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Book cover of Self in Time: Retrieving Existential Theology and Freud
Psychological Self-Help, Theology, Christian, General & Miscellaneous Religion, Philosophy, Religious, Protestantism, Philosophical Positions & Movements, Psychology - Theory, History & Research, Major Branches of Philosophical Study, General Christianity

Self in Time: Retrieving Existential Theology and Freud

by Charles E. Brown
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Overview

This book examines human wholeness and human brokenness in terms of temporal unity and temporal fragmentation. Clearly those existential theologians who were influenced by Martin Heidegger conceive of time in terms of past, present, and future, and call attention to the imbalances in these dimensions of time occasioned by anxiety. Of primary consideration is their insistence that the human being is constituted as a being toward death. Likewise, Freud was deeply interested in time, though his psychology of time is implicit and devoted to unconscious intentionally, which disorders time by virtue of repression, neurotic symptom formation, and the creation of ego defenses. The central focus of the Freudian corpus is how the power of the past influences present functioning, but he also concentrated on the power of the future to intrude into the present by means of anticipatory dread about death, as well as the return of the repressed. Of particular interest to scholars engaged in the ongoing effort to correlate the humanizing aspects of psychology with those humanizing and transcendent dimensions of Christian faith.

Synopsis

This book examines human wholeness and human brokenness in terms of temporal unity and temporal fragmentation. Clearly those existential theologians who were influenced by Martin Heidegger conceive of time in terms of past, present, and future, and call attention to the imbalances in these dimensions of time occasioned by anxiety. Of primary consideration is their insistence that the human being is constituted as a being toward death. Likewise, Freud was deeply interested in time, though his psychology of time is implicit and devoted to unconscious intentionally, which disorders time by virtue of repression, neurotic symptom formation, and the creation of ego defenses. The central focus of the Freudian corpus is how the power of the past influences present functioning, but he also concentrated on the power of the future to intrude into the present by means of anticipatory dread about death, as well as the return of the repressed. Of particular interest to scholars engaged in the ongoing effort to correlate the humanizing aspects of psychology with those humanizing and transcendent dimensions of Christian faith.

Author Biography: Charles E. Brown is Associate Professor of Pastoral Theology at Union Theological Seminary in Virginia.

About the Author, Charles E. Brown

Charles E. Brown is Associate Professor of Pastoral Theology at Union Theological Seminary in Virginia.

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Book Details

Published
December 1, 1996
Publisher
University Press of America
Pages
328
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780761805168

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