2 Matching Annotations
- Sep 2023
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Winnicott also had a strikingly different notion of the agent of psychological change.
- for: Winnicott, Freud, comparison, comparison - Winnicott - Freud, transitional space, Bardo, evolution
- paraphrase
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comparison: Winnicott, Freud
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Winnicott had a strikingly different notion of the agent of psychological change than Freud.
- Winnicott
- His psychotherapeutic model was developmental, one that sees.
- the therapeutic relationship and
- the original parent-child relationship(s)
- as analogous.
- Thus, just as he saw the development of the child as being fundamentally tied
- to the immediate, visceral relationship with the mother in the experiential unit.
- His psychotherapeutic model was developmental, one that sees.
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psychotherapeutic change was all about the relationship between - client and - therapist.
- This was later conceptualised as a shift
- from a ‘one-person’ psychology
- to a ‘two-person’ psychology.
- This was later conceptualised as a shift
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Freud
- Freud was focused on rational interventions from the outside
- This gave way in Winnicott to a co-creative journey occurring in the area in between,
- which was much more about who one was and what one did, than what one thought or said.
- In his book Playing and Reality (1971),
- Winnicott called the location of this experience ‘transitional space’,
- alluding to its dynamic, insubstantial quality,
- but also to its nature as a place of becoming.
- It is, he said, a place we both
- create and that
- creates us
- a paradox that we must accept and not try to resolve
- where unformulated possibility replaces
- fixed identities, and
- experience is necessarily co-constructed.
- Winnicott
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comment
- Winnicott's transitional space is like
- the Tibetan concept of the Bardo
- the biological concept of evolution
- Winnicott's transitional space is like
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Winnicott’s concept of psychopathology was very different from Freud’s.
- for: psychopathology, psychopathology - Winnicott, comparison - Winnicott - Freud
- paraphrase
- comparison: Winnicott, Freud
- Winnicott’s concept of psychopathology was very different from Freud’s.
- Freud
- Freud understood psychopathology in terms of conflicts between:
- the internal drives and
- the external demands of the world
- that what goes wrong is something internal to the person
- only triggered by the outside world.
- This basic idea is still very much alive in reductive psychiatric thinking and CBT, which, following the common dualistic model,
- also locate the problem inside the mind/brain.
- Freud understood psychopathology in terms of conflicts between:
- Winnicott
- By contrast, Winnicott understood psychopathology primarily in terms of trauma or deficit in the relational domain,
- which in turn follows from his inherently interpersonal understanding of the psyche.
- Crucially, what goes wrong is not to be located in the individual per se,
- but in the experiential units that the person was and is involved including, by extension,
- the sociocultural milieu in which they find themselves.
- Freud
- Winnicott’s concept of psychopathology was very different from Freud’s.
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