Massimo Fagioli

Massimo Fagioli
Born Massimo Fagioli
(1931-05-19)19 May 1931
Monte Giberto, Italy
Died 17 February 2017(2017-02-17) (aged 85)
Rome, Italy
Nationality Italian
Scientific career
Fields Psychiatry, psychotherapy

Massimo Fagioli (Monte Giberto, 19th May 1931 - Rome, 13 February 2017) was an Italian psychiatrist and psychotherapist. He is best known for his “Human Birth Theory” which aims to define the roots and causes of mental illness in order to propose a structure for diagnosis and psychotherapeutic cure. Fagioli drew his theory from a theoretical framework that encompasses both the physiology of birth and the beginning of human thought.[1] He is also known for the “Analisi Collettiva”, a unique form of psychotherapeutic group practice that he ran continuously for more than 40 years between January 1975 and December 2016. His medical theory and practice represent the core of “Il sogno della farfalla” psychiatric periodical.

Biography

Fagioli was born on 19th May 1931 in Monte Giberto, a commune situated near Fermo, Marche. During the World War II he was a partisan runner, fighting on the battlefield alongside his father, a medical doctor and surgeon. He graduated in medicine and surgery in Rome in 1956 and then specialised in Neuropsychiatry in Modena.[2] He died on 13th of February 2017.

Medical Carreer

In 1957 Fagioli worked at psychiatric hospitals in Venice, where he was soon disappointed by the organicist practice, a methodology directly inherited from 19th century psychiatry. In 1960 he decided to move to Padua, where he studied and worked with Ferdinando Barison, one of the most important psychiatrists of that time.[3] By “breaking down the ward’s wall” and living with his patients, Fagioli found a radically new and innovative approach.[4] In 1963 he led a psychotherapeutic community at Ludwig’s Binswanger’s clinic Bellevue in Kreuzlingen, Switzerland. The hospital was then directed by Binswanger’s homonymous nephew, father of the existential therapy.[5]

After gaining experience in the public sector, Fagioli moved to Rome and started his own private psychotherapeutic practice. Building on many theoretical and empirical studies, Fagioli’s 1962 paper “Some notes on paranoid and schizophrenic delusional perception” ("Alcune note sulla percezione delirante paranoicale e schizofrenica")[6] introduced the first results of his research. A decade later he would then publish the first fundamental volume of his theoretical work, “Death Instinct and Knowledge” ("Istinto di Morte e Conoscenza").[7] Typewritten copies of this book started circulating at the end of the 1970. However, due to its theoretical propositions which were in stark opposition to the psychoanalytic orthodoxy, Massimo Fagioli was expelled from the Italian Psychoanalytic Society (Società Psicoanalitica Italiana). “Death Instinct and Knowledge” and the following books “The Puppet and the Marionette” ("La Marionetta e il Burattino")[8] and “Human Birth Theory and Human Castration” ("Teoria della Nascita e Castrazione Umana")[9] constitute a theoretical trilogy of what he would then call “The Human Birth Theory”.

The beginning of the Analisi Collettiva

In 1975 Fagioli was appointed supervisor of a psychiatrists’ group, on behalf of the Institute of Psychiatry at the University of Rome, La Sapienza. During these sessions, an ever-increasing number of people started joining in. Some participants worked in the psychiatric field while others came from different backgrounds such as extra-parliamentary left-wing movements, but also from the working class and Rome's artistic scene. From the initial session set at once per week, Fagioli increased the number up to four. This change marked the beginning of what became known as the Analisi Collettiva. Since its early years, this unique form of psychotherapeutic group drew the attention of the media[10], due in particular to Fagioli harsh criticism towards Sigmund Freud.[11]

Free access and participants’ anonymity were the most important features of this psychotherapeutic practice. Fagioli was not interested in the patient's social identity but rather in the human and universal dynamic that could arise in the rapport during the group-analytic setting. However, after the first few years, the director of the Sapienza Psychiatry Institute, Giancarlo Reda, asked Fagioli to end the sessions. In response to this command, in November 1980 Fagioli decided to leave the university and carry on the Analisi Collettiva sessions in his own private studio in Via di Roma Libera 23, in the Roman neighbourhood Trastevere. In the same year, a book based on an interview with Fagioli, “Child, Woman and Man’s Transformation” ("Bambino, donna e trasformazione dell'uomo") was published.[12]

