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International Studies in Phenomenology and Philosophy

Book | Chapter

186053

Desire in the time of aids

Grahame Hayes

pp. 146-163

Abstract

There is no precise way of specifying what psychoanalysis is, and the answer to what it is lies in who one reads, or what one thinks one wants to do with this body of knowledge. This lack of precision seems to be a good thing as the pursuit of a stable and resolute body of knowledge of the unconscious does not sound sustainable or desirable. However, a lack of conceptual precision within, and especially between, "schools' of psychoanalytic thought is not the same as saying that anything goes, and that we can make psychoanalysis mean whatever we want it to. And on a surprisingly large number of topics there is considerable agreement and consensus among the many theoretical approaches within psychoanalysis.

Publication details

Published in:

Gülerce Aydan (2012) Re(con)figuring psychoanalysis: critical juxtapositions of the philosophical, the sociohistorical and the political. Dordrecht, Springer.

Pages: 146-163

DOI: 10.1057/9780230373303_9

Full citation:

Hayes Grahame (2012) „Desire in the time of aids“, In: A. Gülerce (ed.), Re(con)figuring psychoanalysis, Dordrecht, Springer, 146–163.