The second reason the book is of interest is that it nicely reflects the current attention of part of the psychoanalytic movement to the progress of neurosciences. Vamik Volkan, in his introductory piece, mentions "genetic (biological) determinants" as first in the list of what "passes through the channel" of early mother-child experiences, and Salman Akhtar, in his concluding essay, lists "heredity and constitutional factors" as first among the "constituents of the psychotic core." Some hints are also given at how biological and psychological determinants may relate to each other, as when the hypothesis is put forward that "a certain weakness of attachment to objects, a tendency to react to frustrations with the loss of objective relationships and by turning away from the outside world, might be genetically determined." However, these hints remain somewhat generic, and one would have liked to see specific references to the current dialogue between psychoanalysis and neurosciences, as well as to the recent literature about the biological correlates of schizotypy.