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X-WR-CALNAME;VALUE=TEXT:The Philosophers and the Super-Ego: On Kant, Freud, and Moral Psychology
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SUMMARY:The Philosophers and the Super-Ego: On Kant, Freud, and Moral Psychology
DESCRIPTION:<h2>	<img alt="Hegel" height="324" src="https://mahindrahumanities.fas.harvard.edu/sites/hwpi.harvard.edu/files/styles/os_files_xxlarge/public/mahindra/files/dialectical.jpg?m=1587658906&amp;itok=jukn0D8U" title="" width="900"><a href="internal:/dialectical-thinking-humanities" title="">DIALECTICAL THINKING IN THE HUMANITIES</a></h2><h2>	SPEAKER: Francey Russell, Barnard College</h2><p>	In recent decades, several philosophers—Samuel Scheffler, David Velleman, and Béatrice Longuenesse—have turned to Freud’s last metapsychology of id, ego, and super-ego in order to reconstruct a naturalistic, causal-developmental account of Kantian moral psychology.  In this paper I show that the picture of the super-ego that they extract from Freud omits a crucial and highly unusual detail: according to Freud, the super-ego generates contradictory commands, both demanding that the egostrive to realize the ego-ideal and prohibiting that very striving.  This, I argue, makes Freud’s moral psychology quite different from Kant’s, and much less philosophically familiar.  After defending this reading of Freud, I then begin the task of arguing for the merits of adopting Freud’s picture.  I close by suggesting that adopting this picture requires greater transformations in our moral psychological ideals than has recently been acknowledged.  </p>
LOCATION:Barker Center, Room 114
STATUS:CONFIRMED
DTSTART:20240502T220000Z
DTEND:20240502T220000Z
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