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Glyn Hughes'
Squashed Philosophers The
Condensed Edition of "...we men, with the high claims of our civilization and under the pressure of our repressions, find reality generally quite unsatisfactory." |
| © | This page does not contain Freud's Origin and Development of Psychoanalysis, but an abridged summary for privare study and research only. Copyright may exist on the original work. |
INTRODUCTION
to FREUD'S PSYCHOANALYSIS
Freud was born in Freiburg, Moravia (now Pribor in the Czech
Republic). He studied medicine in Vienna and was a member of the
team that discovered the local anaesthetic effect of cocaine. He
learned hypnosis in Paris under the physiologist Charcot and
later in Nancy among Charcot's opponents. His research into
hysteria began with the Viennese physician Josef Breuer, and,
from 1886 on, through Freud's private practice in Vienna, where
he abandoned hypnosis in favour of 'psychoanalysis' by free
association on his patients- mainly upper-middle-class,
middle-aged women. Here he developed the ideas that unconscious
forces influence people's thoughts and actions, that repression
of infantile sexuality and aggression can be the root of adult
neuroses. He tried to interpret dreams and drew a comparison
between the symbolism of dreams and of mythology and religion,
stating that religion was an infantile and neurotic projection of
repressed wishes.
He was controversial in his time, and controversial now.
Nonetheless, his theories have changed the way people think about
human nature and brought about a much more open approach to
sexual matters. Irrationality, crime, love, hate and fear are now
seen as, at least in part, the product of unconscious drives. It
is this view which has had such a wide influence, not only on the
science and medicine of the mind (where it remains highly
questioned), but on art, literature, philosophy and, indeed, on
everyday thinking about the way we humans are.
Following the Nazi occupation of Austria in 1938, Freud left for
London, where he died.
| THE
VERY SQUASHED VERSION I did not create psychoanalysis. My colleague, Dr Joseph Breuer, first applied this method to the case of a hysterical girl who had developed paralysis, impairment of vision, speech disorders, "absences," and altered personality. Physician's can't understand hysteria, and tend to blame the patient. Dr. Breuer offered sympathy, and tried hypnosis, repeating back to the girl words she mumbled while in her 'absences'. This 'talking cure' helped her remember the traumatic incidents that had led to her condition, all associated with the time she spent caring for her dying father. When she was allowed to vigorously express long-restrained emotion from each memory, the symptom vanished permanently. Breuer found that almost all hysterical symptoms are remnants of traumatic experiences. P Janet of Paris had proposed that hysteria is a mental weakness, but this does not accord with observation. I could not hypnotise many of my patients, so worked with them in their normal state, encouraging them to tell me about past experiences. When they declared they knew nothing more, I would assert that the memory would emerge as I laid my hand on their forehead. It seemed that wishes had been aroused, which was incompatible with the "ego" of the patient. His ethical and other pretensions were preventing the wish being expressed, and so causing trauma. To discover a repressed complex, we let the patient speak as he desires, assuming that all he says is of value. The interpretation of dreams is the surest ground of psychoanalysis. We usually reject and forget dreams, especially when they carry immoral longings. The dreams of young children are of the fulfillment of wishes from previous experiences. Adult dreams are more disguised, preventing repressed wishes from entering consciousness, but betray the importance of experiences from early childhood. There are also those bungling acts of forgetting and confusion which are normally ignored, but can betray the most intimate secrets of psychic life. Psychoanalysis often traces symptoms back to early childhood wishes, which are generally sexual. It is not easy to accept that the child has sexual impulses from the beginning. But the child enjoys auto-excitation of the genitals, and begins to develop a libido with a second person as its object. The disposition to neuroses can arise from impaired development of the sex life, though I use the word "sexuality" in a very wide sense. The child takes his parents as objects of erotic desire, he begins to investigate where children come from. You may regard psychoanalytic treatment as a continued education for the overcoming of childhood-remnants. One is afraid of doing harm by psychoanalysis, of calling up repressed impulses, but experience shows that a wish made conscious is weakened. We do not wish to destroy sexuality, for without a certain ration of oats, no work could be expected from any animal. |
THIS
SQUASHED EDITION
The Origin and Development of Psychoanalysis was
delivered as five of lectures by Freud at Clark University in
September 1909 and later published in the The American Journal of
Psychology. This Squashed Edition reduces the original to a
readable 6,800 words.
GLOSSARY
The terminology of psychology, much of it coined by Freud, has
not passed into popular usage without distortion. Here are some
of the terms used by him and his successors, but with no
guarantee that every authority will agree to our choice of
definition.
Affect: Observable behaviour that represents an
emotional state.
Anal stage: The period of psychosexual
development associated with , usually 1 to 3 years, in which
there is special interest in defecation.
Autoeroticism: Sensual self-gratification;
genital play, masturbation, fantasy.
Catharsis: The healthful release of ideas, the
freeing into awareness of repressed material from the
unconscious.
Ego: The personality; the visible result of
mediation between primitive instinctual drives (the id), and
social prohibitions (the superego).
Ego ideal: The self's aspirations.
