
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Robert Rowland Smith and Mark Vernon discuss these two dynamics of projection. Transference and countertransference have become core to psychoanalysis, though Freud and others were initially very wary of them. So what are the limits to using the feelings that fill a therapy room?
How can the set-up of the room itself affect such things? How can transference and countertransference be unethically manipulated, not least when feelings of love are activated?
And also, how do these experiences relate to the uncanny, even so-called paranormal types of awareness and perception?
By Mark Vernon4.9
1616 ratings
Robert Rowland Smith and Mark Vernon discuss these two dynamics of projection. Transference and countertransference have become core to psychoanalysis, though Freud and others were initially very wary of them. So what are the limits to using the feelings that fill a therapy room?
How can the set-up of the room itself affect such things? How can transference and countertransference be unethically manipulated, not least when feelings of love are activated?
And also, how do these experiences relate to the uncanny, even so-called paranormal types of awareness and perception?

5,021 Listeners

580 Listeners

92 Listeners

1,287 Listeners

434 Listeners

33,236 Listeners

4,096 Listeners

1,670 Listeners

863 Listeners

87 Listeners

357 Listeners

15,880 Listeners

217 Listeners

2,415 Listeners

287 Listeners