Ricœur's Freud

Authors

  • Richard J. Bernstein New School for Social Research

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5195/errs.2013.163

Keywords:

Freud, Psychoanalysis, Hermeneutics, Dialectic

Abstract

Ricoeur’s reading of Freud is one of the most comprehensive, perceptive and judicious explications of Freudianism—one that begins with his early “Project” of 1895 and culminates with the last book that Freud published, Moses and Monotheism. Ricoeur is successful in exposing some of the weaknesses in Freud, and even more importantly, why we need to move beyond Freud. I am deeply sympathetic with his claim that there is a dialectical relationship between a hermeneutics of suspicion and a restorative hermeneutics of meaning—and that they are integral to each other. And I also think he is successful in showing how, if we relentlessly pursue the logic of Freud’s thinking, we are led beyond Freud. But, even though he gives some indications of how such dialectic is to be developed, this remains a task (an Aufgabe) that lies before us.


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Published

2013-05-22

Issue

Section

Varia