Demonstrating a relational, dialogic way of thinking and writing, this
book offers an innovative perspective on the human potential for
intersubjective engagement and on the nature of true encounter.
The authors engage in creative, associative dialogues and trialogues
inspired by psychoanalysis and Buddhism, poetry and religion, theory and
case studies, academic and free styles of writing - each enriching the
other. Reflecting on the essence of relating, they convey a flow between
inner, private reveries and shared ones, and between individual
expressions of thought and evolvements of newly born thirds. Through
this interdisciplinary, experimental setting, the authors explore the
possibility to reach truths and meanings that each individual would not
have achieved on their own.
Offering new concepts and formulations that may nourish
psychotherapists' thought and be usefully implemented in their practice,
this book presents a pressingly unique and essential viewpoint for
psychoanalysts and psychoanalytic psychotherapists in training and in
practice.