Romain Rolland: Difference between revisions
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* Accuses Freud's rejection of oceanic experiences and religion as shallow and normative | * Accuses Freud's rejection of oceanic experiences and religion as shallow and normative | ||
* Felt a Yogic "science of mind was superior to Freud's psychoanalytic science | * Felt a Yogic "science of mind was superior to Freud's psychoanalytic science | ||
*Takes a "adaptive/transformative" approach to understanding [[Connection Experience]]<ref>Maharaj, Ayon. “The Challenge of the Oceanic Feeling: Romain Rolland’s Mystical Critique of Psychoanalysis and His Call for a ‘New Science of the Mind’.” History of European Ideas 43, no. 5 (July 2017): 474–93. </ref> | |||
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[[category:terms]][[category:lightningpath]][[Had a functional definition of::Religion| ]][[Had a substantive definition of::Religion| ]][[Is a::Mystic| ]][[Takes a::Transformative approach]] | [[category:terms]][[category:lightningpath]][[Had a functional definition of::Religion| ]][[Had a substantive definition of::Religion| ]][[Is a::Mystic| ]][[Takes a::Transformative approach]] |
Revision as of 20:40, 10 July 2021
Romain Rolland (29 January 1866 – 30 December 1944) was a French dramatist, novelist, essayist, art historian and mystic. For more, see the Wikipedia entry.
Notes
- A critic of psychoanalysis's superficial conception of mind. Suggested that the discipline had to correct and deepen their conception by taking into account mystical experiences, both East and West. [1]
- Call for a new "science of mind" root in ancient Indian spiritual systems (yoga). Such a science would incorporate the valuable aspect of modern psychology (psychoanalysis) without succumbing to reductionist frameworks. [2]
- "According to Rolland, psychoanalysts have tended to ‘depreciate’ the mystical experiences of saints because the psychoanalysts themselves lack the ‘inner sense’ necessary to have mystical experiences in the first place." [3]
- "At various points in the Appendix, Rolland makes the provocative suggestion that the psychoanalytic denigration of mystical experience stems from an abnormally extroverted tendency among psychoanalysts themselves."[4]
- Rolland accuses psychoanalysis of having unconscious 'prejudice' that prevents them from seen the truths of mystical experience.
- Defends the notion of mystical experience against charges that it is an infantile, regressive state.
- Accuses Freud's rejection of oceanic experiences and religion as shallow and normative
- Felt a Yogic "science of mind was superior to Freud's psychoanalytic science
- Takes a "adaptive/transformative" approach to understanding Connection Experience[5]
Footnotes
- ↑ Maharaj, Ayon. “The Challenge of the Oceanic Feeling: Romain Rolland’s Mystical Critique of Psychoanalysis and His Call for a ‘New Science of the Mind’.” History of European Ideas 43, no. 5 (July 2017): 474–93.
- ↑ Maharaj, Ayon. “The Challenge of the Oceanic Feeling: Romain Rolland’s Mystical Critique of Psychoanalysis and His Call for a ‘New Science of the Mind’.” History of European Ideas 43, no. 5 (July 2017): 474–93.
- ↑ Maharaj, Ayon. “The Challenge of the Oceanic Feeling: Romain Rolland’s Mystical Critique of Psychoanalysis and His Call for a ‘New Science of the Mind’.” History of European Ideas 43, no. 5 (July 2017): 474–93. p. 478,
- ↑ Maharaj, Ayon. “The Challenge of the Oceanic Feeling: Romain Rolland’s Mystical Critique of Psychoanalysis and His Call for a ‘New Science of the Mind’.” History of European Ideas 43, no. 5 (July 2017): 474–93. p. 478,
- ↑ Maharaj, Ayon. “The Challenge of the Oceanic Feeling: Romain Rolland’s Mystical Critique of Psychoanalysis and His Call for a ‘New Science of the Mind’.” History of European Ideas 43, no. 5 (July 2017): 474–93.