Ego-dystonic: Referring to aspects of the self
which are self-viewed as repugnant.
Free association: Spontaneous, uncensored
verbalisation of whatever comes to mind.
Id: The unconscious source of desires and
drives.
Intellectualisation: Excessive abstract thinking
to avoid confrontation with disturbing feelings.
Libido: The sexual instinct, in the broad sense
of pleasure and love-object seeking.
Magical thinking: The conviction that thinking
equates with doing.
Oral stage: The first year's psychosexual
development, consisting of the oral erotic (sucking) and the oral
sadistic (biting). Addiction, depression and character traits
such as pessimism have been traced to failure to resolve these
conflicting predispositions.
Psychosis: Widely-used and poorly-defined term,
generally taken to indicate psychological impairment, commonly
with delusions or hallucinations.
Reality principle: The ability to evaluate the
external world and to differentiate between it and the internal
world.
Secondary gain: The advantage derived from an
illness, such as attention and release from responsibilities.
Structural theory: Freud's division of the mind
into id, ego, and superego.
Sublimation: An unconscious mechanism whereby
undesired instinctive drives are diverted into the socially
acceptable.
Superego: The part of the personality associated
with ethics, standards, and self-criticism, generally formed from
an early role-model.
Transitional object: An object chosen by an
infant for self-soothing and anxiety-reduction.
Unconscious: That part of the mind, which
rarely, or never, enters awareness.
Wernicke's Aphasia: Loss of linguistic ability.
Word-salad: Jumbled words, common in
schizophrenia.
Zeitgeist: The general intellectual and cultural
tastes of an era.
The
Origin and Development of Psychoanalysis
by
Sigmund Freud, 1910
Squashed
version edited by Glyn Hughes © 2002
FIRST LECTURE
Ladies and Gentlemen: I assume that you have invited me to talk
of psychoanalysis. So, I shall attempt to give you a brief
history of this new method of research and cure.
If creating psychoanalysis is a merit, it is not my merit. I was
a busy student, when another Viennese physician, Joseph Breuer,
first applied this method to the case of a hysterical girl, which
we outlined in 1882 in "Studien über Hysterie." I
notice with pleasure that most here do not belong to the medical
profession, for we will accompany the doctors a little way, but
then follow Dr. Breuer alone.
Dr. Breuer's patient was an intelligent girl of twenty one, who
had developed paralysis of her extremities, impairment of vision,
intense Tussis nervosa, nausea on trying to take nourishment,
and, at one time, an inability to drink. She lost speech and was
subject to "absences," delirium, and alteration of her
whole personality.
There is clearly an injury here, probably to the brain. As her
vital organs seemed normal, physicians will expect that there is
a state of hysteria, known since the ancient Greeks. We should
know that the illness first appeared while she was caring for her
beloved dying father.
The physician, who has learned much anatomy and physiology and
pathology, can understand alterations of the brain in apoplexy or
dementia, but he cannot understand hysteria. He is reduced to the
layman's position, which is very disagreeable to one who sets a
high value on his own knowledge. Hystericals, accordingly, tend
to lose his sympathy; he blames them for exaggerations, deceit
and "simulation," and punishes them by withdrawing his
interest.
Now Dr. Breuer did offer sympathy and interest. He noticed that
in her states of "absence," she mumbled words to
herself. He used a sort of hypnosis in which he repeated these
words, in order to bring up any associations that they might
have.
The patient yielded up certain fancies, deeply sad, often
poetically beautiful, daydreams, commonly centered on a girl
beside her father's sickbed. In relating them, she seemed to be
freed and restored to normal mental life, until the next day a
new "absence" arose, which was removed in the same way.
The patient herself, who strangely enough understood and spoke
only English, called this "the talking cure," or
jokingly, "chimney sweeping." Symptoms would disappear
when, in hypnosis, she could be made to remember the situation
under which they first appeared, provided free vent was given to
the emotions that they aroused.
It was a hot summer, yet the patient developed an extreme fear of
drinking water, eating only fruit to relieve her tormenting
thirst. After about six weeks, she was talking in hypnosis of how
she had once met with her despised English governess, to find
that lady's dog had drunk out of a glass. After she had
energetically expressed her restrained anger, she was easily able
to drink. The symptom thereupon vanished permanently. Breuer
found that almost all symptoms originated as remnants, as
precipitates, of affectively toned experiences, which we came to
call "psychic traumata."
There was one curiosity; it was usually several experiences which
seemed to co-operate in bringing about the trauma, and it was
impossible to reach the first and most essential one, without
first clearing away those coming later.
When I began to use Breuer's methods, my experiences coincided
with his. There was the case of a woman who developed a peculiar
smacking tic whenever she was excited. It had its origin in two
experiences where she had tried to suppress all sound, once in
putting her sick child to sleep, and once in trying to remain
calm during a thunderstorm. To generalize: Hysterical patients
suffer from symptoms which are the remnants of traumatic
experiences.
