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authornfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org>2025-04-07 10:21:19 -0700
committernfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org>2025-04-07 10:21:19 -0700
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+ <title>Introductory Lectures on Psycho-analysis | Project Gutenberg</title>
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+ <body>
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75810 ***</div>
+
+<div class='tnotes covernote'>
+
+<p class='c000'><strong>Transcriber’s Note:</strong></p>
+
+<p class='c000'>New original cover art included with this eBook is granted to the public domain.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='chapter ph1'>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c001'>
+ <div>INTRODUCTORY LECTURES</div>
+ <div>ON PSYCHO-ANALYSIS</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='figcenter id001'>
+<img src='images/i_frontis.jpg' alt='' class='ig001'>
+<div class='ic001'>
+<p><i><span lang="de">SCHWIND</span></i>, “THE PRISONER’S DREAM.”<br> <br> See p. <a href='#Page_113'>113</a> for analysis.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='titlepage'>
+
+<div>
+ <h1 class='c002'>INTRODUCTORY LECTURES ON PSYCHO-ANALYSIS<br> <span class='large'>A COURSE OF TWENTY-EIGHT LECTURES DELIVERED AT THE UNIVERSITY OF VIENNA</span></h1>
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c003'>
+ <div><span class='small'>BY</span></div>
+ <div><span class='xlarge'>PROF. SIGM. FREUD, M.D., LL.D.</span></div>
+ <div><span class='small'><span class='sc'>Vienna</span></span></div>
+ <div class='c003'>AUTHORIZED ENGLISH TRANSLATION</div>
+ <div><span class='small'>BY</span></div>
+ <div><span class='large'>JOAN RIVIERE</span></div>
+ <div class='c003'>WITH A PREFACE</div>
+ <div><span class='small'>BY</span></div>
+ <div><span class='large'>ERNEST JONES, M.D.</span></div>
+ <div><span class='small'><em>President of the International Psycho-Analytical Association</em></span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='figcenter id002'>
+<img src='images/i_title.jpg' alt='[Logo]' class='ig001'>
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>LONDON: GEORGE ALLEN &#38; UNWIN LTD.</div>
+ <div>RUSKIN HOUSE, 40 MUSEUM STREET, W.C. 1</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c001'>
+ <div><span class='small'><em>First Published in Great Britain in 1922</em></span></div>
+ <div class='c004'><span class='small'>(<em>All rights reserved</em>)</span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_5'>5</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>PREFACE</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c006'>Among the many difficulties confronting those who wish to
+acquire a knowledge of psycho-analysis, not the least has been
+the absence of a suitable text-book with which they could begin
+their studies. They have hitherto had their choice among three
+classes of book, against each of which some objection could be
+urged from the point of view of the beginner. They could pick
+their way through the heterogeneous collection of papers, such
+as those published by Freud, Brill, Ferenczi, and myself, which
+were not arranged on any coherent plan and were also for the
+greater part addressed to those already having some knowledge
+of the subject. Or they could struggle with more systematic
+volumes, such as those by Hitschmann and Barbara Low, which
+suffer from condensation because of the difficulty of having
+to compress so much into a small space. Or, finally, it might
+be their fate to come across one of the numerous books, which
+need not be mentioned by name, that purport to give an
+adequate account of psycho-analysis, but whose authors have
+neglected the necessary preliminary of acquiring a proper knowledge
+of the subject themselves. The gap in the literature of
+psycho-analysis has now been filled by the writer most competent
+of all to do it—namely, Professor Freud himself, and the
+world of clinical psychology must be grateful to him for the
+effort it must have cost to write such a book in the midst of
+his other multitudinous duties. In the future we can unhesitatingly
+deal with the question so often asked, and say: This
+is the book with which to begin a study of psycho-analysis.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Even here, however, the reader should be warned that it
+is necessary to add a few modifications to the statement that
+the present volume is a complete text-book of psycho-analysis.
+The circumstances of its inception forbid its being so regarded.
+The book consists of three separate courses of lectures delivered
+at the University of Vienna in two winter sessions, 1915–1917.