Cinema, architecture and sculpture

During the first years of the Analisi Collettiva, Fagioli collaborated with the Italian movie director Marco Bellocchio. From the second half of the 1980s onwards, they worked together on the movies Devil in the Flesh (1986), The Conviction (1991) and The Butterfly’s Dream (1994). Their first work, Devil in the Flesh, which harshly criticised left-wing ideas, received a critical reception. Fagioli was in fact accused of manipulating Bellocchio during the making of the movie.[13]. However, Bellocchio always denied these accusations.[14] A few years later, The Conviction became a subject of great controversy, being defined by the media as an apology of rape[15], but both Fagioli and Bellocchio[16] responded in defence of their work. Despite this, the movie was awarded the Silver Bear at the Berlinale in 1991. After these three works, Bellocchio went on taking part in the Analisi Collettiva, while working on new projects.

In addition to his work with Marco Bellocchio, in 1997 Massimo Fagioli wrote, directed and produced the soundtrack of the movie Il cielo della luna.[17][18] The movie was presented at the Locarno Film Festival, while his second work, the documentary “Does psychiatry exist?” was screened at Farnese Cinema in Rome in 2003.

Fagioli’s artistic work also includes sculpture and architecture. In 2005 he designed the “Blue Sculpture”, that was exhibited at the Faculty of Oriental Studies at the University of Rome La Sapienza.[19] As an architect he produced the “Palazzetto Bianco” in collaboration with the architects Paola Rossi and Francoise Bliek.[20] This project was well received by the critics, appearing in different volumes of selected works such as “Rome’s Wonders: from the Renaissance to the present day” ("Le meraviglie di Roma: dal Rinascimento ai giorni nostri") realised by Vittorio Sgarbi.[21] However, amongst his architectural projects, “The Fountain” ("La Fontana"), built in Largo Ettore Rolli for the neighbourhood urban renewal, gained less recognition. Due to the lack of maintenance required for water monuments, the fountain was criticised by some experts - among them the art critic Vittorio Sgarbi himself and some of the habitants living in the area.[22][23]

Politics

Over the years, Fagioli was actively involved in the political scene, collaborating with many left-wing political supporters, newspapers and periodicals. His political activity was mainly intellectual, aiming to propose a new cultural and anthropological perspective for the left.[24] His views led him to face conflicts and inevitable clashes with political exponents. In 1975 he gave a lecture on Das Kapital by Karl Marx at the University of Siena, whilst between the years 1979 and 1981 he collaborated both with the Italian Communist Party and with Lotta Continua newspaper.[25]

Fagioli is the author of a large number of articles addressed and published on Lotta Continua. All the articles were subsequently collected in the periodical “Il sogno della Farfalla”.[26] Towards the end of the 1990s and the first decade of the 2000s he was involved in political debates with Fausto Bertinotti, the secretary of the Communist Refoundation Party.[27][28] Later on, Fagioli came in touch with the Italian Radical Party, through the periodical Quaderni Radicali and more specifically and personally with Marco Pannella and Emma Bonino.[29]

University Research and the Publishing House

From 2002 to 2012 he gave lectures at the Gabriele D’Annunzio University of Chieti-Pescara. From 2006 until 25th February 2017 he wrote a weekly column for the Left periodical (the articles that appeared on 17th and 25th of February were published posthumously). On 30th October and 6th November 2015 a two day conference took place in the lecture hall of the La Sapienza University of Rome to celebrate the Analisi Collettiva 40th anniversary; the conference’s talks were then collected and published by the publishing house L’Asino d’Oro.[30]

The Human Birth Theory

After the publication of various articles[31], the Human Birth Theory was systematised in the theoretical trilogy constituted by “Death Instinct and Knowledge”(1971)[32],“ The Marionette and the Puppet” (1974)[33], “Human Birth Theory and Human castration” (1975).[34]