A comparison with other sorts of memory symbols may help us
understand this. In London there is an ornate Gothic pillar
called Charing Cross, a memory of the last sad journey of the
coffin of Eleanor, wife of one of the Plantagenant kings. But
what would you say to a Londoner who today stood sadly before
Queen Eleanor's cross, instead of rejoicing with the young queen
of his own heart? Now hystericals and neurotics behave like this
unpractical Londoner, they cannot escape from painful experiences
of the past.
In the experience with the governess' dog, our patient suppressed
disgust through regard for convention. When she reproduced the
same scenes before the physician, the suppressed emotion burst
out, reaching its greatest intensity while the doctor was
striving to revive the memory, and vanished after it had been
fully exposed. Experience shows that reproducing the scene
without emotional release brings no cure. We must conclude that
the patient fell ill because "imprisoned" (dingeklemmt)
emotions underwent a series of abnormal changes.
We are now on the way to a purely psychological theory of
hysteria. A further observation by Breuer will compel us to
ascribe much of the disease to an altered condition of
consciousness.
Our patient was normally quite unaware of her
"absences," and alteration of character, which were
only revealed under hypnosis. It is through the study of hypnotic
phenomena that we have come to see that in the same individual
several mental groupings are possible. Cases of such spit
consciousness, known as "double personality"
("double conscience"), occasionally appear
spontaneously. Where consciousness remains constantly bound up
with one of the two states, this is called the conscious mental
state, and the other the unconscious. Breuer concluded that
hysterical symptoms originated in such a mental state, which he
called "hypnoidal state." Emotional experiences during
such hypnoidal states easily become pathogenic, since such states
do not allow for a normal draining off of emotion. Consequently,
the products of the exciting process are projected as symptoms,
like a foreign body, into the normal state, which then has no
conception of their significance. Where a symptom arises, we also
find amnesia, a memory gap, and the filling of this gap includes
the removal of the conditions under which the symptom originated.
So far, it may seem that our knowledge in this field is not very
far advanced. Indeed, Breuer's idea of the hypnoidal states has
been shown to hinder further investigation. But complete theories
do not fall from Heaven. Indeed, to present a perfectly rounded
explanation from the beginning could only be seen as the child of
speculation and not the fruit of unprejudiced investigation of
the facts
SECOND LECTURE
Ladies and Gentlemen: At about the same time Breuer was using the
"talking cure", M. Charcot in Paris began researches
with the hystericals of the Salpetriére. It was his student,
P.Janet, who first proposed a theory of hysteria, looking on it
as a degeneration of the nervous system, in which the patient is
incapable of correlating and unifying his manifold mental
processes, leading to mental dissociation.
If you will permit me to use a banal but clear illustration,
Janet's hysterical reminds one of a weak woman returning from
shopping, laden with packages and bundles. She cannot manage them
all, and soon drops one. When she stoops to pick this up, another
breaks loose, and so it goes on
But this theory of mental weakness does not accord with
observation of hystericals, where some partial increase in mental
function can sometimes be observed. Breuer's patient, for
instance, showed a great improvement in her ability to speak
English. When I began to follow-on from Breuer's investigations,
I soon came to a different view of the origin of hysterical
dissociation (or splitting of consciousness). It was inevitable
that my views should differ, as my point of departure was not,
like Janet's, laboratory researches, but attempts at therapy.
Practical needs urged me on. Breuer's cathartic treatment
required deep hypnosis. But I came to dislike that fanciful,
almost mystical, aid, when I discovered that I could not
hypnotize by any means all of my patients.
Since I could not alter the psychic state of most of my patients,
I directed my efforts to working with them in their normal state.
This seems at first sight to be a particularly senseless
undertaking. The problem was this: to find out something from the
patient that the doctor did not know and the patient himself did
not know. I was helped by recalling Bernheim's experience at his
clinic at Nancy. He found that persons put in a condition of
hypnotic somnambulism, stated afterwards that they had no memory
of their experiences during somnambulism, but if he persisted,
urged and assured them that they did know, then every time the
forgotten memory came back
Accordingly, I did this with my patients. When I had reached with
them a point at which they declared that they knew nothing more,
I would assure them that they did know, asserting that the memory
would emerge at the moment that I laid my hand on the patient's
forehead. This was an exhausting procedure, but it substantiated
the fact that the forgotten memories were ready to emerge, but
hindered from becoming conscious by some resisting forces.
But what were those forces? It seemed that a wish had been
aroused, which was incompatibility with the "ego" of
the patient. His ethical and other pretensions were the
repressing forces. The mental pain of incompatible wishes was
avoided by repression.
I will give you the history of a single one of my cases. It is
that of a young girl, deeply attached to her father, who, like
Breuer's patient. When her older sister married, the girl grew to
feel a peculiar sympathy for her new brother-in-law, which easily
passed with her for family tenderness. But the sister fell ill
and died, and our patient found herself by the deathbed with
thoughts that might be summed up as "Now he is free to marry
me." This love, of which she had not been conscious, was
rapidly repressed by her revolted feelings. The girl fell ill
with severe hysterical symptoms, and, when I came to treat her,
she had entirely forgotten that scene at her sister's bedside and
the unnatural, egoistic desire which had arisen in her. She
remembered it during the treatment, reproduced the pathogenic
moment with every sign of intense emotional excitement, and was
cured. I can make this process of repression more concrete by a
rough illustration.
