What exactly is involved in using particular case histories to think
systematically about social, psychological and historical processes? Can
one move from a textured particularity, like that in Freud�s famous
cases, to a level of reliable generality? In this book, Forrester teases
out the meanings of the psychoanalytic case, how to characterize it and
account for it as a particular kind of writing. In so doing, he moves
from psychoanalysis to the law and medicine, to philosophy and the
constituents of science. Freud and Foucault jostle here with Thomas
Kuhn, Ian Hacking and Robert Stoller, and Einstein and Freud�s
connection emerges as a case study of two icons in the general category
of the Jewish Intellectual.
While Forrester was particularly concerned with analysing the style of
reasoning that was dominant in psychoanalysis and related disciplines,
his path-breaking account of thinking in cases will be of great interest
to scholars, students and professionals across a wide range of
disciplines, from history, law and the social sciences to medicine,
clinical practice and the therapies of the world.