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Table of Contents
Preface; Contents; Contributors; Abbreviations; Chapter 1: Introduction; 1.1 Bridges and the Hyphen of Neuro-Psychoanalysis; 1.2 Terminology Counts; 1.3 Present Sites of Bridging and Controversy; References; Part I: The Venture of Neuropsychoanalysis; Chapter 2: What Is Neuropsychoanalysis?; 2.1 Historical Foundations of Neuropsychoanalysis; 2.2 Philosophical Foundations of Neuropsychoanalysis; 2.3 Scientific Foundations of Neuropsychoanalysis; 2.4 What Neuropsychoanalysis Is Not; 2.5 The Future; References; Part II: Embodiment as Bridge Between Psychoanalysis and Neuroscience
Chapter 3: Enactments in Transference: Embodiment, Trauma and Depression. What Have Psychoanalysis and the Neurosciences to Offer to Each Other3.1 Countertransference Reactions as a Product of Unconscious Enactments or Embodied Memories of Trauma?; 3.1.1 Concerning Embodied Memory; 3.1.2 Concerning Trauma; 3.1.3 Concerning Treatment; 3.2 Clinical Psychoanalytical Research and the Functions of Psyche and the Brain: Human Interaction, Affects, Memories and Trauma in the Transference Relationship to the Analyst; 3.2.1 Remembering Psychological and Sexual Abuse
3.2.2 Remembering and Denying Early Traumatic Separations3.3 Memory, Trauma and Depression and the Dialogue Between Psychoanalysis, Embodied Cognitive Science and Epigenetics; 3.4 Summary; References; Chapter 4: Embodiment in Simulation Theory and Cultural Science, with Remarks on the Coding-Problem of Neuroscience; 4.1 Prologue; 4.2 Introduction: Point of Departure and Field of Intervention; 4.2.1 On the Neurosciences; 4.2.2 On Psychoanalysis; 4.3 Epistemological Problems Part I: The Quantity-Quality-Gap; 4.4 Epistemological Problems Part II: The Coding Term in Simulation Theory
4.5 Mimetic and Arbitrary Aspects of Language-The Time of Cultural History4.6 Language, Image, Gesture; 4.7 Empathy and Its Relative from Cultural Science: Compassion; References; Part III: The Unconscious Before Freud and After; Chapter 5: Signs and Souls: The Prehistory of Psychoanalytical Treatment in Nineteenth-Century French Psychiatry; References; Chapter 6: Dreams, Unconscious Fantasies and Epigenetics; 6.1 Dreams; 6.1.1 Dreams in Psychoanalysis and Neurobiology; 6.1.2 The Dreaming Mind and Brain; 6.2 When Psychoanalysis Meets Neurophysiology; 6.3 Dreams and Unconscious Fantasies
6.4 EpigeneticsReferences; Part IV: ReVisions of the Drive in Freud and Neuroscience; Chapter 7: Beyond the Death Drive: Freud's Engagement with Cell Biology and the Reconceptualization of His Drive Theory; 7.1 The Drive on the Threshold Between Biology and the Psyche; 7.2 The Detour of Psychoanalysis; 7.3 Beyond the Pleasure Principle: Discovering a "More Primordial" Drive; 7.4 Beyond the Death Drive; 7.5 Life and Death; 7.6 Reintroducing the Question of Quality; 7.7 Postscript: "What Is Life?"; References; Chapter 8: Drive and Love: Revisiting Freud's Drive Theory
Chapter 3: Enactments in Transference: Embodiment, Trauma and Depression. What Have Psychoanalysis and the Neurosciences to Offer to Each Other3.1 Countertransference Reactions as a Product of Unconscious Enactments or Embodied Memories of Trauma?; 3.1.1 Concerning Embodied Memory; 3.1.2 Concerning Trauma; 3.1.3 Concerning Treatment; 3.2 Clinical Psychoanalytical Research and the Functions of Psyche and the Brain: Human Interaction, Affects, Memories and Trauma in the Transference Relationship to the Analyst; 3.2.1 Remembering Psychological and Sexual Abuse
3.2.2 Remembering and Denying Early Traumatic Separations3.3 Memory, Trauma and Depression and the Dialogue Between Psychoanalysis, Embodied Cognitive Science and Epigenetics; 3.4 Summary; References; Chapter 4: Embodiment in Simulation Theory and Cultural Science, with Remarks on the Coding-Problem of Neuroscience; 4.1 Prologue; 4.2 Introduction: Point of Departure and Field of Intervention; 4.2.1 On the Neurosciences; 4.2.2 On Psychoanalysis; 4.3 Epistemological Problems Part I: The Quantity-Quality-Gap; 4.4 Epistemological Problems Part II: The Coding Term in Simulation Theory
4.5 Mimetic and Arbitrary Aspects of Language-The Time of Cultural History4.6 Language, Image, Gesture; 4.7 Empathy and Its Relative from Cultural Science: Compassion; References; Part III: The Unconscious Before Freud and After; Chapter 5: Signs and Souls: The Prehistory of Psychoanalytical Treatment in Nineteenth-Century French Psychiatry; References; Chapter 6: Dreams, Unconscious Fantasies and Epigenetics; 6.1 Dreams; 6.1.1 Dreams in Psychoanalysis and Neurobiology; 6.1.2 The Dreaming Mind and Brain; 6.2 When Psychoanalysis Meets Neurophysiology; 6.3 Dreams and Unconscious Fantasies
6.4 EpigeneticsReferences; Part IV: ReVisions of the Drive in Freud and Neuroscience; Chapter 7: Beyond the Death Drive: Freud's Engagement with Cell Biology and the Reconceptualization of His Drive Theory; 7.1 The Drive on the Threshold Between Biology and the Psyche; 7.2 The Detour of Psychoanalysis; 7.3 Beyond the Pleasure Principle: Discovering a "More Primordial" Drive; 7.4 Beyond the Death Drive; 7.5 Life and Death; 7.6 Reintroducing the Question of Quality; 7.7 Postscript: "What Is Life?"; References; Chapter 8: Drive and Love: Revisiting Freud's Drive Theory