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In Search of the Spiritual

Gabriel Marcel, Psychoanalysis and the Sacred

Paul Marcus

$69.99

Paperback

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English
Karnac Books
01 October 2012
"Gabriel Marcel (1889-1973), the first French existentialist and phenomenologist, was a world-class Catholic philosopher, an accomplished playwright, drama critic and musician. He wrote brilliantly about many of the classic existential themes associated with Sartre, Heidegger, Jaspers and Buber, prior to the publication of their main works. Marcel regarded himself as a ""homo viator,"" a spiritual wanderer: ""If man is essentially a voyager, it is because he is en route . . . towards an end which one can say at once and contradictorily that he sees and does not see."" As a self-described ""philosopher of the threshold"" and ""an awakener,"" his stated goal was to shed some light on the nature of spiritual reality, those moments when one experiences an upsurge of the love of life. In this book, Paul Marcus joins the best of Marcellian and psychoanalytic insights to help the reader develop an inner sensibility that is more receptive, responsive and responsible to the transforming sacred presences that grace everyday life, such as are experienced in selfless love, hoping beyond hope, and maintaining faith in the goodness of the world despite its harsh challenges. Whether one is reading ""Re-finding God during Chemo-therapy,"" ""Maintaining Personal Dignity in the Face of the Mass Society,"" ""On Fidelity and Betrayal in Love Relationships"" or ""The Kiss,"" Marcus, with the help of his two spiritual masters, Marcel and Freud, points the reader in the direction of a greater everyday sacred attunement to the eternal presences that life mysteriously reveals to those with a discerning eye and an open heart."

By:  
Imprint:   Karnac Books
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 230mm,  Width: 147mm,  Spine: 15mm
Weight:   362g
ISBN:   9781780490540
ISBN 10:   1780490542
Pages:   234
Publication Date:  
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Primary ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Dr. Marcus is a supervising and training analyst at the National Psychological Association for Psychoanalysis. He is the author of 'In Search of the Good Life: Emmanuel Levinas, Psychoanalysis and the Art of Living' and 'Ancient Religious Wisdom, Spirituality and Psychoanalysis', among other books.

Reviews for In Search of the Spiritual: Gabriel Marcel, Psychoanalysis and the Sacred

'Learned and moving, nourishing psyche and spirit, this book opens heart and eyes to the reality we share. A Jewish psychoanalyst meets a Catholic existentialist and, with the latter as a vehicle, renews appreciation of the human journey.'- Michael Eigen, author of Contact With the Depths and Faith and Transformation'[This book] is a most impressive and important study of the presence of the spiritual and the sacred in the writings of the twentieth century French philosopher Gabriel Marcel. [It] is an extended reflection by a practising analyst on Marcel's insights into the utter fragility and yet transcendent dignity of the human condition. Using concrete illustrations from his cancer experience and from his twenty-five years as a professional psychotherapist, Dr Marcus shows in detail how Marcel's writings on hope, grace, courage, humility, dignity, fidelity, and love enabled him to achieve some understanding and acceptance of that terminal illness and to create/find positive meaning in it. His reflections are offered in the hope that all who search for an ultimate meaning and value for their finite existence may benefit from this unique combination of psychoanalysis and Marcel's thought. This clear well-written book can offer immense help in understanding Marcel and in seeing the usefulness of his ideas in psychoanalysis. Indeed, the dialogue Dr Marcus presents here between Marcel's thought and analytic theory and practice will certainly enhance one's appreciation of both. I hope that the conversation presented in this study, the conversation between a religious Jew who is a psychoanalyst and a Catholic convert who is a major philosopher of our time will encourage others not of the Catholic faith to take seriously a Christian writer who continues to have so much to offer to our understanding of our common human pilgrimage towards the transcendent, absolute Thou.'- Taken from the Preface by Dr Thomas C. Anderson, Emeritus professor of philosophy, Marquette University, Milwaukee, Wisconsin


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