Chapter 2: Submit to Reality (Mastery)

Darwin had a domineering father who pressured him into professions he didn’t have an interest in, such as the clergy. After spending most of his time hunting and collecting biological specimens, his father scolded him, and told him that he would be a disgrace to himself and his family. One day, he defied his father … Read more

Chapter 1: Discover Your Life Task (Mastery)

There is an idea, that since every person is unique, has never existed before, and will never exist again, that they are made up on a unique configuration of atoms, that they will have a life calling that is unique to them. That is, there is something that you are attracted to, and the reason … Read more

Introduction (Mastery)

Greene reminds us that before industrial society, humans derived a survivalist advantage in observing and in thinking to themselves. A human hunter could afford to observe the patterns of behavior of other animals, before creating the right hunting strategy. That is, the human being figured out how to make time work for him. His physical … Read more

Chapter 9: The Present Outcome of Psychoanalysis (The Denial of Death)

Otto Rank’s insight into neuroticism is a key argument in Becker’s book. According to Rank, the neurotic is close to the truth, spiritually. Psychoanalysis tries to get people to see beyond the illusions of their senses, but with the neurotic, it is a different kind of problem. Neuroticism While the neurotic refuses to acknowledge the … Read more

Chapter 7: The Spell Cast by Persons – the Nexus of Unfreedom (The Denial of Death)

Within man, there is a kind of innate slavishness, a need to worship something bigger than themselves. Many people later question how they could have been fooled by the magnetism or aura of someone great. How they could lose control of their critical faculties so easily? Freud called this phenomenon “transference” – it was when … Read more

Chapter 5: The Psychoanalyst Kierkegaard (The Denial of Death)

Religion and psychoanalysis are related. Kierkegaard can be considered a psychologist, even though he was a theologian and a philosopher. The foundation of Kierkegaard’s philosophy is the Fall in the story of Adam and Eve. This myth contains the basic insight of psychology, that man is a union of opposites – self-consciousness and the physical … Read more