Top 5 Songs Of The Week: June 16th 2023
A Melbourne club duo spread the gospel about acid and techno + The Moving Stills drop an instant classic that features Adam Newling wailing on the harmonica.
Explore " superego" with insightful episodes like "Top 5 Songs Of The Week: June 16th 2023", "Top 5 Songs Of The Week: May 12th 2023", "Ego Unraveled - Exploring the True Nature of Self in Psychology", "The psychology of conscience with Sean McGrath & Donald Carveth" and "E13 Making conscience conscious: A conversation with Donald Carveth & Sean McGrath" from podcasts like ""triple j Unearthed", "triple j Unearthed", "Information for Life - Insights and Ideas to Navigate Your World", "Berlin Psychoanalytic" and "Psychology & The Cross"" and more!
A Melbourne club duo spread the gospel about acid and techno + The Moving Stills drop an instant classic that features Adam Newling wailing on the harmonica.
WA songwriter Sash Seabourne is on the pod talking about his Australian Idol experience and how growing up in "survival mode" influenced his personal new song. Plus you'll head on a mind bending trip with SA's finest six piece psych outfit.
Unravel the complexities of the ego in psychology with "Information for Life" as we explore its true nature, debunk misconceptions, and reveal the essential role it plays in our lives.
In future episodes of "Information for Life - Insights and Ideas to Navigate Your World," we will continue exploring various facets of the human experience, providing valuable insights and ideas to support your personal journey. Together, we will delve into emotional intelligence, mindfulness, communication styles, strategies, pitfalls to watch out for, and how to spot potentially true narcissists and people with possible borderline personality disorder online based on their public profiles. Hence, we come better prepared to handle, help, or avoid them. We will also discuss the benefits of monogamy, non-monogamy, the grey areas in between, and more.
Thank you for joining us on this journey into the world of ego. We hope found this discussion enlightening and informative, and gained new insights and ideas to help you navigate your life with greater understanding and compassion. Join us next time on "Information for Life - Insights and Ideas to Navigate Your World" for further exploration into the human experience. Until next time, take care, lead with compassion and empathy, and keep learning, growing, and navigating your world with curiosity and an open heart.
Sources:
Freud, S. (1923). The Ego and the Id. The Hogarth Press and the Institute of Psychoanalysis.
Erikson, E. H. (1968). Identity: Youth and Crisis. W. W. Norton & Company.
Jung, C. G. (1953). Two Essays on Analytical Psychology. Routledge & Kegan Paul.
Maslow, A. H. (1954). Motivation and Personality. Harper & Row.
Maslow, A. H. (1968). Toward a Psychology of Being. Van Nostrand Reinhold Company.
Rogers, C. R. (1959). A Theory of Therapy, Personality, and Interpersonal Relationships: As Developed in the Client-centered Framework. In S. Koch (Ed.), Psychology: A Study of a Science, Vol. 3. McGraw-Hill.
What’s the role of conscience, ethics, and morals in psychological development and individuation? To investigate this question Berlin Psychoanalytic invited again the Toronto-based psychoanalyst Donald Carveth (earlier discussion here) and Philosophy & Theology professor Sean J. McGrath for a conversation. As a base for our discussion, we have read the important 1958 Jung essay ‘A psychological view of conscience’. You can access it through the Substack page of our sister podcast, Psychology & The Cross and their Substack page.
Donald Carveth is the author of the book "The still small voice: Psychoanalytic reflections on guilt and conscience” (Routledge, 2013). He runs a popular Youtube channel on psychoanalysis and also make some of his readings available on his website https://www.doncarveth.com/
Sean McGrath is a Canadian philosopher and Professor of Philosophy at Memorial University of Newfoundland. He is known for his published work in the history of philosophy and the philosophy of religion. Major single-authored works includes for example 'The Dark Ground of Spirit: Schelling and the unconscious'. There is also a separate podcast series, Secular Christ where Jakob Lusensky discusses questions related to Christianity today.
Jakob Lusensky is a Jungian psychoanalyst with a private practice in Berlin.
Music played in this episode is licensed under creativecommons.org: "Falling Angels" and "Golden teacher" by Ketsa.
“Somewhere Jung says that the only evil is unconsciousness and this, I think touches to your work Don, that this growth in consciousness, which psychoanalysis aims towards, has to be understood as a moral drive towards the good.”
Episode description:
What’s the role of conscience, ethics, and morals in psychological development and individuation? To investigate this question we invited again the Toronto-based psychoanalyst Donald Carveth (Episode 12) and Philosophy & Theology professor Sean McGrath (Episode 3) for a conversation. As a base for our discussion, we have read the important 1958 Jung essay ‘A psychological view of conscience’.
You can access it through our new Substack page.
Donald Carveth is the author of the book "The still small voice: Psychoanalytic reflections on guilt and conscience” (Routledge, 2013). He runs a popular Youtube channel on psychoanalysis and also make some of his readings available on his website https://www.doncarveth.com/
Sean McGrath is a Canadian philosopher and Professor of Philosophy at Memorial University of Newfoundland. He is known for his published work in the history of philosophy and the philosophy of religion. Major single-authored works includes for example 'The Dark Ground of Spirit: Schelling and the unconscious'. There is also a separate podcast series, Secular Christ where Jakob Lusensky discusses questions related to Christianity today.
Jakob Lusensky is a Jungian psychoanalyst with a private practice in Berlin and the host of this podcast.
