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Originally published in 1954, New Dimensions of Deep Analysis was a systematic attempt at integrating facts which were once misrepresented as "occult" into the framework of modern dynamic psychiatry.
List of contents
Preface. Part I: Telepathy in the Psychoanalytic Situation – A Review of Illustrative Cases 1. Operational Concepts and Guiding Principles 2. Psychological versus Statistical Significance – A Digression into Method 3. Ruth’s Telepathic Dream 4. Ronald’s Telepathic Dream 5. More Telepathic Incidents During Analysis – The Case of Fred L. 6. Fred Has Another Telepathic Dream 7. When the Therapist Has a Dream 8. Precognition in Dreams? 9. Precognition and Self-Fulfilment Part II: Levels of Functioning – An Attempt at a Theory 10. The Ego, the Id, and Psi 11. Levels of Functioning and Mental Metabolism 12. Empathy and Enkinesis – or How the Ego Reaches Out Beyond its Confines 13. Telepathy and the Child-Parent Relationship 14. Patterns of Neurotic Interaction 15. Complementary Neuroses – With a Note on Psi Factors in Mating and Marriage 16. Castration Fear, Superego, and Primal Conflict – A Three-Level Approach 17. Personality Structure and Group Cohesion 18. Telepathy and Cerebral Localization Part III: Can it be Applied in Practice? An Approach to Therapy 19. The Psychotherapist Takes His Bearings 20. Analytic Schools and Telepathic Leakage 21. How Does the Patient Respond? 22. Telepathy: Cause or Effect? 23. How is the Therapist Involved? A Digression into the Dynamics of Co-operation 24. Scientific Psychotherapy and the Decline of Magic 25. Some Principles and Problems of Three-Level Therapy. Bibliography. Glossary. Index.
Summary
Originally published in 1954, New Dimensions of Deep Analysis was a systematic attempt at integrating facts which were once misrepresented as “occult” into the framework of modern dynamic psychiatry.