Freud on the Acropolis: Reflections on a Paradoxical Response to the Real

Susan Sugarman

Freud on the Acropolis: Reflections on a Paradoxical Response to the Real
Format
Paperback
Publisher
The Perseus Books Group
Country
United States
Published
15 July 1999
Pages
124
ISBN
9780465083305

Freud on the Acropolis: Reflections on a Paradoxical Response to the Real

Susan Sugarman

Analyzes a unique mental eventthe paradoxical surprise that people often feel when they come upon something that they have felt sure existed but are seeing for the first time.. This book analyzes a subtle but intriguing mental eventthe paradoxical surprise that people often feel when they come upon something that they have felt sure existed but are seeing for the first time. Noted first by Sigmund Freud, this common but odd experience proves remarkably resistant to trivial explanation and marks instead a distinct type of experience. Similarly, in everyday life we often feel compelled to verify firsthand the scene of a recent event, even though we never doubted its occurrence. Susan Sugarman probes this experience and its relation to other everyday sensibilities, such as the pleasure of reencountering the familiar and peoples fascination with authenticity. Although the experience manifests itself in a seeming lapse in logic and remains obscure in a way that one mightand that Freud didassociate with pathological formations, it is neither illogical nor pathological. On the contrary, it observes a moment of mental health and personal integration. This book analyzes a subtle but intriguing mental eventthe paradoxical surprise that people sometimes feel when they come upon something that they have felt sure existed but are seeing for the first time. Noted first by Sigmund Freud, this common but odd experience proves remarkably resistant to trivial explanation.Upon seeing the Acropolis for the first time, Freud remarked, So all this really does exist, just as we learned in school! Similarly, in everyday life we often feel compelled to verify firsthand the scene of a recent event, even though we never doubted its occurrence. Susan Sugarman probes this experience and its relation to other everyday sensibilities, such as the pleasure of reencountering the familiar and peoples fascination with authenticity. Although the experience manifests itself in a seeming lapse in logic and remains obscure in a way that one mightand that Freud didassociate with pathological formations, it is neither illogical nor pathological. On the contrary, it observes a moment of mental health and personal integration.Similar to approaches in modern philosophy and linguistics, Sugarmans analysis is applied here accessibly and in ordinary terms to concrete behavior and experience. As a result, thought and feeling, normally believed to elude systematic inquiry, yield to it, allowing for genuine progress in understanding the human mind.

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