The Unconscious Before Freud
β Scribed by Lancelot Law Whyte
- Publisher
- Anchor
- Year
- 1962
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 230
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
self-explanatory title
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
When Freud first published his theory of the unconscious mind, it was ridiculed by many for being a logically indefensible revision to older foundational theories of subconsciousness. A war zone opened between opponents and defenders of the Freudian concept, and the traditional theory was forgotten.
<span><span>During the first ten years of his career in psychological medicine, Sigmund Freud espoused a theory of unconsciousness which predated his own. As Rosemarie Sand describes in </span><span style="font-style:italic;">The Unconscious without Freud</span><span>, he would evolve this theory ov
If there ever was one word that could represent the essence of Freud's work, that word would be 'unconscious'. Indeed, Freud himself regarded his 1915 paper<em>'The Unconscious'</em>as central to clarifying the fundamentals of his metapsychology. The paper delineates the topographic model of the min
If there ever was one word that could represent the essence of Freudβs work, that word would be unconscious. Indeed, Freud himself regarded his 1915 paper "The Unconscious" as central to clarifying the fundamentals of his metapsychology. The paper delineates the topographic model of the mind and spe