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(1999) Freud's philosophy of the unconscious, Dordrecht, Springer.

Donald Davidson

the rational unconscious

David L Smith

pp. 156-158

I have shown, in earlier chapters, that Freud's theory of occurrent unconscious mental events was confronted by two rival theories: the neuro-physiological dispositionalist account and the dissociationist thesis. In the preceding two chapters, I have shown how John Searle revived a sophisticated version of the dispositionalist account which, however, remains vulnerable to Freudian criticism. In the present and succeeding chapters, I will argue that Donald Davidson has revived a version of the dissociationist approach. Unlike Searle, who rightly treats his thesis as a rival to that of Freud, Davidson offers his as a philosophical underpinning for Freud's work, apparently unaware that the two versions of mental architecture are deeply incompatible. Unlike Searle, whose argument, as we have seen, is strongly reminiscent of those advanced in the last century, Davidson gives dissociationism a distinctive twist.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-94-017-1611-6_16

Full citation:

Smith, D.L. (1999). Donald Davidson: the rational unconscious, in Freud's philosophy of the unconscious, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 156-158.

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