Suppose that here in this hall and in this audience, whose
exemplary stillness and attention I cannot sufficiently commend,
an individual is creating a disturbance. I explain that I cannot
go on with my lecture, whereupon several strong men get up, and
eject the troublemaker from the hall
He is now "repressed," and I can continue my lecture.
But in order that the disturbance may not be repeated, those
strong men take their chairs to the door and establish themselves
as a "resistance," to keep up the repression. Now, if
you call this "consciousness," and the outside the
"unconscious," you have a tolerably good illustration
of the process of repression.
You will see that we do not, as Janet did, ascribe psychic
fission to a congenital lack of capacity, but explain it
dynamically as the result of a striving of mental complexes
against the other.
New questions at once arise in great number from our theory.
Attempts by the ego to defend itself from painful memories can be
observed everywhere, yet the result is not mental fission. We
must conclude dissociation requires still other conditions. I
willingly concede that with the assumption of
"repression" we stand, not at the end, but at the very
beginning of a psychological theory.
It is not at first evident how we can get from the repression to
the creation of the symptoms Instead of giving a complicated
theoretical derivation, I will return to my illustration.
Remember that with the ejection of the rowdy and the
establishment of the watchers before the door, the affair is not
necessarily ended. It may very well happen that the repressed
man, now embittered and quite careless of consequences, makes a
terrible uproar outside, and interferes with my lecture even
more. Perhaps our honored president, Dr. Stanley Hall, might take
upon himself the role of peacemaker and mediator. He would speak
with the rowdy on the outside, and then turn to us with the
recommendation that we let him in again, provided he would
guarantee to behave himself better. On Dr. Hall's authority we
decide to stop the repression, and peace reigns again. This is a
fairly good presentation of the task of psychoanalytic therapy.
In driving matters out of consciousness and out of memory, a
great amount of psychic pain is saved. But the suppressed wish
still exists, only waiting for its chance to become active, and
finally succeeds in sending into consciousness, instead of the
repressed idea, a disguised and unrecognizable surrogate creation
(Ersatzbildung). The psychic conflict which then arises, is made
capable of a happier termination, under the guidance of the
physician, than is offered by repression. Either the personality
of the patient may be convinced to wholly or partly accept the
pathogenic wish; or this wish may be directed to a less
objectionable goal, by what is called sublimation (Sublimierung);
or the rejection may be recognized as rightly motivated, and the
automatic and therefore insufficient mechanism of repression be
reinforced by the higher, more characteristically human mental
faculties, the patient succeeds in mastering his wishes by
conscious thought.
THIRD LECTURE
Ladies and Gentlemen: It is not always easy to tell the truth,
but I must correct a statement that I made in my last lecture. I
told you how when I gave up hypnosis I pressed my patients to
remember what they had apparently forgotten. But, often, ideas
emerged which could not be the right ones. In this state of
perplexity, I clung to a prejudice, which was later proved by my
friend Dr. Jung of Zürich to have a scientific justification. I
must confess that it is often of great advantage to have
prejudices. I could not believe that any idea occurring to the
patient could be quite arbitrary and out of all relation to the
idea we sought. In my patients there were two opposing forces:
the conscious striving to drag up forgotten experience; and on
the other hand the resistance to the emergence of the suppressed
idea. When resistance was slight or non-existent, the forgotten
material could become conscious without disguise (Enstellung).
When there was greater resistance, the thoughts which broke into
the patient's consciousness were accordingly made up just like
symptoms; they were new, artificial, ephemeral surrogates for the
repressed ideas. These surrogates must, however, show a certain
similarity with the ideas which are the object of our search.
They must be related to the repressed thought as a sort of
allusion, as a statement of the same thing in indirect terms
We know of analogous situations in ordinary experience, such as
instances of wit. I will give one example.
The anecdote runs: Two unscrupulous businessmen had made large
fortunes, and began trying to break into good society. To this
end, they had their portraits painted by a famous and expensive
artist. The paintings were first shown at a great soirée, to
elicit the admiring judgement of a noted critic. The critic
looked for a long time, and then merely asked, pointing out the
vacant space between the two pictures; "And where is the
Saviour?" I see that you are all laughing over this good
example of wit, which we will now attempt to analyse. We
understand that the critic means; "You are a couple of
malefactors, like those crucified beside the Saviour." But
he does not say this; he expresses himself instead through an
allusion, a surrogate, to the insult. Why? Because, in addition
to his desire to say it straight out, he is actuated by strong
opposite motives. It is dangerous to offend one's hosts,
especially those who can call sturdy servants to their aid. So,
the critic does not express the insult directly. The same
constellation comes into play, according to our hypothesis, when
our patient produces the irruptive idea as a surrogate for the
forgotten idea which is the object of the quest.
Ladies and gentlemen, the Zürich School of Bleuler, Jung and
others usefully designate a group of ideas belonging together and
having a common emotive tone, as a "complex." We have
every prospect of discovering a repressed complex, if only the
patient will communicate a sufficient number of the ideas which
come into his head. So we let the patient speak as he desires,
and cling to the hypothesis that nothing can occur to him except
what has some indirect bearing on the complex we are seeking. If
this method of discovering the repressed complexes seems too
circumstantial, I can assure you that it is the only available
one.
