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Book reviews for "Ostow,_Mortimer" sorted by average review score:

The Memory Wars: Freud's Legacy in Dispute
Published in Hardcover by New York Review of Books (1995)
Authors: Frederick Crews, Harold P. Blum, Marcia Cavell, Morris Eagle, Matthew Hugh Erdelyi, Allen Esterson, Robert R. Holt, James Hopkins, Lester Luborsky, and David D. Olds
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Highly entertaining and serious debate
I have always been a fan of the intellectual debates in the New York Review of Books letters to the editor pages. This book consists of two articles by Crews and the subsequent debates surrounding them. I would have liked to see better defenses of Freud, but none of the eminent defenders of psychoanalysis is able to mount a serious challenge to Crews's devastating attacks.

frontal attack on psychoanalysis and father Freud.
This devastating book has two parts: (1) The Unknown Freud, where the reader gets a picture of Freud as a dictator, a megalomaniac and egotripper. A pope who alone knew the truth and who founded a secret commission to protect his 'church' against the heathen. He was a bad psychoanalyst (e.g. the Wolf Man case) and a venal man (e.g. the catastrophic Horace Fink case, where he tried to get his own hands on some money of the heiress).
I agree with the author that psychoanalysis is a pseudoscience - statements cannot be tested and the research results cannot be verified uniformly. Although it is not totally without meaning (Karl Popper), it is not a science.
(2) the revenge of the repressed
A frontal attack on the caste of the psychoanalysts, depicted as 'religious zealots, self-help evangelists, sociopolitical ideologues, and outright charlatans who trade in the ever seductive currency of guilt and blame, while keeping the doctor's fees mounting.'
The author is particularly severe with their latest 'school' : the 'recovered memory movement', based on the rape of children by their parents (really!). This lead to false accusations and condemnations of innocent people. No wonder the author predicts an accelerating collapse of psychoanalysis as a respected institution.
A much needed and courageous book to halt a profession riding at full speed on a misty highway. And a much needed angle on Freud as a person, written in a style to slaughter the not so innocent father of psychoanalysis.
After reading this book, I agree with Peter Madawar, who called doctrinaire psychoanalytic theory "the most stupendous intellectual confidence trick of the twentieth century".

Freudians Release Their Pent Up Hostility
Frederick Crews really knows how to tap that deep reservoir of hostility found in modern Freudian psychoanalysts. In 1993 and 1994 FC wrote two essays in the New York Review of Books debunking Freud in the first, and tearing to shreds the recovered memory movement in the second.

These two essays and the letters in response to them have been put into the book The Memory Wars. As someone trained in experimental psychology you can guess my own personal bias in this matter. Crews discusses Freud's botched cases; his frequent vacillation in theory formation; some of his sillier theories; and his serious interjection of personal bias into the formation of his beliefs. The main problem with the whole Freudian system is the total lack of scientific evidence supporting it. Freudian psychoanalysis is founded on anecdote and supported by anecdotes. To be fair, much current non-Freudian therapy is also based on anecdote. Indignant Freud followers write back, and their letters are indeed interesting (and often pompous).

The second half of the book takes on the recovered memory movement. It would be great to poke fun at this movement if it weren't for the fact that it has caused so much damage to all parties involved. Symptoms checklists are published with the statement if you suffer from these symptoms you may be a victim of sexual abuse. Read the list and you will find that the majority of Americans will find that they have been abused. It's all a patient seduction game with the intent to make big money. Hospitals have even set up units to treat such patients (Having worked in the psychiatric hospital industry I am well aware of the "product lines" that such facilities set up in order to fill beds). Crews does an excellent job of dissecting the memory movement, and once again we get to read the indignant responses.

Those who believe that psychological therapy should be based on sound scientific evidence will love this book. Those who have accepted Freudianism with a religious like faith will, of course, hate it. To me this whole subject is analogous to the evolution vs. creationist debate. It's science versus pseudoscience.


From Liverpool to Jerusalem: A Rabbi's Journey
Published in Paperback by Shengold Publishers (1997)
Authors: Chaim Pearl and Mortimer Ostow
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Jewish Mystical Leaders and Leadership in the 13th Century
Published in Paperback by Jason Aronson (1998)
Authors: Moshe Idel, Mortimer Ostow, Ivan G. Marcus, Paul Fenton, Israel M. Ta-Shma, and J. N. Hillgarth
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Judaism and Psychoanalysis
Published in Paperback by Karnac Books (1997)
Author: Mortimer Ostow
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LA Depresion: Psicologia De LA Melancolia
Published in Paperback by Lectorum Pubns (Juv) (1984)
Author: Mortimer Ostow
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Myth and Madness: The Psychodynamics of Antisemitism
Published in Hardcover by Transaction Pub (1995)
Author: Mortimer Ostow
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The Need to Believe: The Psychology of Religion
Published in Paperback by International Universities Press (1969)
Authors: Mortimer Ostow and Ben-Ami Scharfstein
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The Psychology of Melancholy.
Published in Hardcover by HarperCollins (1970)
Author: Mortimer. Ostow
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Ultimate Intimacy: The Psychodynamics of Jewish Mysticism
Published in Hardcover by International Universities Press (1996)
Author: Mortimer Ostow
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