“Arnold Goldberg is one of the most innovative and exciting contributors to psychoanalysis today. This fascinating volume examines the moral and ethical foundations of the field and, not surprisingly, Goldberg finds that many of our comfortable core assumptions—confidentiality, honesty, neutrality, appropriate superego functioning, and more—turn out to be devilishly complex when examined carefully. His meticulous and constructive explorations, sharp and witty, are in the service of understanding and enlightening our professional morality, much of which operates automatically, without scrutiny. Reading Moral Stealth will make you a more thoughtful—and better—psychoanalyst and psychotherapist.”--Arnold M. Cooper, author of The Quiet Revolution in American Psychoanalysis and past president of the American Psychoanalytic Association
— Arnold. M. Cooper
“Moral Stealth is a profound clinical and philosophical reflection of how genuine moral dilemmas creep into psychoanalysis. Using the ethical models of philosophical pragmatism from William James to Richard Rorty, Goldberg focuses on the unique dynamics of the psychoanalytic relationship. Aware of its moral ambiguities, he avoids both moral absolutism and relativism by taking moral issues seriously while never allowing them to divert therapy from its main task—the analysis of the relationship itself. This is an important book for both psychotherapists and moral philosophers.”--Don Browning, emeritus, Alexander Campbell Professor of Religious Ethics and the Social Sciences, University of Chicago
— Don Browning
“One of the leading psychoanalysts in the world, Arnold Goldberg is a clear and original thinker, an engaging writer, and an extraordinarily effective communicator. All of these characteristics are apparent in Moral Stealth. His argument that the nature of psychoanalysis is always at tension with unexamined accepted rules and moral standards is an original and stimulating one.”
— Robert Michels, Weill Medical College of Cornell University
"Goldberg raises thought-provoking questions we need to explore. The book has made me question theoretical and practical issues that have been helpful to me, especially regarding confidentiality, neutrality, and the superego. I would recommend it to students as well as to longtime practitioners. I myself plan to use portions of it in an ethics course for advanced candidates. . . . A well-written, erudite monograph."
— Theodore F. Mucha, Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association
"In this slender volume, Arnold Goldberg, who is well known as an incisive commentator on matters psychoanalytic, adds his reflections to what has become increasingly a matter of general concern and debate, not only for psychoanalysis but also for the profession of mental health care as a whole."
— W.W. Meissner, Bulletin of the Menninger Clinic
"This book is brave and provocative in its challenge of the status quo. Goldberg asks therapists to analse their own behaviour in therapy and make moral decisions. . . . Psychotherapists are advised to read this book, and take up the challenge."
— Preeti Chhabra, Journal of Mental Health