Difference between revisions of "Training Analysis"

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Training Analysis
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[[Training]] [[Analysis]]
The training analysis is the personal course of psychoanalytical treatment that every psychoanalyst must undergo with a certified analyst prior to, or in parallel with, his or her theoretical training, and before beginning to practice.
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The [[training analysis]] is the personal course of [[psychoanalytical]] [[treatment]] that every [[psychoanalyst]] must undergo with a certified [[analyst]] prior to, or in parallel with, his or her [[theoretical]] training, and before beginning to [[practice]].
As late as 1909, Freud's answer to the hypothetical question "How can one become a psycho-analyst?" was still: "by studying one's own dreams" (1910a, p. 33). This was a shibboleth that he mentioned several times, but by the following year he widened the requirements: "no psycho-analyst goes further than his...
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As late as 1909, [[Freud]]'s answer to the hypothetical question "How can one become a [[psycho]]-analyst?" was still: "by studying one's own [[dreams]]" (1910a, p. 33). This was a shibboleth that he mentioned several [[times]], but by the following year he widened the requirements: "no psycho-analyst goes further than his...
  
  

Latest revision as of 02:43, 21 May 2019

Training Analysis The training analysis is the personal course of psychoanalytical treatment that every psychoanalyst must undergo with a certified analyst prior to, or in parallel with, his or her theoretical training, and before beginning to practice. As late as 1909, Freud's answer to the hypothetical question "How can one become a psycho-analyst?" was still: "by studying one's own dreams" (1910a, p. 33). This was a shibboleth that he mentioned several times, but by the following year he widened the requirements: "no psycho-analyst goes further than his...