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The anteater and the dreamer.
Authors:Miller   Laurence
Abstract:Reviews the book, Brain and psyche: The biology of the unconscious by Jonathan Winson (1985). Winson offers a "biology of the unconscious," based on his reading of psychoanalysis and his research in experimental neurophysiology. Given Winson's main area of professional activity, it is not surprising that the slant of this book is one of a neuroscientist. But Winson is no slouch in the Freud department either; he devotes 3 of 10 chapters to a well-expounded, somewhat selective, chronological account of the main events leading to the development of psychoanalytic thought. In tackling the challenge of such an integration, Brain and psyche makes a unique and valuable theoretical contribution. Many different types of experiences, along with their associated cognitive and emotional concomitants, will form relatively permanent traces in the brain and thus exert subsequent effects on behavior, by virtue of their being consolidated during critical periods. This is why, says Winson, so many patterns of behavior, adaptive or maladaptive, appear so fixed and immutable in an individual's personality. Dreams allow us to glimpse at the neurobehavioral process whereby, from early childhood on, behavioral strategies are laid down, modified, or consulted, a process that Winson calls the unconscious personality. But it is Winson's account of repression that is the most intriguing. Repression is a process that intervenes in the temporal space between the generation of an idea, emotional feeling, or sensory impression, and the subjective apperception of that experience. Winson makes the conceptual leap from experimental neurophysiology (he works mainly with the rat) to human psychodynamics. What seems to be missing is a middle step, some evidence from human brain research that could link the two domains. Winson has taken an important first step in bridging the chasm between laboratory and consulting room. What we need now is more data from the human side of the brain and behavioral sciences to bring these domains closer still. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)
Keywords:brain   psyche   unconscious   psychoanalytic thought   experimental neurophysiology   repression
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