Awakening and Insight: Zen Buddhism and Psychotherapy

(Martin Jones) #1
3 Masao Abe (1998:184) anticipated that the Buddhist concept of ‘no-self’ would be both
‘strange and frightening’ to some. In this same essay, Abe relates the story of the
bhikkhu’s encounter with the Buddha where the Buddha says: ‘O bhikkhus, this idea
that I may not be, I may not have, is frightening to the uninstructed worldling’ (p. 184).
Of course, as Abe reminds us, this awareness did not impede the Buddha from widely
preaching the notion of no self.

References

Abe, M. (1990) ‘Kenotic god and dynamic sunyata’, in J.B.Cobb and C.Ives (eds) The Emptying
God: A Buddhist-Jewish-Christian Conversation, Maryknoll, NY: Orbis Books, 3–65.
Abe, M. (1998) ‘The self in Jung and Zen’, in A.Molino (ed.) The Couch and the Tree: Dialogues
in Psychoanalysis and Buddhism, New York: North Point Press, 276–89.
Alonso, A. (1996) ‘Toward a new understanding of neutrality’, in L.Lifson (ed.), Understanding
Therapeutic Action: Psychodynamic Concepts of Cure, Hillsdale, NJ: Analytic Press, 3–19.
DeMartino, R.J. (1991) ‘Karen Horney, Daisetz T.Suzuki, and Zen Buddhism’, American
Journal of Psychoanalysis 51:267–83.
Epstein, M. (1995) Thoughts without a Thinker: Psychotherapy from a Buddhist Perspective, New
York: Basic Books.
Fosshage, J. (1994) ‘Toward reconceptualizing transference: theoretical and clinical
considerations’, International Journal of Psychoanalysis 75 (2):265–80.
Fosshage, J. (1998) ‘Countertransference as the analyst’s experience of the analysand: influence
of listening perspectives’, Psychoanalytic Psychology 12 (3):375–91.
Freud, S. (1912/1989) ‘Recommendations to physicians practicing psycho-analysis’, in P.Gay
(ed.), The Freud Reader, New York: Norton, 356–63.
Gill, M.M. (1979) ‘The analysis of the transference’, Journal of the American Psychoanalytic
Association 27:263–88.
Gill, M.M. (1983) ‘The distinction between the interpersonal paradigm and the degree of the
therapist’s involvement’, Contemporary Psychoanalysis 19:200–37.
Hoffer, A. (1985) ‘Toward a redefinition of psychoanalytic neutrality’, Journal of the American
Psychoanalytic Association 33:771–95.
Hoffman, I.Z. (1998) Ritual and Spontaneity in the Psychoanalytic Process: A
Dialectical-Constructivist View, Hillsdale, NJ: Analytic Press.
Horney, K. (1987) Final Lectures, ed. by D.Ingram, New York: Norton.
Jacoby, M. (1984) The Analytic Encounter: Transference and Human Relationship, Toronto:
Inner City Books.
Jung, C.G. (1969) ‘The practice of psychotherapy’, in H.Mead, M.Fordham, G. Adler, and
W.McGuire (eds), and R.F.C.Hull (trans.), Collected Works, Vol. 16 (Bollingen Series,
vol. 20), Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
Kasulis, T.P. (1981) Zen Action: Zen Person, Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press.
Kawai, H. (1996) Buddhism and the Art of Psychotherapy, College Station, TX: Texas A & M
University Press.
Kopf, G. (1998) ‘In the face of the other: psychic interwovenness in Dogen and Jung’, in A.
Molino (ed.), The Couch and the Tree: Dialogues in Psychoanalysis and Buddhism, New
York: North Point Press, 276–89.


88 MELVIN E.MILLER

Free download pdf