One is further bothered by the fact that the patient often
arrives at a point where he considers that he has nothing more to
say. Such an apparent halt appears only when the patient holds
back or rejects ideas. He must be encouraged to lay aside any
critical choice, although he may think his ideas irrelevant,
nonsensical, or especially unpleasant. In this way, we secure the
material which sets us on the track of the repressed complex
These irruptive ideas, which the patient himself values little,
are for the psychologist like the ore, which by interpretation,
he reduces to valuable metal. If one desires to gain rapidly a
preliminary knowledge of the patient's repressed complexes,
association experiments may be used, as Jung and his pupils have
done so well. This procedure is to the psychologist what
qualitative analysis is to the chemist.
This method of work with whatever comes into the patient's head
is not our only means of widening of consciousness. Two other
methods are available, the interpretation of dreams and the
evaluation of acts which he bungles or does without intending to
(Fehl und Zufallshandlungen).
The interpretation of dreams, old-fashioned as it seems, is in
fact the via regia to the interpretation of the unconscious, the
surest ground of psychoanalysis. If I were asked how one could
become a psychoanalyst, I should answer, through the study of
one's own dreams.
You must remember that our nightly dream productions show the
greatest outer similarity to the creations of the insane, yet are
compatible with full health during waking life. Follow me now on
a brief excursion through the field of dream problems.
In our waking state, we usually reject dreams, we forget them
quickly, and consider them foreign to our personality. Our
rejection derives support from the unrestrained shamelessness and
immoral longings in many dreams. Yet, antiquity, and still today
the lower classes of our people, value dreams highly, expecting
from them some revelation of the future. Yet, dreams are
wonderful enough, without having to hypothesize any prophetic
nature.
Consider the dreams of young children from the age of a year and
a half on. They always present the fulfillment of wishes aroused
from the previous day's experiences.
Now it would be a most satisfactory solution of the dream riddle,
if adult dreams consisted likewise of wish fulfillments. This is
actually the case, as analysis of the dream can show. But adult
dreams generally have an incomprehensible content; they have
become disguised, so that we must differentiate between the
manifest dream content and the latent dream-thoughts, whose
presence in the unconscious we must assume. This distortion of
the dream (Traumentstellung) is the same process which has been
revealed to you in the investigations of hysterical subjects.
This disguising, the work of the defensive forces of the ego,
prevents repressed wishes from entering consciousness during
waking life, and even in the relaxation of sleep. The dreamer
knows just as little of the sense of his dream as the hysterical
knows of the significance of his symptoms. Discovering, through
analysis, the relation between the manifest and latent
dream-content is exactly the technique of psychoanalysis.
From the manifest dream and from the irruptive ideas arising
through free association the latent dream thoughts may be
discovered. From the latent dream thoughts which you will find in
this way, you will see how thoroughly justified one is in
interpreting the dreams of adults by the same rubrics as those of
children. We discover that the manifest dream, which we remember
after waking, may then be described as a disguised fulfillment of
repressed wishes
Through this "dream-work" (Traumarbeit) it is possible
to get some insight into the process which has brought about the
disguise of unconscious thoughts. This deserves our fullest
theoretical interest, since here as nowhere else we can study the
process separating the conscious and the unconscious. Among these
newly discovered psychic processes, two, condensation
(Verdichtung) and displacement or transvaluation, change of
psychic accent (Verschiebung), stand out most prominently.
You will furthermore discover in dreams, especially your own, the
unsuspected importance of experiences from early childhood. In
the dream life, the child, as it were, continues his existence in
the man. With irresistible might it will be impressed on you by
what processes of development, of repression, of sublimation and
reaction there arises out of the child the so-called normal man,
the bearer and partly the victim of our painfully acquired
civilization. We have also discovered from the analysis of dreams
that the unconscious makes use of a symbolism, especially in
presenting sexual complexes. This symbolism partly varies with
the individual, but is partly is of a typical nature, and seems
to be identical with the symbolism of our myths and legends.
Finally, I must remind you that the occurrence of anxiety-dreams
(Angsttraüme) does not contradict our idea of dreams as a wish
fulfillment. Anxiety is just one of the ways in which the ego
relieves itself of repressed wishes.
You can now easily understand how the interpretation of dreams
can lead to knowledge of concealed and repressed wishes. I may
now pass to a group of everyday mental phenomena whose study has
become a technical help for psychoanalysis.
These are the bungling of acts (Feldhandlungen) among normal men
as well as among neurotics, to which no significance is
ordinarily attached; the forgetting of things (such as proper
names); mistakes in speaking (Versprechen), which occur so
frequently; mistakes in writing (Verschreiben) and in reading
(Verlesen), the automatic execution of purposive acts in wrong
situations (Vergreifen) and the loss or breaking of objects, etc.
