Issue |
E3S Web Conf.
Volume 119, 2019
Science and the Future 2 “Contradictions and Challenges”
|
|
---|---|---|
Article Number | 00010 | |
Number of page(s) | 4 | |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.1051/e3sconf/201911900010 | |
Published online | 27 September 2019 |
A contribution from psychoanalysis and neuroscience to a non-reductionist approach in economics
Psychologist, Psychotherapist, Group Analysis Professor School of Specialisation in Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy COIRAG, Turin,
Italy, full member and past president APRAGI (Turin, Italy), full member COIRAG
( Italy )
* Corresponding author: fornero@libero.it
What connections can be identified between economics, psychoanalysis and neuroscience and why make them? These are different disciplines and it is unusual to approach them together. The scientific paradigm of complexity includes and broadens the positivist paradigm and invites us to learn to think in terms of relationships and processes, and therefore in interdisciplinary terms. Specifically, it has been noted that the study of economics tends to be independent of a precise knowledge of human operations, of what actually determines effective choices and behaviours. In this sense, both psychoanalysis – understood as a discipline that leads the human sciences to the need to equip themselves in order to also consider the socalled unconscious aspects – and neurosciences – for the study of the neurophysiological correlates of the mind – can help build knowledge based on a complex systemic view of economic processes and their peculiarities. From this perspective, the group analysis – as also applying the unconscious conceptualisation to the study of the groups and to the groups clinic –can constitute a theoretical-experiential laboratory for the analysis and verification of hypotheses consistent with complex objectives, in the setting of survey, research and practice in the scientific, political and social fields.
© The Authors, published by EDP Sciences, 2019
This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License 4.0, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Current usage metrics show cumulative count of Article Views (full-text article views including HTML views, PDF and ePub downloads, according to the available data) and Abstracts Views on Vision4Press platform.
Data correspond to usage on the plateform after 2015. The current usage metrics is available 48-96 hours after online publication and is updated daily on week days.
Initial download of the metrics may take a while.