Light-retina interaction, annulment pulsion, disappearance fantasy

The Human Birth Theory is based around some fundamental ideas. One of the most pivotal points states that the foetus and the newborn must be considered as two different beings. During the foetus’ passage from the dark intrauterine environment to the light of the external world, a retinal photo-stimulation determines the activation of the brain.[35] Decades after the publication of "Death Instinct and Knowledge", biological, neonatology and physiological experimental evidences have confirmed that retinal-light contact triggers a fundamental and unique chemical-brain reaction.[36] Moreover this phenomenon is particularly observed and evident in the first instants of life.[37] From this perspective, the Human Birth Theory states that the beginning of human life is determined by the light-brain interaction rather than by the air-lungs interaction, as affirmed by medical science.

In regards to this point, it has been fundamental for Fagioli to observe the newborn physical condition in the first instants of life; a span of time around 20 seconds long when the baby is not breathing, the body has no muscle tensions and has apparently no reaction towards the external environment. The only human activity that occurs must be a mental activity, therefore one of the most crucial questions that the Human Birth Theory aims to define and clarify is the one concerning the physiology of mind.[38]

In the passage from a dark and warm condition into the coldness and aggressiveness of the external world, light is the new feature, an “absolutely new stimuli”. In this ‘after birth’ condition, Fagioli affirms that the first reaction of the mind is a pulsion, an annulment pulsion. Through this, the newborn makes both the inanimate environment and itself disappear. Therefore light stimulation determines simultaneously the beginning of human thought activity and the emergence of what Fagioli formulated as the annulment pulsion of the non-material world. This pulsion is directed against non-material reality.[39]

The annulment pulsion induces the change of the capability to react into vitality, a specie-specific human characteristic. According to Fagioli, vitality is a biological sensitivity developed by the foetus during the last weeks of pregnancy. The fusion between the annulment pulsion and vitality induces the onset of the capability to imagine, which determines the appearance of a first mental image. From the sensation of the skin in contact with the amniotic fluid the newborn creates the image of the existence of another human being.[40] At birth, the experience in the previous intrauterine condition is turned into an internal image, a memory-fantasy of the sensation had before. (This was initially described by Fagioli in "Death Instinct and Knowledge" as the “amnesiac trace”). Through the memory of body physiology the newborn realizes not only its own existence but also the hope-certainty of an existent breast. This allows the relationship with another human being, moving the newborn to look for nourishment and human affection.[41] In his book "Death Instinct and Knowledge" this complex dynamic is explained using the terms “disappearance fantasy”, a syntagm that summarises his research on human birth, as Fagioli stated in the article “Twenty-one words that did not exist before” published on Left.[42]

In this same article, Fagioli suggested and developed a new line of research. He proposed a formula able to describe and coherently embody the dynamic of human birth, human thinking and its further development. The resulting sequence is made of the following word: reaction, pulsion, vitality, creation, existence, time, ability to imagine, force, movement, sound, memory, hope-certainty of an existent breast, conscious perception, fantasy, line, sense, aspect. Despite some small differences, the theoretical articulation that Fagioli expresses in these twenty-one words does not compromise his original theorisation. It has been considered that whilst the Human Birth Theory, elaborated in the book "Death Instinct and Knowledge", aimed to determine the beginning of human thinking, with these twenty-one words Fagioli questioned how human thought emerges and what its development path in the first year of life consists of.[43]

Negation, mental pathologies and dream interpretation

According to Fagioli, the annulment pulsion is fundamental to explain the onset of mental illness.[44] Deficiency or lack of affection in the mother-newborn relationship between breast-feeding and weaning, can determine the emergence of the annulment pulsion towards the external world.[45] This is what Fagioli defined in the Italian language as “anafettività”. The very first years of life, when there is still no conscience nor verbal thought, represent for Fagioli the so called non-conscious. Throughout his life, Fagioli fought against the idea that the non-conscious dimension is unknowable.[46]