These trifles have passed unchallenged as chance consequences of
absent-minded inattention. Likewise playing with objects, humming
melodies, handling one's person and clothing and the like are not
chance, but meaningful acts. That meaning is generally easy and
sure to interpret from the situation in which they occur, and
their observation, like that of dreams, can reveal hidden
complexes in the psychic life. With their help, one will usually
betray the most intimate of secrets
Where these occur among people in health, with whom repression
has succeeded well, this is due to their insignificance. But they
can lay claim to high theoretic value, proving the existence of
repression even in health. For the psychoanalyst there is in the
expressions of the psyche nothing trifling, nothing arbitrary and
lawless, he expects everywhere a clear psychic motivation.
Seeing our ability to discover repressed things in the soul life,
you will come with me to the conclusion that our technique can
show how pathogenic psychic material enters into consciousness,
and so to do away with the suffering brought on by surrogate
symptoms.
You may have gained the impression that psychoanalysis is
peculiarly difficult On the contrary, once learned, its is easy.
But it must be learned, just as much as histological or surgical
techniques. You may surprised to learn that in Europe there have
been frequently judgements passed on psychoanalysis by persons
who knew nothing of its technique and had never practiced it.
Some of those critics are acquainted with scientific methods;
they would not reject the result of a microscopical research
because it cannot be confirmed with the naked eye. But in matters
of psychoanalysis, circumstances are less favorable.
It is not difficult to substantiate in our opponents the same
impairment of intelligence produced by emotivity which we may
observe every day with our patients. The arrogance of that
consciousness which, for example, rejects dreams so lightly,
generally belongs to the strongest protective apparatus which
guards us against the breaking through of unconscious complexes.
Consequently, it is hard to convince people of the reality of the
unconscious, and to teach them anew, what their conscious
knowledge contradicts.
FOURTH LECTURE
Ladies and Gentlemen, at this point you will be asking what the
psychoanalysis has taught us of the nature of repressed wishes.
One thing in particular is surprising; the regularity of
impressions from the sexual life in both men and women.
I know that this assertion will not willingly be credited. Some
think that I overestimate sexuality, and ask why other mental
excitations should not equally lead to the phenomena of
repression and surrogate-creation. I can only answer that
experience has clearly shown it so. You will find that my
co-workers were equally sceptical, until their own analytic
labors forced them to the same conclusion.
The conduct of the patients does not make it any easier to
convince one's self of the correctness of this view. Instead of
willingly giving us information concerning their sexual life,
they wear a thick overcoat, a fabric of lies, as though it were
bad weather in the world of sex. And they are not wrong; sun and
wind are not favorable in our civilized society to any
demonstration of sex life. But when your patients are assured
that they may disregard conventional restraints, they lay aside
this veil of lies, and leave you in a position to formulate a
judgment. Unfortunately, physicians are not favored above the
rest of the children of men in questions of the sex life. Many of
them are under that ban of prudery and lasciviousness which
determines the behaviour of most Kulturmenschen in affairs of
sex.
Now to proceed with the communication of our results. It is true
that psychoanalysis often traces the symptoms back not to the
sexual, but to banal traumatic experiences. But the distinction
loses its significance through other circumstances. It is only in
recovering the wishes of adolescence and early childhood that we
hit upon the circumstances which determine the later sickness.
These mighty wishes of childhood are very generally sexual.
Now I can be sure of your astonishment. You ask, is not childhood
distinguished by the lack of the sexual impulse? No, gentlemen,
it is not at all true that the sexual impulse enters the child at
puberty, as the biblical devils entered the swine. The child has
sexual impulses and activities from the beginning, and from these
the so-called normal sexuality of adults emerges. As fate would
have it, I am in a position to call a witness from your own
midst; Dr. Sanford Bell, a fellow of Clark University, the same
institution within whose walls we now stand. In his "A
Preliminary Study of the Emotion of Love between the Sexes",
supported by no less than 2,500 positive observations over
fifteen years, he says, "The emotion of sex love does not
make its appearance for the first time at the period of
adolescence" and "The unprejudiced mind, in observing
these manifestations in hundreds of couples of children, cannot
escape referring them to sex origin."
It would not be surprising if you should believe the observations
of a fellow-countryman rather than my own. Fortunately a short
time ago from the analysis of a five-year-old boy who was
suffering from anxiety, an analysis undertaken with correct
technique by his own father, I succeeded in getting a fairly
complete picture of the bodily expressions of an early stage of
childish sexual life. My friend, Dr. Jung, read to you a few
hours ago in this room an observation on a still younger girl who
from the same cause as my patient, the birth of a little child in
the family, presented almost the same complex-creation.
Accordingly, I hope that you may feel this idea of infantile
sexuality not so strange. If it is true that most men do not want
to know anything about the sexual life of the child, a fact which
is explained all too easily.
They have repressed their own infantile sexual activity under the
pressure of civilization. Lay aside your doubts and let us
evaluate this sexuality. The sexual impulse of the child is
complex, and entirely disconnected from reproduction. It permits
the child to gain different sorts of pleasure sensations, notably
in the auto-excitation of the genitals, the rectum, the opening
of the urinary canal, the skin and other sensory surfaces. We
call this early phase after a word coined by Havelock Ellis,
"auto-eroticism." The parts of the body significant in
giving sexual pleasure we call "erogenous zones." The
passionate sucking of very young children has been correctly
interpreted by Dr Lindner of Budapest, as sexual satisfaction.
