Notes
1 Here I follow M. Leuzinger-Bohleber's usage of contrasting clinical and extra-clinical research.
2 Here are the concluding remarks of the paper “Lines of advance in psycho-analytic therapy,” which Freud gave at the Fourth Congress of the IPA held in Budapest in September 1918: “It is very probable, too, that the large-scale application of our therapy will compel us to alloy the pure gold of analysis freely with the copper of direct suggestion; and hypnotic influence, too, might find a place in it again, as it has in the treatment of war neuroses. But, whatever form this psychotherapy for the people might take, whatever the elements out of which it is compunded, its most effective and most important ingredients will assuradely remain those borrowed from strict and untendetious psycho-analysis” (Freud, Citation1919, p. 168).
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Notes on contributors
Marco Conci
Marco Conci, MD, has been a coeditor-in-chief of this journal since June 2007.
Ingrid Erhardt
Ingrid Erhardt, clinical psychologist, music therapist, and candidate in psychoanalytic training, is a research associate at the University of Munich.
Horst Kächele
Horst Kächele, former chair of psychosomatic medicine and psychotherapy at Ulm University (1990–2009), is now a professor at the International Psychoanalytic University in Berlin.