Origin myths and utopias: the primitive patriarch and the superman

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.59539/2175-2834-v16n2-88

Keywords:

superman; patriarch; culture; affirmation; sublimation.

Abstract

This article aims to establish a temporary connection between the myth of the patriarch of the primitive horde in Freud and the perspective of overcoming of man as it appears in Nietzsche. We analyze the vision of the Viennese psychoanalyst about the Nietzschean superman and its meaning for psychoanalysis. The clinical importance of the issue appears when we try to think about the consequences of the civilizing process for the common man. Can the man become someone very different from who he is? Can we think of man as someone that presents the extraordinary ability of the superman to affirm life, despite the resistance encountered within society? To what extent can one bear the consequences of affirmation of his own life in the context of human relationships?

Published

2014-12-01 — Updated on 2014-12-01

How to Cite

Fonseca, E. R. (2014). Origin myths and utopias: the primitive patriarch and the superman. Human Nature - International Philosophy and Psychology Review, 16(2), 72–91. https://doi.org/10.59539/2175-2834-v16n2-88

Issue

Section

Artigos