Disciplining freud on religion/ perspectives from the humanities and social sciences
edited by Gregory Kaplan and William Barclay Parsons
- 1st ed.
- New York: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers Inc., 2010.
- 233 p.
Part I: On Freud, Religion, and Religious Studies Desiderata and Possibilities for the Psychological Study of Religion: How to Enlarge the Place of Freudian TTiought in Religious Studies Jacob A. Belzen, The University of Amsterdam When Throne and Altar Are in Danger: Freud, Mourning, and Religion in Modernity Diane Jonte-Pace, Santa Clara University Part II: Perspectives from the Natural and Social Sciences Love the Mother, Hate the Father: Understanding Sociology's Vehement Rejection of Freud on Religion Michael P. Carroll, University of Western Ontario Of Chariots, Navels, and Winged Steeds: The Dialogue between Psychoanalysis and Buddhism William B. Parsons, Rice University Freud and Neuroscience: A Return to Origins Kelly Bulkeley, The Graduate Theobgical Union, John F. Kennedy University Part III: Philosophical Reconsiderations Freud and Philosophy of Religion after Metaphysics Gregory Kapbn, Rice University "The Jewish People Does Not Dream": The Paradoxes of Identification, or Martin Buber and Sigmund Freud on the Meaning of Judaism Bettina Bergo, Universiti de Montreal Freudian Unconscious and Secularization of Judaism Jean'Joseph Goux, Rice University