The end of the first stage of life, during which the mother-newborn relationship is central, represents the beginning of a second fundamental stage. The baby will either realize its own autonomy or on the contrary, this moment will determine the conditions for the onset of postnatal factors of illness.[47] As a consequence, the possibility to cure mental illness is achievable only by knowing, interpreting and overcoming non-conscious dynamics experienced in “pathological” human relationships. The aim of the psychotherapeutic practice is to recreate the physiological disappearance fantasy; that is to say, the first moments of life. According to this theory, the physiology of the mind is rooted in the ability to separate ones inner dimensions from previous type of object-relations without acting on them.[48]

One of the pivotal points of Fagioli's therapeutic praxis is the interpretation of dreams, which descends directly from the Human Birth Theory. According to this theory, dreams and the first months and years of life are considered as non-conscious language or in other words thoughts expressed through images (on the contrary, Freud affirmed that dreams are a daily residual, hallucinatory satisfaction of desire[49]).[50] Fagioli refused the common belief that the unconscious dimension is naturally ill or animalistic. This belief can be found in the Freudian Es, a phylogenetic heritage criticized by Fagioli as a restatement of the Original Sin, codified by the Judeo-Christian tradition.[51]

The possibility of curing mental illness through the interpretation of dreams becomes possible only if a non-conscious dynamic is discovered. This dynamic has been defined as negation, a form of reality alteration that is expressed through oniric images. The psychotherapist’s interpretation of negation can prevent the worsening of mental illness and avoid the development of the patient’s alteration of reality into conscious mental disorder, that can result in full-blown mental disease.[52]

If this alteration is expressed on a conscious level, it can be curable only through a psychotherapy founded on three fundamental points : setting, transfer and interpretation.[53] It is essential to underline that the concept of negation radically differs from the one proposed by Freud. For the latter, negation is a dimension affecting only the conscious thought.[54] Moreover, Fagioli’s conception of negation stands in stark opposition to the Freudian concept of remotion which aimed at bringing into consciousness what had been previously “moved” into another area of the mind. Fagioli’s interpretation of dreams has no connection with the correspondent psychoanalytic proposition.

Works

Books

  • Istinto di morte e conoscenza: pensieri di psicoanalisi, Roma, A. Armando, 1972; poi Istinto di morte e conoscenza, Roma, L'Asino D'Oro, 2010, 2017. ISBN 978-88-6443-015-7 (German edition, Todestrieb und Erkenntnis, Frankfurt, Stroemfeld, 2011. ISBN 978-38-6600-076-6)
  • La marionetta e il burattino, Roma, A.Armando, 1974; Roma, L'Asino D'Oro, 2011. ISBN 978-88-6443-002-7
  • Psicoanalisi della nascita e castrazione umana, Roma, A. Armando, 1975; poi Teoria della nascita e castrazione umana, Roma, L'Asino D'Oro, 2012. ISBN 978-88-6443-003-4
  • Bambino, donna e trasformazione dell'uomo, Roma, Nuove Edizioni Romane, 1980; Roma, L'Asino D'Oro, 2013. ISBN 978-88-6443-004-1

Lectures

  • Storia di una ricerca. Lezioni 2002, L'Asino d'oro edizioni, Rome, 2018. ISBN 978-88-6443-005-8
  • Das Unbewusste. Lezioni 2003, Roma, Nuove Edizioni Romane, 2007. ISBN 978-88-7457-051-5
  • Una vita irrazionale. Lezioni 2006, Roma, Nuove Edizioni Romane, 2006-2007. ISBN 978-88-7457-042-3
  • Fantasia di sparizione. Lezioni 2007, L'Asino d'oro edizioni, Rome, 2009. ISBN 978-88-6443-008-9
  • Il pensiero nuovo. Lezioni 2004, L'Asino d'oro edizioni, Rome, 2011. ISBN 978-88-6443-009-6
  • L'uomo nel cortile. Lezioni 2005, L'Asino d'oro edizioni, Rome, 2012. ISBN 978-88-6443-010-2
  • Settimo anno. Lezioni 2008, L'Asino d'oro edizioni, Rome, 2013. ISBN 978-88-6443-011-9
  • Religione, Ragione e Libertà. Lezioni 2009, L'Asino d'oro edizioni, Rome, 2014. ISBN 978-88-6443-012-6
  • L'idea della nascita umana. Lezioni 2010, L'Asino d'oro edizioni, Rome, 2015. ISBN 978-88-6443-013-3
  • Materia energia pensiero. Lezioni 2011, L'Asino d'oro edizioni, Rome, 2016. ISBN 978-88-6443-014-0
  • Conoscenza dell’istinto di morte. Lezioni 2012, L'Asino d'oro edizioni, Rome, 2017. ISBN 978-88-6443-016-4

