Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 188
Trim: 6¼ x 9½
978-1-4422-3173-3 • Hardback • December 2013 • $123.00 • (£95.00)
978-1-4422-3174-0 • eBook • December 2013 • $116.50 • (£90.00)
Rosemarie Sand has been a psychoanalyst for twenty-five years. She is a member of the Institute for Psychoanalytic Training and Research and the International Psychoanalytical Association. Her works include Early Nineteenth Century Anticipation of Freudian Theory, Confirmation in the Dora Case, Pre-Freudian Discovery of Dream Meaning: the Achievements of Charcot, Janet, and Krafft-Ebing, On a Contribution to a Future Scientific Study of Dream Interpretation, and Freud and the Western Dream Tradition. She specializes in antecedents to Freudian theory.
Preface
Chapter 1. Leibniz and the Unconscious
Chapter 2. Psychodynamics
Chapter 3. The Light and the Dark in the Mind
Chapter 4. The Power of Dark Ideas
Chapter 5. The Leibnizian Brain
Chapter 6. Free Association
Chapter 7. The Cartesian Unconscious
Chapter 8. The Demonic Unconscious
Chapter 9. The Romantic Imagination
Chapter 10. Schopenhauer: The Ego and the Id
Chapter 11. Hartmann: the Blockbuster
Chapter 12. The Ghost in the Freudian Mansion
Chapter 13. The Psychic Mechanism
Chapter 14. The Herbartian Legacy
References
About the Author
Rosemarie Sand has resurrected the splendid theory of unconscious mental functioning proposed by G.W. Leibniz at the beginning of the eighteenth century, together with the contributions of Christian Wolff and other disciples during the following decades. The teaching of this Leibniz-Wolffian psychology was highly regarded and widely accepted during the nineteenth century. Freud himself relied on its conceptualization of unconscious mind during the decade before he created his own first theory. Its immediate, potential importance today is attributable to its being unencumbered by the controversial ‘Freudian’ features to which critics have objected, the grounds for the interminable ‘Freud wars.’ Devoid of these obstacles, the Leibnizian vision could easily serve as the common denominator for diverse Freudian schools; it could also render service as a common ground where psychoanalytic theoreticians and the experimenters of cognitive psychology could meet.
— Adolf Grünbaum PhD, Andrew Mellon Professor of Philosophy, University of Pittsburgh
This is a brilliant book. Sigmund Freud’s seminal discussions of the unconscious mind are well known to the general educated public. Less well known are the contributions to the subject made by Freud’s predecessors. What Rosemarie Sand has done is to show in detail using previously untranslated German sources that in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, there were far more than hints, brief comments, and allusions to unconscious mentality. Beginning with Leibniz’s impressive contributions to psychology, there were well worked out theories and entire schools of thought devoted to the study of the unconscious culminating in the major works of the nineteenth century scholars Heinz Hartmann and Jonathan Herbart. In present day discussions of consciousness, most of the contributions of these pre-Freudian theorists of the unconscious tend to be ignored except by a few specialists. Psychologists, philosophers, and indeed anyone interested in the human mind can profit greatly from reading Sand’s The Unconscious without Freud.
— Edward Erwin, PhD, University of Miami