Anxiety of being and anxiety to be: psychoanalytic concepts of anxiety in the light of Heidegger
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.59539/2175-2834-v15n1-83Keywords:
anxiety; castration; existential phenomenology; Winnicott.Abstract
This article is intended to show that the concept of anxiety by Freud's psychoanalysis can only be developed in the investigation of an anxiety of being, i.e., it deals with the anxiety of man as a being in the world. In contrast, we aim to demonstrate that the study of unthinkable anxiety by Winnicott is concerned with the question of how man comes to be a being in the world. The result of the pragmatic distinction between the two psychoanalytic theories of anxiety may be elucidated by taking Martin Heidegger's existential phenomenology as a support.Downloads
Published
2013-01-06 — Updated on 2013-01-06
How to Cite
Santos, E. S. (2013). Anxiety of being and anxiety to be: psychoanalytic concepts of anxiety in the light of Heidegger. Human Nature - International Philosophy and Psychology Review, 15(1), 63–75. https://doi.org/10.59539/2175-2834-v15n1-83
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