Writers' Community!
Home Page Two Columnists Q&A Submit an Article FAQs Contact Author Login
Article Submission
We Need YOUR Articles!
We'll Promote Them for FREE!

Author Login

New Authors
Register Here


Now Serving 7,780 Authors
70,498 Quality Articles
& 7,747 Current Users Online!
Featured Authors
Mogama (15,965)
Bruce Horst (142)
Joel Hendon (16,285)
Michael Ramzy (633)
E. Raymond Rock (3,068)
Ira Coffin (6,669)
Connor Davidson (5,131)
Ben Morrish (7,936)
Steve Kovacs (4,545)
Sandra E. Graham (7,883)
Fran Larson (2,271)
Shari Vaudo (418)
David Tanguay (9,577)
Missing Link (766)

View All Featured Authors
Most Recent
Blind Spots - What You Can Learn From a Turkey

What Is The Chinese Dream Dictionary?

Why Are My Dreams So Odd?

Meaning Of Dreams, Do They Mean Anything?

What Are The Meanings Of My Dreams?

Why We Create Drama In Our Lives

Make Your Mind An Ocean Using Positive Psychology

German Killer 13th School Shooter Under Influence of Psychiatrys Drugs

The Life of Sigmund Freud

Five Reasons People Change

Home » Categories » Science & Technology » Psychology » The Life of Sigmund Freud » Reprint Rights » Printer Friendly

Russell Shortt

The Life of Sigmund Freud

Rated 2.5 out of 5
No Reader Ratings Available ?
Rate It  /  View Comments  /  View All Articles submitted by Russell Shortt
Submitted Wednesday, February 25, 2009
Russell Shortt (997)
Russell Shortt

Exploring Ireland
Log in to become a member of Russell Shortt's Fan Club!


Freud is now such a part of all of our lives, but perhaps in not the way that old Siggy himself would have liked. Everyone is savvy with the term Freudian, we all know that the dude paved the way into analysing our dreams and psychoanalysis remains with us, albeit in a much more limited way. For Freud, his theories were science more akin to biology than psychology. However, his theories were not drawn up nor developed in a scientific manner, being intensely metaphorical and far from entirely verifiable. Wittgenstein dismissed psychoanalysis as mere speculation rather than theory but there can be no doubting Freud was a great thinker, an immense heavyweight in the development of the human mind and our awareness of ourselves. He admitted himself in later life that his theories were exploratory, that perhaps he was more of a conceptualist than he would have readily admitted before. Indeed, Freud is open to countless interpretations and perhaps that's what maintains his ascendant position in our modern consciousness. Like a great dramatist, study of his work constantly opens up new avenues, he can be read over and over ad finitum and fresh insights will always be garnered. Indeed, like a novelist, Freud looked to his own life first, appropriating the parts that he thought could contribute insights on a universal level. But instead of concentrating on his real life experiences, he looked to his dreams, prevalent in them were the themes of an underlying hostility he felt towards his father and an incestuous, forbidden lust that he held for his mother when he was a child. Link this to an ancient Greek myth and abracadabra you have a theory which will capture the world's dirty imagination forever.

When Freud revealed his theory or his method or his drama, it was immediately seized upon and a circle of supporters began to form around Sigmund. But encouraging people that the solution of their inherent problems is in their dreams causes a massive problem, does it not? A snowball effect of gigantic proportions is set-off because everybody's dreams are of course different, so you are going to have to constantly develop theories to try to keep up with the sludge of dreams that are being explained. In addition, dreams are vague, fractured, objective and I for one can never remember them, not a jot of them, thus - problems, problems, problemsI mean just because Sigmund had these thoughts, it doesn't meant that everyone has them. Others may have even more disturbing dreams but unlike Freud they keep them hush-hush and don't get flung headlong down this exploratory avenue but then again Freud would admit that this is his very point, would he not? Freud though seems to have rushed his research, experimenting briefly and then proclaiming his revelations to the public, many times they came back to bite him in the ass, for example when he waxed lyrical about the merits of cocaine, prescribing it to friends and family before it's addictive and destructive elements were discovered. For this and other accusations (such as mis-diagnosing patients and fraudulently misrepresenting case histories) Freud gained many caustic critics of his work, they attacked his baffling concepts as singular and seriously subjective. Take his super-ego theory - the notion that all actions, reactions, treatments of others, views of the world can be shaved down to what the hell is bouncing around the super-ego - nothing whatsoever seems to matter about what is done to the individual, what befalls them, what direct real life experience occurs. Or am I just hesitant that all that befalls me are direct results of self-punishments that I am inflicting on myself, that anything bad is due to myself and not conspiring world forces?

Russell Shortt is a travel consultant with Exploring Ireland, the leading specialists in customised, private escorted tours, escorted coach tours and independent self drive tours of Ireland. Article source Russell Shortt, http://www.exploringireland.net http://www.visitscotlandtours.com




The author of this article has chosen to make this article available with free reprint rights.
Click here to copy this article.

Reprint Rights

Log in to become a member of Russell Shortt's Fan Club!

No comments yet.


Was this article helpful to you? Leave a Public Comment or Question:

This Article has been viewed 31 times.
Article added to SearchWarp.com on 2/25/2009 5:31:48 AM.
View other articles written by Russell Shortt (997)
Russell Shortt


If you found this article interesting, you may want to check out:

Disclaimer:  All information on this site is provided for informational purposes only! By no means is any information presented herein intended to substitute for the advice provided to you by any health care or other professional or organization.


Today's Most Popular
How Do We Define Intelligence?

Love Addicts and the Emotionally Unavailable

The Top 10 NLP Books I Recommend

Can’t Memorize Anything? Why Your Memory Stinks

Mental Illness as Social Deviance: A Closer Look at Cross Cultural Psychiatry

What is your Parenting Style?

People With Control Issues

How I Was Overtaken By Evil Eye Envy!

What Can Body Acceptance Get You? Plenty!

Why Does Time Go Faster As We Get Older?

Viewed from Cache. Load Time: 0.031.

Home  |  Page Two  |  FAQ's  |  Contact  |  Terms of Service  |  Article Submission Guidelines  |  Questions & Answers  |  Privacy  |  Mission / About
Copyright © 1999-2009 SearchWarp.com, All Rights Reserved - SearchWarp.com is an IcoLogic, Inc. Company