Freud: The Mind of the Moralist

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University of Chicago Press, 1979 M05 15 - 440 pages
Now a classic, this book was hailed upon its original publication in 1959 as "An event to be acclaimed . . . a book of genuine brilliance on Freud's cultural importance . . . a permanently valuable contribution to the human sciences."—Alastair MacIntyre, Manchester Guardian

"This remarkably subtle and substantial book, with its nicely ordered sequences of skilled dissections and refined appraisals, is one of those rare products of profound analytic thought. . . . The author weighs each major article of the psychoanalytic canon in the scales of his sensitive understanding, then gives a superbly balanced judgement."—Henry A. Murray, American Sociological Review

"Rieff's tremendous scholarship and rich reflections fill his pages with memorable treasures."—Robert W. White, Scientific American

"Philip Rieff's book is a brilliant and beautifully reasoned example of what Freud's influence has really been: an increasing intellectual vigilance about human nature. . . . What the analyst does for the patient—present the terms for his new choices as a human being—Mr. Rieff does in respect to the cultural significance of Freudianism. His style has the same closeness, the same undertone of hypertense alertness. Again and again he makes brilliant points."—Alfred Kazin, The Reporter
 

Contents

VI
3
VIII
28
IX
65
X
66
XI
102
XIII
148
XIV
186
XV
220
XVI
257
XVII
300
XVIII
329
XX
358
XXI
399
XXII
401
XXIII
425
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About the author (1979)

Philip Rieff is the Benjamin Franklin Professor of Sociology and University Professor at the University of Pennsylvania. He is the author of The Feeling Intellect: Selected Writings; Fellow Teachers: Of Culture and Its Second Death; and The Triumph of the Therapeutic: Uses of Faith after Freud, all published by the University of Chicago Press.

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