Collections of articles appeared on the Left periodical

  • Left 2006, L'Asino d'oro edizioni, Rome, 2009. ISBN 978-88-6443-025-6
  • Left 2007, L'Asino d'oro edizioni, Rome, 2010. ISBN 978-88-6443-026-3
  • Left 2008, L'Asino d'oro edizioni, Rome, 2011. ISBN 978-88-6443-027-0
  • Left 2009, L'Asino d'oro edizioni, Rome, 2012. ISBN 978-88-6443-028-7
  • Left 2010, L'Asino d'oro edizioni, Rome, 2013. ISBN 978-88-6443-029-4
  • Left 2011, L'Asino d'oro edizioni, Rome, 2014. ISBN 978-88-6443-030-0
  • Left 2012, L'Asino d'oro edizioni, Rome, 2015. ISBN 978-88-6443-031-7
  • Left 2013, L'Asino d'oro edizioni, Rome, 2016. ISBN 978-88-6443-032-4
  • Left 2014, L'Asino d'oro edizioni, Rome, 2017. ISBN 978-88-6443-033-1

Papers and other

  • Alcune note sulla percezione delirante, paranoicale e schizofrenica, in “Archivio di psicologia, neurologia e psichiatria”, anno XXIII, 1962. Republished in “Il sogno della farfalla”, n.3, L'Asino d'oro edizioni, Rome 2009.
  • Psicosi epilettiche croniche e sindromi pseudoschizofreniche, in “Annali di freniatria e scienze affini”, ottobre-dicembre,1962.
  • L’integrazione collettiva del lavoro psicoterapeutico dei medici in ospedale psichiatrico. Insulinoterapia e psicoterapia di gruppo, with Novello E., in “Minerva Medico-Psicologica”, vol. 3, n.4, 1963.
  • Insulinoterapia e psicoterapia di gruppo. Valore psicoterapeutico del “senso della schizofrenicità, in “Archivio di psicologia, neurologia e psichiatria”, anno XXIV, 1963. Republished in “Il sogno della farfalla”, n.1, L'Asino d'oro edizioni, Rome 2010.
  • Due saggi di psicologia dinamica, Roma, Romagrafik, 1974.
  • Introduzione a René Arpad Spitz, Il no e il sì: saggio sulla genesi della comunicazione umana, Roma, A.Armando, 1975.
  • Biancaneve e i sette anni, in “Psicoterapia e scienze umane”, ottobre-dicembre, 1979.
  • Realtà umana dell’artista e opera d’arte, in “Il sogno della farfalla”, n.4, L'Asino d'oro edizioni, Rome 2001.
  • Intervista a Radio Città, in “Il sogno della farfalla”, n.4, L'Asino d'oro edizioni, Rome 2001.
  • Possibilità e realtà di un lavoro psichico di realizzazione, trasformazione e sviluppo, in “Il sogno della farfalla”, n.4, L'Asino d'oro edizioni, Rome 2001.
  • Una depressione, in "Il sogno della farfalla", n.2, L'Asino d'oro edizioni, Rome 2002.
  • Functional maturation of neocortex: a base of viability, with Maria Gabriella Gatti e altri, in “The journal of maternal-fetal & neonatal medicine: the official journal of the European Association of Perinatal Medicine, the Federation of Asia and Oceania Perinatal Societies, the International Society of Perinatal Obstetricians”, Suppl 1:101-3, 2012.
  • Maturazione funzionale della neocorteccia, with Maria Gabriella Gatti, in “Il sogno della farfalla”, n.1, L'Asino d'oro edizioni, Rome 2013.
  • La psichiatria come psicoterapia, in "Il sogno della farfalla", n.4, L'Asino d'oro edizioni, Rome 2013.

