23(4) p. 473-506. (2010).

Click Here to Read: Between Technique and Ethic, Between Hermeneutics and Science: Freud’s right guesin by Shichot Israel Journal for psychotherapy.  This article is in Hebrew.

 

 

Philosophy Thursday: Andy Clark

 

Click Here to Read:  Andy Clark on Wikipedia Commons.

Click Here to Read: The Mind-Expanding Ideas of Andy Clark: The tools we use to help us think—from language to smartphones—may be part of thought itself By Larissa MacFarquhar in The New Yorker on April 2, 2018 Issue

Click Here to View: Andy Clark: Being and Computing: Are You Your Brain, and Is Your Brain a Computer? on YouTube.

Click Here to Read: Andy Clark Articles on Philosophy of Brains website.

Click Here to View:  Professor Andy Clark: Research in a Nutshell on YouTube.

Click Here to Read:  Out of Our Brains by byAndy Clark in The New York Times on December 12, 2010. Continue reading Philosophy Thursday: Andy Clark

Atypical brain development observed in preschoolers with ADHD symptoms

Click Here to Read:  Atypical brain development observed in preschoolers with ADHD symptoms: NIH-funded study uses high-resolution brain scans to uncover structural changes on the National Institutes of Health website on March 26, 2018.

Maturation of the brain, as reflected in the age at which a cortex area attains peak thickness, in ADHD (above) and normal development (below). Lighter areas are thinner, darker areas thicker. Light blue in the ADHD sequence corresponds to the same thickness as light purple in the normal development sequence. The darkest areas in the lower part of the brain, which are not associated with ADHD, had either already peaked in thickness by the start of the study, or, for statistical reasons, were not amenable to defining an age of peak cortex thickness. Movie of same data below. Source: NIMH Child Psychiatry Branch. National Institute of Mental Health Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons,

 

On Klein’s r/evolution in psychoanalysis Ron Britton, MD at IPTAR

IPTAR PRESENTS REVOLUTIONS IN TECHNIQUE: On Klein’s r/evolution in psychoanalysis Ron Britton, MD Discussant: Neal Vorus, PhD
Moderator: Carolyn Ellman, PhD  May 5th, 2018 9:00 am – 4:30 pm IPTAR, 1651 Third Ave, suite 205 Register here: http://iptar.org/event/Britton-2018

ADMISSION General: $125 includes 5 CE credits Candidates: $25 includes 5 CE credits

PROGRAM
9am – 9:30am — BREAKFAST
9:30am – 10:45 am: Dr. Ron Britton (followed by audience Q&A)

The paper describes the evolution of so called post-Kleinian analysis and its current style as exemplified in the work of Ronald Britton. The development of a method of using psychoanalysis with young children largely based on the application of dream analysis to children’s play made considerable changes to adult analysis. A child case is described that illustrates manifest recapitulation in play of an immediate life trauma and its segregation from the primitive phantasy that existed in the child’s frightening dream life. The paper discusses some of Britton’s own ideas and those shared with others such as John Steiner that have influenced technique as well as theorizing such as the concept of triangular space, thick and thin narcissistic organisations and the post- Continue reading On Klein’s r/evolution in psychoanalysis Ron Britton, MD at IPTAR

The Again Psychoanalyst with Joyce Slochower at MITPP

The Metropolitan Institute for Training in Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy, The Metropolitan Center for Mental Health and
The Metropolitan Society of Psychoanalytic Psychotherapists Invite you to a Scientific Meeting

Friday, April 6, 2018 – 7:30 PM THE AGING PSYCHOANALYST   PRESENTER: JOYCE SLOCHOWER, Ph.D., ABPP

Here’s a paradox: psychoanalytic practice focuses on the impact of early loss, trauma, and conflict as they inform and shape patient and analyst’s experience in the present. Whatever our particular theory, we’re accustomed to making these links and helping people unpack and move beyond their personal ghosts. But there’s a future ghost that we avoid examining, no matter whom we’re working with. It is the ghost of who we will become—of our own aging. Most of us avoid dealing with the inevitability of growing old, much less our death. We avoid examining, much less theorizing, its impact on us as analysts. How will we manage the impending diminishment of capacity that often comes with aging? How will we help our patients confront this, and other actualities associated with aging? Continue reading The Again Psychoanalyst with Joyce Slochower at MITPP