Another sexual satisfaction of this time of life is masturbation,
which has such a great significance for later life and, in many
individuals, is never fully overcome. Besides auto-erotic
manifestations, we see very early in the child the
impulse-components of sexual pleasure, of the libido, which
presupposes a second person as its object. These impulses appear
in opposed pairs, as active and passive, most importantly as
pleasure in inflicting pain (sadism) with its passive opposite
(masochism).
There is also the active and passive exhibition pleasure, the
active part of which later forms the curiosity for knowledge, and
the passive part, the impulse toward artistic and theatrical
representation. Other sexual manifestations of the child can be
regarded from the view-point of object-choice, in which the
second person plays the prominent part. The difference between
the sexes plays, however, no very great rôle so that one may
attribute to every child, without wronging him, a bit of the
homosexual disposition.
The sexual life of the child, rich, but dissociated, in which
each single impulse goes about the business of arousing pleasure
independently of every other, is later correlated and organized
in two general directions. The single impulses subordinate
themselves to the overlordship of the genital zone, so that the
whole sexual life is taken over into the service of procreation.
On the other hand, object-choice prevails over auto-erotism, so
that the sexual impulse can be satisfied in the loved person. But
not all the original impulse components are given a share in the
final shaping of the sexual life. Even before puberty certain
impulses undergo energetic repression under the impulse of
education, and mental forces like shame, disgust and morality are
developed, which, like sentinels, keep the repressed wishes in
subjection. When there comes, in puberty, the high tide of sexual
desire it finds dams in this creation of reactions and
resistances. These guide the outflow into the so-called normal
channels, and make it impossible to revivify the impulses which
have undergone repression. The most important of these repressed
impulses are koprophilism, that is, taking pleasure in excrement;
and, further, the tendencies attaching themselves to the persons
of the primitive object-choice.
Gentlemen, every process of development brings with it the germ
of pathological dispositions as far as it may be inhibited,
delayed, or incompletely carried out. The development of the
sexual function is not always smoothly completed, and may leave
behind either abnormalities or disposition to later diseases. It
may happen that not all the partial impulses subordinate
themselves to the rule of the genital zone, bringing about what
we call a perversion, as when the auto-erotism is not fully
overcome. The originally equal value of both sexes as sexual
objects may be maintained and give rise to exclusive
homosexuality.
The disposition to neuroses can also be derived from an injury to
the development of the sex life. The neuroses are related to the
perversions as the negative to the positive. They have been
repressed, but still maintain themselves in the unconscious. If
the exercise of the normal sexual function meets with hindrances
in later life, this repression, dating from the time of
development, is broken through at just that point at which the
infantile fixation took place.
I will concede that I use the word "sexuality" in a
very much wider sense than usual. But using the word solely with
reference to procreation sacrifices an understanding of the
connection between perversion, neurosis and normal sexual life.
The psychoanalyst understands sexuality in that full sense to
which he is led by the evaluation of infantile sexuality.
Now we turn again to the sexual development of the child. The
primitive object-choice of the child, which is derived from his
need of help, at first attaches to all familiar persons, but
gives way in favor of his parents. This relation is, as both
observation of the child and analysis of adults shows, not at all
free from a sexual component. The child takes both parents, and
especially one, as an object of his erotic wishes. Usually this
follows the stimulus given by his parents, whose tenderness has
the character of a sex manifestation, though inhibited. As a
rule, the father prefers the daughter, the mother the son. The
child reacts to this situation, since, as son, he wishes himself
in the place of his father, as daughter, in the place of the
mother. The complex built up in this way is quickly repressed,
but still exerts a great and lasting effect from the unconscious.
We must express the opinion that this presents the nuclear
complex of every neurosis. The myth of King Oedipus, who kills
his father and wins his mother as a wife, or Shakespere's Hamlet,
are only a slightly altered presentations of these infantile
wishes.
At the time when the child is still ruled by the unrepressed
nuclear complex, he begins to investigate where children come
from, an investigation usually awakened by the birth of a rival
child in the family. He arrives at a number of "infantile
sexual theories"; that the same male genitals belong to both
sexes, that children are conceived by eating and born through the
opening of the intestine, and that sexual intercourse is to be
regarded as an inimical act, a sort of overpowering.
But the unfinished nature of his sexual constitution and the gaps
in his knowledge about by the hidden feminine sexual canal, cause
the infant investigator to abandon his search. The invention of
infant sex theories are of determinative significance in building
the child's character, and in the content of his later neuroses.
It is quite normal that the child should make his parents his
first object-choice. But his libido must not remain fixed on
them, it is merely a prototype for a transfer to other persons in
a process of definite object-choice. The breaking loose
(Ablösung) of the child from his parents is necessary if the
social virtue of the young individual is not to be impaired. This
presents a great task for education, which at present certainly
does not always solve it in the most intelligent way.
