Discussion
about Freud's Life
and
Work
Sigmund Freud
(1856-1939)
Freud took up the study of medicine at
Vienna; he eventually choose a speciality,
neurology. While no evolutionist would
argue with Freud's theory of the Universe1
Freud's extended views have gotten us
into some serious difficulty. He advanced the
theory "that hysteria can be cured by
making a patient recall painful memories under
hypnosis." His colleagues frowned, and
Freud changed over from neurology to
psychopathology.
Freud was big on hypnosis, but it eventually
took a second seat to another of his
ideas, that of "free association." Freud
placed much emphasis on infantile sexuality
and emphasized that many of our problems
in later life come from our relationships
with our parents, the so-called Oedipus
complex.2 The symptoms of neurosis,
according to Freud, "are essentially substitute
gratifications for unfulfilled sexual
wishes." From Freud's teachings sprang
a whole industry; which has milked, and
continues to milk, most all of western
society; as a sizable portion of the population
goes about psychoanalyzing their fellows.
This intrusive Freudian exercise, I might
add, is carried out, mainly, at the expense
of the hard working portion of the
population who would hardly think they
have any need for psychoanalysis
themselves; nor, if they knew something
of the subject, would they consider that
anyone else needs it either, and certainly
not at their expense.3 Some4 disagreed
with Freud and his central emphasis on
sexuality, but basically most practitioners of
psychiatry today would agree with fundamental
Freudian principles. Freud's work
effected a profound revolution in man's
attitude towards, and comprehension of, his
mental processes, constituting after Copernicus
and Darwin, a third blow to man's
self-esteem.5
Now, from my opening volley, you may well
get the impression that I am not a
supporter of Freudian theory: and you
would be mostly right. However, not
everything that Freud did was wrong. As
I have already stated Freud's Theory of the
Universe seems to be right. He believed,
-- unlike Plato, the dualist -- that there was
just the one universe, that we have only
the one existence; and not a duel one. On a
more mundane level, certain of his other
theories seem to have proven out right, for
example, his theory of the stages of infantile
sexual development. Likely, too, he was
right in his proposition that a substantial
part of man, his mind, exists in a state of
unconsciousness.
"To use
a familiar but helpful analogy, the mind is like an iceberg, with
only a small
proportion of it visible above the surface, but a vast hidden
bulk exerting
its influence on the rest. For the unconscious is dynamic in
nature,
that is, it actively exerts pressures and influences on what a
person is
and does. For instance, there are unconscious desires, which
can cause
someone to do things that he cannot explain rationally, to
others or
even to himself." (Leslie Stevenson.6)
Personality is a result of both the individual's
heredity; and, in addition, his
experience. Most, I imagine, would agree
with this proposition, but I suppose there
might to a number of persons prepared
to debate as to what extent personality is
governed by experience; personally, I
do not think by much. Experience,
undoubtedly, governs our actions; but
personality changes, -- I believe they come
about as a result of physical changes
to the brain. Freud's theory of individual human
character, his theory of psychoanalysis
(the "talking cure," is, to my mind, akin to
modern day witchcraft), starts from Josef
Breuer's discovery7 that "traumatic"
experiences could, although the events
of the trauma may well be forgotten, exercise
a baneful influence on a person's mental
health.
Neurosis, according to Freud, comes about
from the frustration of basic instincts,
either because of external obstacles or
because of internal mental imbalance.
Another mental misadaption which Freud
describes is repression with the most
decisive repressions occurring in earlier
childhood, usually of a sexual nature:
"In
a situation of extreme mental conflict, where a person experiences
an instinctual impulse which is sharply incompatible with the standards
he feels he must adhere to, it is possible for him to put it out of
consciousness, to flee from it, to pretend that it does not exist. So
repression is one of the so-called "defence mechanisms," by which a
person attempts to avoid inner conflicts. But it is essentially an escape,
a
pretence, a withdrawal from reality, and as such is doomed to failure.
For
what is repressed does not really disappear, but continues to exist in
the
unconscious portion of the mind. It retains all its instinctual energy,
and
exerts its influence by sending into consciousness a disguised substitute
for itself - a neurotic symptom. Thus the person can find himself
behaving in ways which he will admit are irrational, yet which he feels
compelled to continue without knowing why. For by repressing something
out of his consciousness he has given up effective control over it; he
can
neither get rid of the symptoms it is causing, nor voluntarily lift the
repression and recall it to consciousness." (Leslie Stevenson.)
