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New Yorker (Menand)

 

...Freud has long outlived psychoanalysis. For many years, even as writers were discarding the more patently absurd elements of his theory—penis envy, or the death drive—they continued to pay homage to Freud's unblinking insight into the human condition. That persona helped Freud to evolve, in the popular imagination, from a scientist into a kind of poet of the mind. And the thing about poets is that they cannot be refuted. No one asks of "Paradise Lost": But is it true? Freud and his concepts, now converted into metaphors, joined the legion of the undead.
-- Louis Menand. Why Freud Survives (published in print as "The Stone Guest: Can Sigmund Freud ever be killed") New Yorker (August 28, 2017 Issue) [a review of the book Freud: The Making of an Illusion by Frederick Crews.]
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