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Amid, B., Aron, L. & Bachar, E. (2020) Selfless Self-Transcendence in the Clinical Setting as a Source of Self-Enhancement. American Journal of Psychoanalysis 80:16-36
- Dr. Aron passed away on February 28, 2019.
- Dr. Aron passed away on February 28, 2019.
- Aron, L. (1996). A meeting of minds: Mutuality in psychoanalysis.
- , & Aron, L. (2018). Dramatic dialogue: Contemporary clinical practice.
- Weber, S. L. (2003). An analyst's surrender.
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Aron, L. (1989) Dreams, Narrative and the Psychoanalytic Method. Contemporary Psychoanalysis 25:108-126
- 198925108-126Dreams, Narrative and the Psychoanalytic Method1LewisAron Lewis Aron, Ph.D.90 Knightsbridge RoadGreat Neck, New York 11021 I had a dream.
- 2:5-56 Fosshage, J. L. 1987 A revised psychoanalytic approach In, Dream Interpretation: A Comparative Study (revised edition) (eds.) Fosshage, J. L. and Loew, C. A. New York: P.
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Aron, L. (1990) One Person and Two Person Psychologies and the Method of Psychoanalysis. Psychoanalytic Psychology 7:475-485
- Requests for reprints should be sent to Lewis Aron, PhD, 243 West End Avenue, Apartment 310, New York, NY 10023.
- (For a more thorough discussion of the free association method, see Aron, 1990.) The classical approach views free associations as determined by unconscious dynamic conflict that in the absence of interference from the analyst or resistances, from within would spontaneously unfold.
- (p. 69) Acknowledgments On the basis of this article, Lewis Aron was presented with the Postdoctoral Award by the American Psychological Association, Division of Psychoanalysis, August, 1989.
- 56:68-87 Aron, J. A. (1990). Free association and changing models of mind.
- Wachtel, P. L. (1982). Vicious Circles:—The Self and the Rhetoric of Emerging and Unfolding.
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Aron, L. (1990) Free Association and Changing Models of Mind. Journal of the American Academy of Psychoanalysis 18:439-459
- 1990 18 3 439-459 Free Association and Changing Models of Mind Lewis Aron * 243 West End Avenue #310 New York, NY 10023 The method of free association, like most major psychoanalytic concepts, was developed in and has been conceptually tied to a one-person, intrapsychic, drive psychology.
- In a previous paper (Aron, 1989), I argued for the value of pursuing the patient's associations to dream elements in conjunction with attending to manifest content, the narrative theme of the dream, and dream structure.
- Aron, L. (1989), Dreams, narrative, and the psychoanalytic method, Contemp.
- (1984b), The third ear, in L. Caligor, P. Bromberg, and J. Meltzer (Eds.), Clinical Perspectives on the Supervision of Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy, Plenum, New York, pp.
- Friedman, L. (1984), Pictures of treatment by Gill and Schafer, Psychoanal.
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Aron, L. (1991) The Patient's Experience of the Analyst's Subjectivity. Psychoanalytic Dialogues 1:29-51
- 19911129-51The Patient's Experience of the Analyst's SubjectivityLewis Aron 243 West End Avenue, Apt. 310 New York, N.Y. 10023 This article highlights the analysis of the patient's experience of the analyst's subjectivity in the psychoanalytic situation.
- Although many cultural, social, and scientific developments have contributed to a relational view of the psychoanalytic process, I believe that the shift to an intersubjective An earlier version of this article was first presented at the spring meeting of the Division of Psychoanalysis, American Psychological Association, April 5, 1990. Dr. Aron is Supervising Psychologist, Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, St.
- This approach implies a “two-person psychology” or a regulatory-systems conceptualization of the analytic process (Aron, 1990). The terms transference and countertransference too easily lend themselves to a model that implies a one-way influence in which the analyst responds in reaction to the patient.
- (For a discussion of asocial paradigms, see Hoffman, 1983; for a discussion of one-person psychologies, see 44 Aron, in press). For example, Kohutian self psychology provides an important contribution to clinical psychoanalysis in its emphasis on the need for the analyst to be responsive and empathic and in its recognition of the vital experience of emotional attunement in the analytic process.
- Aron, L. (1990), One-person and two-person psychologies and the method of psychoanalysis.
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Aron, L. (1991) Working Through the Past—Working Toward the Future. Contemporary Psychoanalysis 27:81-108
- Lewis Aron, Ph.D.243 West End Avenue, Apt. 310New York, New York 10023 WHY DOES ANALYSIS TAKE SO LONG?
