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In this
remarkable book by one of the great psychologists and neurologists
of the early twentieth century, Kurt Goldstein presents a summation
of his “holistic” theory of the human organism. In the
course of his studies on brain-damaged soldiers during the First
World War, Goldstein became aware of the failure of contemporary
biology and medicine to genuinely understand both the impact of
such injuries and the astonishing adjustments that patients made
to them. He challenged reductivist approaches that dealt with “localized”
symptoms, insisting instead that an organism be analyzed in terms
of the totality of its behavior and interaction with its surrounding
milieu. He was especially concerned with the breakdown of organization
and the failure of central cerebral controls that take place in
catastrophic responses to situations such as physical or mental
illness. But Goldstein was equally attuned to the amazing powers
of the organism to readjust to such devastating losses, if only
by withdrawal to a more limited range of activity that it could
manage by a redistribution of its reduced energies, thus reclaiming
as much wholeness as new circumstances allowed. Goldstein’s
concepts in The Organism have had a major impact on philosophical
and psychological thought throughout this century, as can be seen
in the work of Maurice Merleau-Ponty, Georges Canguilhem, Ernst
Cassirer, Ludwig Binswanger, and Roman Jakobson, not to mention
the wide-ranging field of Gestalt psychology.
“Goldstein’s Organism is a deep, eloquent
work.”
— Anne Harrington, Harvard University
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