Notes

  1. Calesini I, "Fagioli's Human Birth Theory and the possibility to cure mental illness", in "International Journal of Environment and Health", vol 8, n 3, 2017, https://doi.org/10.1504/IJENVH.2017.086188; Mariopaolo D, Del Missier G, Stocco E, Testa E, "Psichiatria e psicoterapia in Italia dall'Unità ad oggi", L'Asino D'Oro, Roma, 2016.
  2. Left, 2/18/2017.
  3. Mariopaolo D, Del Missier G, Stocco E, Testa E, "Psichiatria e psicoterapia in Italia dall'Unità ad oggi", L'Asino D'Oro, Roma, 2016.
  4. Stelio Martini (24 May 1964). "L'autogoverno li strappa alla fossa dei serpenti" (PDF). Il Giorno.
  5. Mariopaolo D, Del Missier G, Stocco E, Testa E, "Psichiatria e psicoterapia in Italia dall'Unità ad oggi", L'Asino D'Oro, Roma, 2016.
  6. Fagioli M, "Alcune note sulla percezione delirante paranoicale e schizofrenica", in “Il sogno della farfalla”, 3, 2009, pp. 9-22.
  7. Fagioli M, "Istinto di Morte e Conoscenza", L'Asino D'Oro, Roma, 2017.
  8. Fagioli M, "La Marionetta e il Burattino", L'Asino D'Oro, Roma, 2011.
  9. Fagioli M, "Teoria della Nascita e Castrazione Umana", L'Asino D'Oro, Roma, 2012.
  10. Giuliano Zincone (12 March 1978). "A Roma è scoppiato l'Anti-Freud". Corriere della Sera. p. 1.
  11. Luca Villoresi (15 March 1991). "Freud? È un imbecille". Venerdì di Repubblica.
  12. Fagioli M, "Bambino, donna e trasformazione dell'uomo", L'Asino D'Oro, Roma, 2013.
  13. Anna Maria Mori (31 January 1986). "Bellocchio è stato plagiato". la Repubblica.
  14. Malcom Pagani (January 2010). "Il cinema come rivolta" (PDF). MicroMega.
  15. Carol Beebe Tarantelli (12 March 1991). "Macché fantasia così si giustifica lo stupro". L'Unità.
  16. Enrico D’Onofrio (1 March 1991). "Assolta "la Condanna". "È un film sulla seduzione"". Gazzetta di Firenze.
  17. ""Il cielo della luna", il film di uno psichiatra alla scuola di Antonioni"". Il Giornale. 14 May 1999.
  18. https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0204204/?ref_=nm_knf_i1.
  19. http://video.associazioneamorepsiche.org/2005/11/conferenza-stampa-scultura-blu-universita-la-sapienza-di-roma-22-novembre-2005/.
  20. https://docs.google.com/viewerng/viewer?url=http://www.associazioneamorepsiche.org/archiviostampa/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/il-palazzetto-bianco.pdf&hl=it, http://www.openhouseroma.org/2017/sito/palazzetto-bianco.html.
  21. Sgarbi V, "Le meraviglie di Roma. Dal Rinascimento ai giorni nostri", Bompiani, Milano, 2011. But see also Presistenza Puglisi L (eds), "Palazzetto Bianco-Roma”, "ItaliArchitettura” - opere selezionate, UTET - scienze tecniche, Vol. n°2, 2010; Uribe Gonzàlez M (eds), papers by M. Locci, F.Pagano, S.Panti, E.Zichella, introduction by F.Purini, "Roma CITTA’ CAPOLAVORO – Guida Architettonica", Prospettive Edizioni, 2009.
  22. Ginevra Nozzoli (25 May 2016). "Porta Portese, anche Sgarbi stronca la più brutta fontana di Roma: "Ridicola e inqualificabile"". RomaToday.
  23. Giovanni Drogo (27 May 2016). "Roma: breve storia di una fontana per zanzare". NeXtQuotidiano.
  24. Del Missier G, “Massimo Fagioli, l’Analisi Collettiva, e la sinistra italiana. 1979 - 2011” in “Il sogno della farfalla”, 1, 2017, pp. 41 - 69.