Gentlemen, do not think that with these explanations of the
sexual development of the child we have too far departed from
psychoanalysis and the cure of neurotic disturbances. If you
like, you may regard psychoanalytic treatment only as a continued
education for the overcoming of childhood-remnants
(Kindheitsresten).
FIFTH LECTURE
Ladies and Gentlemen: With the discovery that neurotic symptoms
can be traced to infantile erotic impulse-components, we see that
the individual falls ill when outer hindrances, or inner lack of
adaptability, deny the satisfaction of erotic needs. But, not
only does the ego of the patient strive against the abandoning
repressions, but the sexual impulses may not renounce their
surrogate satisfaction unless they can be offered something
better.
The flight from unsatisfying reality into disease involves
regression to earlier, more satisfying, phases of sexual life.
The deeper you investigate neurotic diseases, the more the
relation of neuroses to normal mentality becomes apparent. You
will be reminded that we men, with the high claims of our
civilization and under the pressure of our repressions, find
reality generally quite unsatisfactory, and so keep up a life of
fancy to compensate for what is lacking. These phantasies often
contain much of the essence of personality, repressed in real
life. The successful man is he who can transform his wish-fancies
into reality. Under favorable conditions, he may find another
link between fancies and reality, as where those with artistic
talent, (still psychologically puzzling) can transform fancies
into artistic creations. Where this is not possible, the neurosis
replaces the ancient cloister, where those who felt themselves
weak or exposed found refuge. Let me give at this point the main
result of the psychoanalytic investigation of neurotics, namely,
that neuroses have no peculiar psychic content which is not also
found in healthy states; or, as Jung has expressed it, neurotics
fall ill of the same complexes with which we sound people
struggle.
Ladies and gentlemen, I have withheld from you the most
remarkable experience which corroborates our assumptions of the
sexual impulse-forces of neurotics. Whenever we treat a neurotic
psychoanalytically, there occurs the phenomenon of transfer
(Uebertragung), where the patient applies to the physician much
tender emotion, often mixed with enmity, which has no foundation
in any real relation, and must be derived from unconscious
wish-fancies. Every fragment of his emotive life, which cannot be
called back into memory, is lived over by the patient in his
relation to the physician, and only by such a living of them over
in the "transfer" is he convinced of the existence and
the power of these unconscious sexual excitations. The symptoms,
to use a simile from chemistry, are the precipitates of earlier
love experiences (in the widest sense), and can only be dissolved
in the higher temperature of the experience of transfer into
other psychic products. The physician plays in this reaction, to
use an excellent expression of S. Ferenczi, the rôle of a
catalyst, which temporarily attracts to itself the affect which
has become free by the process.
The study of transfer can also give you the key to understanding
hypnotic suggestion, which we had earlier used as a means of
investigating the unconscious. Hypnosis showed itself to be a
therapeutic help, but a hindrance to the scientific knowledge,
since it cleared away some psychic resistances, only to pile them
up in an unscalable wall. The transfer arises spontaneously in
all human relations. Psychoanalysis does not create this
transfer, it merely discloses it to consciousness. I know that
all my adherents were first convinced of the correctness of my
views through their experience with transfer, a conviction which
arises from direct experience of the work of psychoanalysis.
One is afraid of doing harm by psychoanalysis, of calling up
repressed sexual impulses. One can see that the patient has sore
places in his soul life, but one is afraid to touch them, lest
his suffering be increased. But nobody thinks of blaming the
surgeon for temporarily making a condition worse on the way to
restoring lasting health. The consequence which is feared, the
disturbance of the cultural character, is wholly impossible. Our
experience has shown that the power of a wish is incomparably
stronger when it is unconscious than when it is conscious. By
being made conscious, it can only be weakened.
Now what is the fate of the wishes which have been freed by
psychoanalysis? Generally, the wish is consumed by those better
tendencies which oppose it. This is possible, since for the most
part we have to abolish only the effects of earlier developmental
stages of the ego. The individual only repressed the useless
impulse, because he was himself still incompletely organized and
weak; in his maturity and strength he can, perhaps, conquer that
which is hostile to him.
A second issue of the work of psychoanalysis may be that the
revealed unconscious impulses can now arrive at those useful
applications which, in the case of undisturbed development, they
would have found earlier. The banishment of the infantile wishes
is not at all the ideal aim of development.
The neurotic has lost, by his repressions, many valuable sources
of mental energy. The components of the sexual instinct, in
particular, have a capacity for sublimation into ones more
socially valuable. The mental energy won in such a way has
probably had the highest cultural consequences.
However, a certain part of the suppressed libidinous excitation
deserves satisfaction. We should remember that individual
happiness ought to be one of the aims of our culture. If the
narrowing of sexuality is pushed too far it will have all the
evil effects of a robbery.
Perhaps you regard that exhortation as presumptuous? Consider the
old tale of the citizens of Schilda who tried to make their horse
work without fodder, only to be amazed when it died. Without a
certain ration of oats, no work could be expected from any
animal.
I thank you for calling me here to speak, and for your attention.

Sigmund Freud
1856-1939
Feud's ashes at Golders Green
Crematorium
London, England