Yet the literature on Internet addiction fails to establish the agent of this presumptive malady, Friedman points out, as well as what it is that users are actually doing or desiring that constitutes an addiction. In her new book, I Internet Addiction: A Critical Psychology of Users i (Routledge, 2021), Emaline Friedman takes on an enormous and weighty task. [Extracted from the article]
Philip Cushman's collection of papers showcased in his recent book, "Travels with the Self: Interpreting Psychology as Cultural History" coalesce to form a strong critique of psychotherapist/psychoanalytic practitioners, and their compliance with socio-political norms and expectations. As Cushman sees it, psychotherapists and psychoanalysts have gone from being critics of the system to being agents of the system, pushing patients to adjust to social norms. Since Cushman is a hermeneutic philosopher, Heidegger - the founder of ontological hermeneutics - is important to Cushman. [Extracted from the article]