  25. Del Missier G, “Massimo Fagioli, l’Analisi Collettiva, e la sinistra italiana. 1979 - 2011” in “Il sogno della farfalla”, 1, 2017, pp. 41 - 69.
  26. Fagioli M, “Realtà umana dell’artista e opera d’arte”, in “Il sogno della farfalla”, 4, 2001, pp. 5 - 11; Fagioli M, “Intervista a Radio Città”, in “Il sogno della farfalla”, 4, 2001, pp. 11 - 24; Fagioli M, “Possibilità e realtà di un lavoro psichico di realizzazione, trasformazione e sviluppo”, in “Il sogno della farfalla”, 4, 2001, pp. 25 - 34; Fagioli M, “Venticinque anni dopo. Interviste e scritti di Massimo Fagioli su “Lotta Continua”. 1979 - 1981”, in “Il sogno della farfalla”, 1, 2005, p. 5.
  27. Giancarlo Perna (9 July 2007). "I Fagioli di Bertinotti: ecco il guru che psicanalizza la sinistra chic". Il Giornale.
  28. Umberto Rosso (3 January 2009). ""Parole inaccettabili su Liberazione" E Fausto rompe con l'amico Fagioli". La Repubblica.
  29. Del Missier G, “Massimo Fagioli, l’Analisi Collettiva, e la sinistra italiana. 1979 - 2011” in “Il sogno della farfalla”, 1, 2017, pp. 41 - 69.
  30. AA.VV., “Ricerca sulla verità della nascita umana. 40 anni di Analisi Collettiva”, L’Asino D’Oro, Roma, 2016.
  31. Fagioli M, “Alcune note sulla percezione delirante, paranoicale e schizofrenica”, in “Archivio di psicologia, neurologia e psichiatria”, XXIII, (1962), pp. 377 - 392, republished in “Il sogno della farfalla”, 3, 2009, pp. 9-22; Fagioli M, "Psicosi epilettiche croniche e sindromi pseudoschizofreniche", in “Annali di freniatria e scienze affini”, october-december 1962; Fagioli M, Novello E, “L’integrazione collettiva del lavoro psicoterapeutico dei medici in ospedale psichiatrico. Insulinoterapia e psicoterapia di gruppo”, in “Minerva Medicopsicologica”, vol. 3, n.4, pp. 165 - 168; Insulinoterapia e psicoterapia di gruppo. Valore psicoterapeutico del “senso della schizofrenicità””, in “Archivio di psicologia, neurologia e psichiatria”, XXIV, (1963), pp. 545 - 556, republished in “Il sogno della farfalla”, 1, 2010, pp. 11-21.
  32. Fagioli M, "Istinto di morte e conoscenza", L'Asino D'Oro, Roma, 2017.
  33. Fagioli M, "La marionetta e il burattino", L'Asino D'Oro, Roma, 2011.
  34. Fagioli M, "Teoria della nascita e castrazione umana", L'Asino D'Oro, Roma, 2012.
  35. see for example: Fagioli M, "Istinto di morte e conoscenza", L'Asino D'Oro, Roma, 2017, pp. 52 - 59; Fagioli M, "Fantasia di sparizione. Lezioni 2007", L'Asino D'Oro, Roma, 2009, pp. 66 - 74; "Materia energia pensiero", L'Asino D'Oro, Roma, 2016, pp. 111 - 115.
  36. Polli D, Altoè P, Weingart O, Spillane K M, Manzoni C, Brida D, Tomasello G, Orlandi G, Kukura P, Mathies R A, Garavelli M, Cerullo G, "Conical intersection dynamics of the primary photoisomerization event in vision", in "Nature", 2010
