Sigmund Freud
Sigmund
Freud was born May 6, 1856, in a small town -- Freiberg -- in Moravia. His
father was a wool merchant with a keen mind and a good sense of humor. His
mother was a lively woman, her husband's second wife and 20 years younger. She
was 21 years old when she gave birth to her first son, her darling, Sigmund.
Sigmund had two older half-brothers and six younger siblings. When he was four
or five -- he wasn't sure -- the family moved to Vienna, where he lived most of
his life.
A
brilliant child, always at the head of his class, he went to medical school,
one of the few viable options for a bright Jewish boy in Vienna those days.
There, he became involved in research under the direction of a physiology
professor named Ernst Brźcke. Brźcke believed in what was then a popular, if
radical, notion, which we now call reductionism: "No other forces than the
common physical-chemical ones are active within the organism." Freud would
spend many years trying to "reduce" personality to neurology, a cause
he later gave up on.
Freud
was very good at his research, concentrating on neurophysiology, even inventing
a special cell-staining technique. But only a limited number of positions were
available, and there were others ahead of him. Brźcke helped him to get a grant
to study, first with the great psychiatrist Charcot in Paris, then with his
rival Bernheim in Nancy. Both these gentlemen were investigating the use of
hypnosis with hysterics.
After
spending a short time as a resident in neurology and director of a children's
ward in Berlin, he came back to Vienna, married his fiancŽe of many years
Martha Bernays, and set up a practice in neuropsychiatry, with the help of
Joseph Breuer.
Freud's
books and lectures brought him both fame and ostracism from the mainstream of
the medical community. He drew around him a number of very bright sympathizers
who became the core of the psychoanalytic movement. Unfortunately, Freud had a
penchant for rejecting people who did not totally agree with him. Some
separated from him on friendly terms; others did not, and went on to found
competing schools of thought.
Freud
emigrated to England just before World War II when Vienna became an increasing
dangerous place for Jews, especially ones as famous as Freud. Not long
afterward, he died of the cancer of the mouth and jaw that he had suffered from
for the last 20 years of his life.
ŇSigmund
FreudÓ by C. George Boeree , Proffessor of the Psychology Depatment at Shippensburg Universitiy,
4/11/2008, <http://webspace.ship.edu/cgboer/freud.html>
Academic year 2008/2009
© a.r.e.a./Dr.Vicente ForŽs L—pez
© BelŽn Garc’a Castiglioni
Universitat de ValŹncia Press