- However, as I have discussed elsewhere (Aron, 1989), the analytic atmosphere created by Levenson, by focusing so heavily on the active exploration of the interaction in the here-and-now may lend itself to a premature cutting off of the analysand's need to be left "alone" in the presence of the analyst (Winnicott, 1958).
- 47:451-475 Aron, L. 1989 One-person and two-person psychologies: Complementary or contradictory?
- Muslin, H. L. 1986 On working through in self psychology In: A.
- Wallace L. 1984 Pleasure and Frustration: A Resynthesis of Clinical and Theoretical Psychoanalysis New York: International Universities Press.
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Aron, L. (1992) Interpretation as Expression of the Analyst's Subjectivity. Psychoanalytic Dialogues 2:475-507
- Aron, L. (1990), One-person and two-person psychologies and the method of psychoanalysis.
- Aron, L. (1991), The patient's experience of the analyst's subjectivity.
- Aron, L. & Harris, A.
- & Aron, L. (in press), Abandoned workings: Ferenczi's mutual analysis. In: The Clinical and Theoretical Contributions of Sandor Ferenczi, ed. L. Aron & A. Harris. Hillsdale, NJ: The Analytic Press.
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Aron, L. (1992) From Ferenczi to Searles and Contemporary Relational Approaches: Commentary on Mark Blechner's “Working in the Countertransference”. Psychoanalytic Dialogues 2:181-190
- I have previously described (Aron, 1991a) recommendations for analyzing the patient's experience of the analyst's subjectivity as one aspect of the analysis of transference.
- This focus follows from our adopting a more “modern” (Cooper, 1987), interpersonal, social-constructivist (Hoffman, 1991), or “two-person” (Aron, 1991b) conceptualization of transference.
- Children are powerfully motivated to penetrate their parents' selves, to connect with them where they live emotionally, that is, to penetrate their character structures (Aron, 1991a; see also Mitchell, 1988).
- References Aron, L. (1991a), The patient's experience of the analyst's subjectivity.
- Aron, L. (1991b), One person and two person psychologies and the method of psychoanalysis.
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Aron, L. (1993) Working Toward Operational Thought—Piagetian Theory and Psychoanalytic Method. Contemporary Psychoanalysis 29:289-313
- A central aspect of what is worked toward in psychoanalysis (Aron, 1991a) is the capacity to hold two contrasting ideas in mind simultaneously.
- Elsewhere (Aron, 1991b) I have argued for the importance of the internalized primal scene as a fundamental structure in the establishment of one's sense of self and of internal object relations, and I have referred to its role in the establishment of intersubjectivity.
- 56:68-87 Aron, L. 1990 Free association and changing models of mind Journal of the American Academy of Psychoanalysis 18 439-459 Aron, L. 1991a Working through the past — working toward the future Contemp.
- 27:81-109 Aron, L. 1991b The Internalized Primal Scene Paper presented at the New York University, Postdoctoral Program in Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis, Relational Orientation Colloquium, October 25, 1991Bach, S.
- Friedman, L. 1988 The Anatomy of Psychotherapy Hillsdale, N.J.: The Analytic Press.
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Aron, L. (1993) Comments and Criticisms. Contemporary Psychoanalysis 29:747-748
- 199329747-748Comments and CriticismsLewisAron Lewis Aron, Ph.D.NEW YORK, NEW YORK Dr. Aron replies: I APPRECIATE DR.
- REFERENCES Aron, L. 1993 Working toward operational thought: Piagetian theory and psychoanalytic method Contemp.
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Aron, L. (1995) The Internalized Primal Scene. Psychoanalytic Dialogues 5:195-237
- References Aron, L. (1991a), Working through the past—Working toward the future.
- Aron, L. (1991b), The patient's experience of the analyst's subjectivity.
- Aron, L. (1992a), From Ferenczi to Searles and contemporary relational approaches.
- Aron, L. (1992b), Interpretation as expression of the analyst's subjectivity.
- Aron, L. (1993), Working toward operational thought: Piagetian theory and psychoanalytic method, Contemp.
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Aron, L. (1996) Symposium on the Meaning and Practice of Intersubjectivity in Psychoanalysis: Introduction. Psychoanalytic Dialogues 6:591-597
- 199665591-597Symposium on the Meaning and Practice of Intersubjectivity in Psychoanalysis: IntroductionLewis Aron 243 West End Avenue, #310 New York, NY 10023 In the 16th and 17th centuries, Europeans began to encounter foreign peoples and the belief systems of other lands.