+The first two of these presuppose absolutely no knowledge of
+the subject, and the style in which they were delivered constitute
+them an ideal introduction to the subject. But in the third
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_6'>6</span>year Professor Freud, doubtless assuming that those of his
+audience who had pursued their studies so far would by then
+have widened their reading otherwise, decided to treat them no
+longer as mere beginners, and so felt himself free to deal more
+technically with the more difficult subject-matter of the third
+course—the psycho-analysis of neurotic affections. The result
+is that the second half of the book is of a much more advanced
+nature than the first, a fact which, it is true, has the advantage
+that the author was able here and there to communicate some
+of his latest conclusions on obscure points. Every student of
+psycho-analysis, therefore, however advanced, will be able to
+learn much from this volume.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>One must also remark that the book does not convey an
+adequate impression of the extensive bearing that psycho-analysis
+has on other humanistic studies than those here dealt
+with. Apart from a few hints scattered here and there, there
+is little indication of the extent to which psycho-analysis has
+already been applied, to sociology, to the study of racial development,
+and above all, to the psychology of the normal man. The
+book is definitely confined to its three topics of psychopathology
+of everyday life, dreams, and neuroses, these having been chosen
+as constituting the most suitable subject-matter with which to
+effect the author’s purpose—namely, to introduce students to
+psycho-analysis.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>An American translation of the book has already appeared,
+but, apart from its deficiencies of style, it contained so many
+serious falsities in translation—a passage, for instance, to the
+effect that <em>delusions</em> cannot be influenced is translated in such
+a way as to commit Professor Freud, of all people, to the statement
+that <em>obsessions</em> cannot be cured—that it was decided to
+issue a fresh translation. This has been carried out with
+scrupulous care by Mrs. Riviere, aided by drafts carried out
+by Miss Cecil M. Baines of the eleven lectures in Part II. I
+have compared the whole book with the original, and have discussed
+doubtful and difficult points with Professor Freud and
+Mrs. Riviere. Mrs. Riviere’s English translation will be its own
+recommendation: I can give the reader the assurance that it
+is a faithful and exact rendering.</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>ERNEST JONES.</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c008'><em>December 1921.</em></p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_7'>7</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>CONTENTS</h2>
+</div>
+
+<table class='table0'>
+ <tr>
+ <th class='c009'></th>
+ <th class='c010'>&#160;</th>
+ <th class='c011'>PAGE</th>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Preface</span></td>
+ <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_5'>5</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c011'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c011'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr><td class='c012' colspan='3'><em>PART I</em></td></tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c011'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c013' colspan='2'>LECTURE</td>
+ <td class='c011'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>1.</td>
+ <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Introduction</span></td>
+ <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_11'>11</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>2.</td>
+ <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>The Psychology of Errors</span></td>
+ <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_19'>19</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>3.</td>
+ <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>The Psychology of Errors</span> (<em>continuation</em>)</td>
+ <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_31'>31</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>4.</td>
+ <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>The Psychology of Errors</span> (<em>conclusion</em>)</td>
+ <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_47'>47</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c011'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c011'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr><td class='c012' colspan='3'><em>PART II</em></td></tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c011'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr><td class='c012' colspan='3'>DREAMS</td></tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c011'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>5.</td>
+ <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Difficulties and Preliminary Approach to the Subject</span></td>
+ <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_67'>67</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>6.</td>
+ <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Preliminary Hypotheses and Technique of Interpretation</span></td>
+ <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_82'>82</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>7.</td>
+ <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Manifest Content and Latent Thoughts</span></td>
+ <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_94'>94</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>8.</td>
+ <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Children’s Dreams</span></td>
+ <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_105'>105</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>9.</td>
+ <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>The Dream-Censorship</span></td>
+ <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_114'>114</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>10.</td>
+ <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Symbolism in Dreams</span></td>
+ <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_125'>125</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>11.</td>
+ <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>The Dream-Work</span></td>
+ <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_143'>143</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_8'>8</span>12.</td>
+ <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Examples of Dreams and Analysis of Them</span></td>
+ <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_155'>155</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>13.</td>
+ <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Archaic and Infantile Features in Dreams</span></td>
+ <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_168'>168</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>14.</td>
+ <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Wish-Fulfilment</span></td>
+ <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_180'>180</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>15.</td>
+ <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Doubtful Points and Critical Observations</span></td>
+ <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_193'>193</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c011'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c011'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr><td class='c012' colspan='3'><em>PART III</em></td></tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c011'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr><td class='c012' colspan='3'>GENERAL THEORY OF THE NEUROSES</td></tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c011'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>16.</td>
+ <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Psycho-Analysis and Psychiatry</span></td>
+ <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_207'>207</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>17.</td>
+ <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>The Meaning of Symptoms</span></td>
+ <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_218'>218</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>18.</td>
+ <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Fixation upon Traumata: The Unconscious</span></td>
