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Psychoanalysis. Parts of the Brain applied on the Four Noble Truths and Rites of Passage

Titel: Psychoanalysis. Parts of the Brain applied on the Four Noble Truths and Rites of Passage

Essay , 2015 , 7 Seiten

Autor:in: Youssef Al-Youssef (Autor:in)

Psychologie - Sonstiges

Leseprobe & Details   Blick ins Buch
Zusammenfassung Leseprobe Details

This paper associates Buddhist's four noble truths with the three parts of the human brain. it also gives insight about Rites of Passage and applies the three parts with the three steps of intiation in many belliefs. It also links the three parts of the human brain with the three stages of intiation in Victor Turner's theory about Rites of Passage.

Leseprobe


Table of Contents

1. Psychoanalysis

Objectives and Themes

The primary objective of this work is to explore the intersection of psychoanalytic theory—specifically the Freudian model of id, ego, and super ego—with religious archetypes, mythology, and literature. It investigates how human longing for spiritual unity, often termed the "Life Breath," manifests through various cultural and religious practices and how literature serves as a modern alternative archetype for the human psyche.

  • The historical and psychological concept of the soul and its relation to the universe.
  • The integration of Freud’s structural model of the psyche with religious and mythical archetypes.
  • The role of initiation processes and spiritual aspiration across different cultural traditions.
  • The analysis of literary works as modern frameworks for moral and psychological development.
  • The comparison between traditional religious texts and secular literature as sources of archetypal guidance.

Excerpt from the Book

Psychoanalysis

In the old times, they thought that the soul resided in the heart. Nowadays, scientists tell us that the soul is the unsubstantial thing which gives energy to the body. Shakespeare considered the divergent soul is reflected in the whole kingdom (Shakespeare 200). This belief can be traced to Celtic-Buddhism, where it was believed that during the reign of a righteous king, one could not travel easily in the forest because of the abundance of fruit and honey. On the contrary, when the king fails to come up to his duty, famine strikes (Monaghan 289).

If we look at the above background history of the soul concept, one could see that it gives the impression of interrelatedness between the soul and the universe. In Buddhism, the Yogi is a person who is the highest member in this belief, and is in complete unity with the Life Breath. In Shamanism, the dancer performs certain movements in order to be with total unity with the universe, and the dancing movements are expressions of physical and spiritual perfection. Buddhists, and Theosophists, considered the soul different from the spirit; the spirit is what connects the soul to the body (Blavatsky 200). And when the person is dead, the spirit goes to purgation; a place where the soul is redeemed by consuming the spirit. Celtic Buddhism, being almost the father of all other beliefs other than the three heavenly religions, can be taken particularly to see how a Yogi accomplishes total unity with the universe.

Summary of Chapters

1. Psychoanalysis: This chapter introduces the historical perception of the soul and transitions into a psychoanalytic framework, linking the Freudian id, ego, and super ego to religious concepts, the "Life Breath," and archetypal development through initiation and literature.

Keywords

Psychoanalysis, Soul, Id, Ego, Super Ego, Archetypes, Buddhism, Shamanism, Literature, Mythology, Life Breath, Conscience, Initiation, Symbolism, Psychology.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the fundamental focus of this publication?

The work focuses on analyzing the human psyche through the synthesis of Freudian psychoanalytic theory and historical/religious archetypes, examining how individuals strive for spiritual reconciliation.

What are the primary thematic areas covered?

The primary themes include the structural components of the human mind, the history of the soul concept, spiritual initiation, the role of mythology, and the psychological impact of literature.

What is the central research aim of the text?

The author aims to establish a connection between the innate human urge for spiritual unity—the "Life Breath"—and the way this urge is reflected and satisfied through religion, myth, and literary narrative.

Which scientific or theoretical methodology is employed?

The methodology relies on qualitative psychoanalytic theory, primarily using the Freudian model, combined with a comparative analysis of religious rituals, mythologies, and literary texts.

What is examined in the main body of the work?

The main body treats the evolution of the character's phases (separation, transition, reaggregation), the symbolic meaning of archetypes, and how literature functions as a modern vehicle for moral and ego development.

Which keywords best characterize this work?

The work is characterized by terms such as Psychoanalysis, Archetypes, Id/Ego/Super Ego, Life Breath, Religion, and Symbolic Interpretation.

How does the author interpret the role of literature in relation to the psyche?

The author views literature as an "invention of the id" that seeks to fulfill the super ego's search for the "Life Breath," acting as a modern, albeit sometimes divergent, alternative to holy texts.

What is the significance of "symbolic blindness" in the text?

Symbolic blindness is analyzed as a state where the id's internal focus prevents an individual from perceiving external truth, with "light" serving as a symbol for divine guidance and objective reality.

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Details

Titel
Psychoanalysis. Parts of the Brain applied on the Four Noble Truths and Rites of Passage
Autor
Youssef Al-Youssef (Autor:in)
Erscheinungsjahr
2015
Seiten
7
Katalognummer
V294886
ISBN (eBook)
9783656930624
ISBN (Buch)
9783656930631
Sprache
Englisch
Schlagworte
psychoanalysis parts brain four noble truths rites passage
Produktsicherheit
GRIN Publishing GmbH
Arbeit zitieren
Youssef Al-Youssef (Autor:in), 2015, Psychoanalysis. Parts of the Brain applied on the Four Noble Truths and Rites of Passage, München, GRIN Verlag, https://www.hausarbeiten.de/document/294886
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Leseprobe aus  7  Seiten
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