  37. Gatti M G, Beccucci E, Fargnoli F, Fagioli M, Ådén U, Buonumore G, “Functional maturation of neocortex: a base of viability”, in “The journal of maternal-fetal & neonatal medicine: the official journal of the European Association of Perinatal Medicine, the Federation of Asia and Oceania Perinatal Societies, the International Society of Perinatal Obstetricians” 25/4/2012 Suppl 1:101-3. doi: 10.3109/14767058.2012.664351; Gatti M G, Fagioli M, “Maturazione funzionale della neocorteccia”, in “Il sogno della farfalla”, 1, 2013, pp. 9 - 22; Long M A, Cruikshank S J, Jutras M J, Connors B W, “Abrupt maturation of a spike-synchronizing mechanism in neocortex”, in “Journal of neuroscience”, 25, 2005, pp 7309 - 7316; Hellstrom-Westas L, Rosén I, de Vries L S, Greisen G, “Amplitude integrated EEG classification and interpretation in preterm and term infants”, in “Neoreviews”, 7, 2006, 76 - 87; de Vries J I, Fong B F, “Normal fetal motility: an overview”, in “Ultrasound in obstetrics and gynecology”, 27, 2006, pp 701 - 711.
  38. Fagioli M, “Settimo anno (Lezioni 2008)”, L’Asino D’Oro, Roma, 2011; De Simone G, “Lo strano caso del dr. Ich e mr. Selbts: la negazione dell’identità non cosciente”, in “Il fogno della farfalla”, 1, 2017, pp. 9 - 40.
  39. Fagioli M, “Istinto di morte e conoscenza”, L’Asino D’Oro, Roma, 2017; ”Fantasia di sparizione", L'Asino D'Oro, Roma, 2009.
  40. Fagioli M, "Istinto di morte e conoscenza", L'Asino D'Oro, Roma, 2017; Colamedici D, Masini A, Roccioletti G, “La medicina della mente. Storia e metodo della psicoterapia di gruppo”, L’Asino D’Oro, Roma, 2011.
  41. Fagioli M, “Istinto di morte e conoscenza”, L’Asino D’Oro, Roma, 2017.
  42. Fagioli M, “Ventuno parole, che prima non esistevano”, in Left del 30 luglio 2016; De Simone G, “Lo strano caso del dr. Ich e mr. Selbst: la negazione dell’identità non cosciente”, in “Il sogno della farfalla”, 1, 2017, pp. 9 - 40.
  43. Fagioli M, “Ventuno parole, che prima non esistevano”, in Left del 30 luglio 2016; De Simone G, “Lo strano caso del dr. Ich e mr. Selbst: la negazione dell’identità non cosciente”, in “Il sogno della farfalla”, 1, 2017, pp. 9 - 40.
  44. Calesini I, "Fagioli's human birth theory and the possibility to cure mental illness", in "International Journal of Environment and Health", vol 8, n 3, 2017, https://doi.org/10.1504/IJENVH.2017.086188.
  45. Fagioli M, "Istinto di morte e conoscenza", L'Asino D'Oro, Roma, 2017; "Teoria della nascita e castrazione umana", L'Asino D'Oro, Roma, 2012.
  46. Fagioli M, "Das Unbewusste. L'inconoscibile (Lezioni 2003)", Nuove Edizioni Romane, Roma, 2007.
  47. Fagioli M, “Teoria della nascita e castrazione umana“, L'Asino D'Oro, Roma 2012.
  48. see mainly Chapter 1 of di Fagioli M, “Istinto di morte e conoscenza”, L’Asino D’Oro, Roma 2017.
  49. Freud S, “Die Traumdeutung”, Franz Deuticke, Lipsia-Vienna, 1939.
  50. Fagioli M, "Istinto di morte e conoscenza", L'Asino D'Oro, Roma, 2017; "Das Unbewusste. L'Inconoscibile (Lezioni 2003)", Nuove Edizioni Romane, Roma, 2007.
  51. Fagioli M, "Storia di una ricerca", Nuove Edizioni Romane, Roma, 2007.
  52. The concept of negation frequently occurs within Fagioli's writings, but see mainly Fagioli M, "Istinto di morte e conoscenza", L'Asino D'Oro, Roma, 2017.
  53. Fagioli M, “La psichiatria come psicoterapia”, in “Il sogno della farfalla”, 4, 2013, pp. 9 - 80.
  54. Sigmund Freud, Gesammelte Werke Bd. XIV, pp.9-15

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