Wisdom Won from Illness: Essays in Philosophy and Psychoanalysis

Wisdom Won from Illness: Essays in Philosophy and Psychoanalysis

by Jonathan Lear
Wisdom Won from Illness: Essays in Philosophy and Psychoanalysis

Wisdom Won from Illness: Essays in Philosophy and Psychoanalysis

by Jonathan Lear

Hardcover(New Edition)

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Overview

Wisdom Won from Illness brings into conversation two fields of humane inquiry—psychoanalysis and moral philosophy—that seem to have little to say to each other but which, taken together, form a basis for engaged ethical thought about how to live.

Jonathan Lear begins by looking to the ancient Greek philosophers for insight into what constitutes the life well lived. Socrates said the human psyche should be ruled by reason, and much philosophy as well as psychology hangs on what he meant. For Aristotle, reason organized and presided over the harmonious soul; a wise person is someone capable of a full, happy, and healthy existence. Freud, plumbing the depths of unconscious desires and pre-linguistic thoughts, revealed just how unharmonious the psyche could be. Attuned to the stresses of modern existence, he investigated the myriad ways people fall ill and fail to thrive. Yet he inherited from Plato and Aristotle a key insight: that the irrational part of the soul is not simply opposed to reason. It is a different manner of thinking: a creative intelligence that distorts what it seeks to understand.

Can reason absorb the psyche’s nonrational elements into a whole conception of the flourishing, fully realized human being? Without a good answer to that question, Lear says, philosophy is cut from its moorings in human life. Wisdom Won from Illness illuminates the role of literature in shaping ethical thought about nonrational aspects of the mind, offering rich readings of Shakespeare, Kierkegaard, J. M. Coetzee, Marilynne Robinson, and others.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780674967847
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Publication date: 01/02/2017
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 344
Sales rank: 690,936
Product dimensions: 6.20(w) x 9.30(h) x 1.20(d)

About the Author

Jonathan Lear is John U. Nef Distinguished Service Professor on the Committee on Social Thought and in the Department of Philosophy at the University of Chicago. His works include Wisdom Won from Illness, Radical Hope, A Case for Irony, and Happiness, Death, and the Remainder of Life.

Table of Contents

Introduction 1

1 Wisdom Won from Illness 11

2 Integrating the Nonrational Soul 30

3 What Is a Crisis of Intelligibility? 50

4 A Lost Conception of Irony 63

5 Waiting for the Barbarians 80

6 The Ironic Creativity of Socratic Doubt 103

7 Rosalind's Pregnancy 120

8 Technique and Final Cause in Psychoanalysis 138

9 Jumping from the Couch 159

10 Eros and Development 175

11 Mourning and Moral Psychology 191

12 Allegory and Myth in Plato's Republic 206

13 The Psychic Efficacy of Plato's Cave 227

14 The Ethical Thought of J. M. Coetzee 244

15 Not at Home in Gilead 269

Notes 287

Acknowledgments 317

Index 321

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