- Montesquieu observed this Chinese convert observing him and recognized that the foreigner, the stranger, the other, the object of his own observation, was himself another subject, and that he, Montesquieu, was not Lewis Aron, Ph.D. is Clinical Professor and Supervisor at the New York University Postdoctoral Program and at the Adelphi University Derner Institute for Advanced Psychological Studies.
- Elsewhere (Aron, 1996), I compare and contrast a variety of meanings of the term intersubjectivity, discuss the various psychoanalytic traditions of intersubjectivity, and trace their clinical implications.
- References Aron, L. (1996), A Meeting of Minds.
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Aron, L. (1996) From Hypnotic Suggestion To Free Association: Freud As A Psychotherapist, Circa 1892–1893. Contemporary Psychoanalysis 32:99-114
- Lewis Aron, Ph.D.243 West End AvenueNew York, NY 10023 IN THIS ARTICLE, I want to celebrate one aspect of Freud's creative genius, and in doing so, I want to make use of Freud as a model for contemporary students of psychotherapy and psychoanalysis.
- In a recent article, cowritten with Annabella Bushra (Aron & Bushra, 1995), we have examined this resurgence of interest by contemporary psychoanalysts in states of consciousness.
- REFERENCES Aron, L., Bushra, A.
- May 4, 1995Breuer, J., & Freud, S. 1893–1895 Studies on hysteria Standard Edition 2 Chertok, L., De Saussure, R.
- 81-166Wolberg, L. R. 1948 Medical hypnosis: Volume 1, The principles of hypnotherapy New York: Grune Straton.
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Aron, L. (1997) Are We To Have a Meeting of Minds?: A Reply to the Discussions of A Meeting of Minds. Psychoanalytic Dialogues 7:885-896
- References Aron, L. (1990), One-person and two-person psychologies and the method of psychoanalysis.
- Aron, L. (1997), Self-disclosure and the interactive matrix: Discussion of Kenneth A.
- , 7: 315-318 Aron, L. & Bushra, A.
- Bachant, J. L. & Richards, A.
- Mayer, E. L. (1996), Subjectivity and intersubjectivity of clinical facts.
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Aron, L. (1997) Self-Disclosure and the Interactive Matrix: Commentary on Kenneth A. Frank's Paper. Psychoanalytic Dialogues 7:315-318
- The articles of mine that Frank cites (Aron, 1991, 1992) were not primarily about self-disclosure—they were about the patient's experience of the analyst's Lewis Aron, Ph.D.
- References Aron, L. (1991), The patient's experience of the analyst's subjectivity.
- Aron, L. (1992), Interpretation as expression of the analyst's subjectivity.
- Aron, L. (1996a), Clinical choices and the relational matrix.
- Aron, L. (1996b), A Meeting of Minds.
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Aron, L. (1998) “Yours, Thirsty for Honesty, Ferenczi”: Some Background to Sándor Ferenczi's Pursuit of Mutuality. American Journal of Psychoanalysis 58:5-20
- Aron, L. (1994). Aspects of mutuality in clinical psychoanalysis.
- Aron, L. and J. Frankel (1993).
- In L. Aron and A. Harris (eds.)
- Ragen, T. and L. Aron (1993).
- In L. Aron and A. Harris (eds.)
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Aron, L. (1998) Clinical Choices and the Theory of Psychoanalytic Technique: Commentary on Papers by Mitchell and by Davies. Psychoanalytic Dialogues 8:207-216
- Between both Steve and George and Steve and Jane, there was a mutual affective exchange, an empathic connection, a meeting of minds (Aron, 1996).To turn now to Jody's paper, it too is dazzlingly rich with ideas that I want to take up.
- Elsewhere, I have written (Aron and Bushra, in press) of the mutual regulation of regression or, put differently, the mutual regulation of states of consciousness between analyst and analysand.
- Aron, L. (1996), A Meeting of Minds.
- Aron, & Bushra, A. (in press) Mutual regression: Altered states in the psychoanalytic situation.
- Friedman, L. (1988), The Anatomy of Psychotherapy.
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Aron, L. (1999) Clinical Choices and the Relational Matrix. Psychoanalytic Dialogues 9:1-29
- Aron, L. (1996a), A Meeting of Minds: Mutuality in Psychoanalysis.
- Aron, L. (1996). From Hypnotic Suggestion To Free Association: Freud As A Psychotherapist, Circa 1892–1893.
- 32:99 Aron, L. (1998). Clinical Choices and the Theory of Psychoanalytic Technique: Commentary on Papers by Mitchell and by Davies Psychoanal.
- D. and Trop, J. L. (1989). Impasses in Psychoanalytic Therapy—A Royal Road.
- Josephs, L. (1995), Balancing Empathy and Interpretation.
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