Abstract
In this review of Stephen Seligman’s contribution to the literature on disorders of temporality, the patient’s ordinary and extraordinary experiences of time in the clinical situation, the reviewer provides both theoretical confirmation and clinical illustration in support of the author’s arguments. Infant research, nonlinear dynamic systems theory, and especially a brain-based psychoanalytic perspective taken from the work of Gerald Edelman are introduced to facilitate understanding of memory in general and the second of Seligman’s disorders of temporality in particular. Edelman’s formulation on the biological evolution of consciousness affords a means to comprehend how the phenomenon of dissociation emerges spontaneously in the clinical situation that matches and offers an explanation Seligman’s own understanding.
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Estelle Shane
Estelle Shane, Ph.D., is a Founding Member, Past President, Member of the Board, Training and Supervising Analyst and Faculty Member at the Institute of Contemporary Psychoanalysis, and a Training and Supervising Analyst and Faculty Member at The New Center for Psychoanalysis in Los Angeles. She is Adjunct Faculty Member of the Department of Psychiatry at UCLA, Past President and Board Member of IAPSP, author of numerous articles, and coauthor of Intimate Attachments: A Developmental Systems Self Psychology, published in 1997 by Guilford Press.