Feud classified mental activity to exist
at three levels: the Id, the Ego, and the
Superego. The Id is the centre of our
primitive instincts; it is blind and ruthless and
caters to the business of gratifying our
desires and pleasures; the new born infant is
the personification of the Id. The Ego
develops out of the Id as the child grows. The
Ego is not so inward seeking and recognizes
that there does exist a world beyond;
the Ego acts as censor to the Id, checking
the primitive desires for immediate
gratification, recognizing the larger
picture, so to speak. Conflict between the Id and
the Ego can result in a person having
neuroses. The third state is the Superego. The
Superego is the highest state at which
we have arrived in our evolutionary
"progress." The Superego is an overseer,
our conscience; and, like the Id, is
something of which we are not conscious.
Though we are not aware of the struggle,
according to Freudian theory, there exists
a continuing battle between the id and the
Superego with the Ego in the center trying
to keep them apart. Well, based on my
limited study, that is about all I can
make of this subject of the Id, the Ego and the
Superego; it is but the briefest of descriptions;
one can spend a life studying the
subject, -- there are any number of text
books to consult -- if one cares to do so.
Freud came out with his first influential
work, in 1900, The Interpretation of Dreams.
In this work there is contained nearly
all his fundamental observations and ideas.
"Dreams," Freud said, "are invariably
the product of a conflict ... [they help sleep]
releasing tensions that come from unattainable
wishes." It is, according to Freud, the
Id which unleash our dreams; and their
meanings are expressed in symbols that
require "expert" interpretation. But it
is not just from dreams that a trained
psychoanalyst might take his or her clue:
just everyday behaviour of the subject will
be telling (to those in the know). For
instance: to forget a name means that you
unconsciously dislike the person; if a
man misses his ride to work or school, its
because he or she unconsciously dislikes
going to school or work; or if a man forgets
his house keys it is because he has an
unhappy marriage (whether he thinks it or
not.) Such is the psycho-babble which
has invaded our ranks.8
As far as I am concerned, Freudian theories
are ready made excuses for every bad
actor that comes along; his theories have
created great problems for the social
fabric. Now, my view of it might well
be different if Freudian theory could some how
be demonstrated: but it cannot be demonstrated.
Scientific theory as may be found in
the area of, say chemistry or physics,
can be demonstrated; but not so when it comes
to psychological theory. As one facetious
critic has said (and I forget who): "For the
layman, as Freud's theories spread, he
emerged as the greatest killjoy in the history
of human thought, transforming man's jokes
and gentle pleasures into dreary and
mysterious repressions, discovering hatreds
at the root of love, malice at the heart of
tenderness, incest in filial affections,
guilt in generosity, and the repressed hatred of
one's father as a normal human inheritance."
NOTES:
1 All phenomena
are determined by the laws of physics and chemistry and that man
is one of these
phenomena, a product of evolution, subject to the same laws which
apply to all matter
of the universe.
2 Oedipus was a
Greek mythological figure who, unknowingly, killed his father and
married his mother.
3 Psychoanalysis
being any and all therapy that "seeks to uncover ... repressions for
what they are and
replace them by acts of judgment."
4 Carl Gustav Jung
(1875-1961) was one.
5 See Stephen Jay
Gould's An Urchin in the Storm, p. 214, for a development of
Freud's "three great
discontinuities."
6 Leslie Stevenson
is, or was, a reader in logic and Metaphysics at the University of
St. Andrews, Scotland;
and, I must say, that I found his little book, Seven Theories of
Human Nature (1974)
(Oxford University Press, 1987) a most useful work in the
earlier stages of
my study.
7 Breuer was a friend
of Freud's in earlier times.
8 Another of Freud's
works is Civilization and Its Discontents. This work, published
in 1930, was a discussion
about the conflicts between the demands of civilized society
and the instincts
implanted in every person
Peter Landry
peteblu@blupete.com
P.O. Box 1200,
Dartmouth, Nova Scotia.
CANADA.
B2Y 4B8
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