Music played in this episode is licensed under creativecommons.org: "Falling Angels" and "Golden teacher" by Ketsa.
“Jesus was the first psychoanalyst. The most brilliant psychoanalyst of all time. The whole theory of projection is right there. Why do you complain about a mote in your neighbor's eye when there's a beam in your eye, he says. So much of psychoanalytic insight is there in the New Testament, especially in the words of Jesus and in St. Paul. So I became increasingly struck by these parallels.”
Episode description:
In this episode I speak to Toronto-based psychoanalyst Donald Carveth. We discuss how Don converted from Jung to Freud, his writing on the importance of differentiating conscience from the superego, and what we can learn from Jesus and the bible about psychoanalysis.
Donald Carveth is the author of the book "The still small voice: Psychoanalytic reflections on guilt and conscience” (Karnac, 2013). He runs a popular Youtube channel on psychoanalysis and also make some of his readings available on his website https://www.doncarveth.com/
Music played in this episode is licensed under creativecommons.org: "Reborn", "Essence", "Blue violets", "Enough" by Ketsa.
In a series of conversations with psychoanalysts, we hope to further our mission of making psychoanalytic education and thought available to everyone. First out is a conversation between Toronto-based Dr. Donald Carveth and Berlin Psychoanalytic's Jakob Lusenky. We discuss how to differentiate one's conscience from the sadistic superego, reparative versus persecutory guilt, the tragic foundation of psychoanalysis, and in what way Jesus was the first psychoanalyst.
Support our mission on Patreon: https://bit.ly/3fADlr7
About Donald L Carveth:
Donald L Carveth, PhD, RP, FIPA is Emeritus Professor of Sociology and Social & Political Thought at York University in Toronto. He is a training and supervising analyst in the Canadian Institute of Psychoanalysis, past Director of the Toronto Institute of Psychoanalysis, and past Editor-in-Chief of the Canadian Journal of Psychoanalysis/Revue Canadienne de Psychanalyse.
About Jakob Lusensky:
Jakob Lusensky is a Jungian psychoanalyst with a private practice in Berlin. You can find more of his podcast on Spotify. 'Psychology & The Cross' & 'Secular Christ with Sean McGrath'.
★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★Becoming a new parent can be a special kind of mayhem. Add a global pandemic into the mix, and the chaos of the first few months are elevated to a new level. But depending on your situation, those challenges may be coupled with opportunity. In Episode 59, podcaster, producer, actor, and all around creative human, Matt Gourley, joins the conversation to discuss the joys, challenges, and insanity of new fatherhood—and how this shift has helped him discover some new perspective on what’s truly important.
Episode 59 of Modern Dadhood kicks off with a short discussion about the podcast's brief winter hibernation where the guys describe life chugging forward and the typical madness of having young kids. Adam shares the story leading up to landing a conversation with new dad Matt Gourley. Matt is the host of Superego, producer and co-host of Conan. O'Brien Needs a Friend, actor, musician, and designer. In our time together, we discuss topics including:
• Finding peace in the first few months of parenthood
• The importance of a paternity leave
• Redefining work/life balance
• The importance of maintaining a sense of self
• Anxiety associated with trying to keep your newborn safe during the pandemic
• What kind of dad Matt envisioned he'd be before having kids
Post-guest, Marc shares a whopper of a "Did I Just Say That Out Loud?" which can't be described... the story must be heard to be believed.
LINKS:
Matt Gourley (website)
Matt Gourley on Twitter
Matt Gourley on Instagram
Housecat And Home
Townland
Superego
Conan O'Brien Needs a Friend
With Gourley and Rust
I Was There Too
James Bonding
Caspar Babypants
Spencer Albee
Red Vault Audio
Stuffed Animal
Without further ado, Dr. Rubin and Dr. Pete bring you the first episode regarding the differences between behaviorism and traditional psychoanalysis as developed by Sigmund Freud. They highlight how the practices are similar and how behavioral health providers are often implementing more similar interventions than different, but how eastern traditions are nonjudgmental and likely more applicable across groups when compared to traditional Freudian theory. Tune in to learn more.
Knowing and not knowing: Exploring the structure and conditions of unconscious processes. This lecture is the second of two that address; unconscious mental states, secondary repression, mechanics of secondary repression (conflict, cleaving of thought & affect), the paradox of repression, the problem of the censor (Sartre) and Doris's solution to this via an anxious psychic pistol shot, motivations for repression (attitudes, cultural norms), primal repression, content and maintenance of repression, repression vs suppression, Freud's Epistemic vs Systemic notions of the UCS, and lifting repression. Contact Email: philosophyofpsychoanalysis@gmail.com Lecturer: Associate Professor Doris McIlwain. Theme song creator: Rose Mackenzie-Peterson. Logo creator: Campbell Henderson. https://www.campbellhenderson.com/artwork Thanks to Dr. Andrew Geeves and Professor John Sutton for all their hard work. Sadly A/Prof. Doris McIlwain, the course creator, died of cancer in 2015. This podcast is created by her family and friends, with hopes that her curiosity, joy and intellectual playfulness will keep inspiring and informing those who listen.
Meet the brand new 16yo ledgie we're totally obsessed with, plus, are you ready to preach from the gospel of WILSN? These are the 5 best songs of the week on triple j Unearthed. Taj Ralph - Kill The Mood | WILSN - Home | ok2222 - F U {Ft. Zabir & park bird} | SUPEREGO - Burn | George Michelle - Here Right Now {Ft. Gauci}
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