1. Burton, Arthur: “Schizophrenia and Existence,” Psychiatry (in press).
2. The present emphasis on mathematics and quantification in our culture is directly related totime-boundedness. It is what existential philosophy seeks to counteract. Man's freedom must also be related to his conception oftime. While mathematics gives us greater precision, it becomes more and more alienated from its object and, more seriously yet, the scientist himself falls a victim by partialing himself out of the total human scene.
3. Shlien, John: “What Length and Intensity for Psychotherapy?” Paper presented at the American Psychological Association, Cincinnati, 1959.
4. It is easy for the psychotherapist to believe that he goes on and on. There are a dozen plausible reasons he can give himself. It therefore comes as a considerable shock to all psychotherapists when a prominent psychoanalyst dies. Such feelings lend confirmation to our own involvement withtime in a special way.
5. Burton, Arthur: op. cit. “Schizophrenia and Existence,” Psychiatry (in press).