+ <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_231'>231</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>19.</td>
+ <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Resistance and Repression</span></td>
+ <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_242'>242</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>20.</td>
+ <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>The Sexual Life of Man</span></td>
+ <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_255'>255</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>21.</td>
+ <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Development of the Libido and Sexual Organizations</span></td>
+ <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_269'>269</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>22.</td>
+ <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Aspects of Development and Regression. Ætiology</span></td>
+ <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_285'>285</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>23.</td>
+ <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>The Paths of Symptom-Formation</span></td>
+ <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_300'>300</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>24.</td>
+ <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Ordinary Nervousness</span></td>
+ <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_316'>316</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>25.</td>
+ <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Anxiety</span></td>
+ <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_328'>328</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>26.</td>
+ <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>The Theory of the Libido: Narcissism</span></td>
+ <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_344'>344</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>27.</td>
+ <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Transference</span></td>
+ <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_360'>360</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>28.</td>
+ <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>The Analytic Therapy</span></td>
+ <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_375'>375</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Index</span></td>
+ <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_389'>389</a></td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_9'>9</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'><em>PART I</em></h2>
+</div>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_11'>11</span>
+ <h3 class='c002'><span class='c014'>FIRST LECTURE</span><br> INTRODUCTION</h3>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c006'>I do not know what knowledge any of you may already have
+of psycho-analysis, either from reading or from hearsay. But
+having regard to the title of my lectures—Introductory
+Lectures on Psycho-Analysis—I am bound to proceed as though
+you knew nothing of the subject and needed instruction, even
+in its first elements.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>One thing, at least, I may presuppose that you know—namely,
+that psycho-analysis is a method of medical treatment for those
+suffering from nervous disorders; and I can give you at once
+an illustration of the way in which psycho-analytic procedure
+differs from, and often even reverses, what is customary in other
+branches of medicine. Usually, when we introduce a patient
+to a new form of treatment we minimize its difficulties and give
+him confident assurances of its success. This is, in my opinion,
+perfectly justifiable, for we thereby increase the probability of
+success. But when we undertake to treat a neurotic psycho-analytically
+we proceed otherwise. We explain to him the difficulties
+of the method, its long duration, the trials and sacrifices
+which will be required of him; and, as to the result, we tell him
+that we can make no definite promises, that success depends
+upon his own endeavours, upon his understanding, his adaptability
+and his perseverance. We have, of course, good reasons, into
+which you will perhaps gain some insight later on, for adopting
+this apparently perverse attitude.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now forgive me if I begin by treating you in the same way
+as I do my neurotic patients, for I shall positively advise you
+against coming to hear me a second time. And with this intention
+I shall explain to you how of necessity you can obtain from
+me only an incomplete knowledge of psycho-analysis and also
+what difficulties stand in the way of your forming an independent
+judgement on the subject. For I shall show you how the whole
+trend of your training and your accustomed modes of thought
+must inevitably have made you hostile to psycho-analysis, and
+also how much you would have to overcome in your own minds
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_12'>12</span>in order to master this instinctive opposition. I naturally
+cannot foretell what degree of understanding of psycho-analysis
+you may gain from my lectures, but I can at least assure you
+that by attending them you will not have learnt how to conduct
+a psycho-analytic investigation, nor how to carry out a psycho-analytic
+treatment. And further, if anyone of you should feel
+dissatisfied with a merely cursory acquaintance with psycho-analysis
+and should wish to form a permanent connection with
+it, I shall not merely discourage him, but I shall actually warn
+him against it. For as things are at the present time, not only
+would the choice of such a career put an end to all chances of
+academic success, but, upon taking up work as a practitioner,
+such a man would find himself in a community which misunderstood
+his aims and intentions, regarded him with suspicion and
+hostility, and let loose upon him all the latent evil impulses harboured
+within it. Perhaps you can infer from the accompaniments
+of the war now raging in Europe what a countless host that is
+to reckon with.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>However, there are always some people to whom the possibility
+of a new addition to knowledge will prove an attraction
+strong enough to survive all such inconveniences. If there
+are any such among you who will appear at my second lecture
+in spite of my words of warning, they will be welcome. But all
+of you have a right to know what these inherent difficulties of
+psycho-analysis are to which I have alluded.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>First of all, there is the problem of the teaching and exposition
+of the subject. In your medical studies you have been
+accustomed to use your eyes. You see the anatomical specimen,
+the precipitate of the chemical reaction, the contraction of the
+muscle as the result of the stimulation of its nerves. Later you
+come into contact with the patients; you learn the symptoms of
+disease by the evidence of your senses; the results of pathological
+processes can be demonstrated to you, and in many cases even
+the exciting cause of them in an isolated form. On the surgical
+side you are witnesses of the measures by which the patient is
+helped, and are permitted to attempt them yourselves. Even
+in psychiatry, demonstration of patients, of their altered expression,
+speech and behaviour, yields a series of observations
+which leave a deep impression on your minds. Thus a teacher
+of medicine acts for the most part as an exponent and guide,
+leading you as it were through a museum, while you gain in this
+way a direct relationship to what is displayed to you and believe
+yourselves to have been convinced by your own experience of
+the existence of the new facts.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_13'>13</span>But in psycho-analysis, unfortunately, all this is different.
+In psycho-analytic treatment nothing happens but an exchange
+of words between the patient and the physician. The patient
+talks, tells of his past experiences and present impressions,
+complains, and expresses his wishes and his emotions. The
+physician listens, attempts to direct the patient’s thought-processes,
+reminds him, forces his attention in certain directions,
+gives him explanations and observes the reactions of understanding
+or denial thus evoked. The patient’s unenlightened
+relatives—people of a kind to be impressed only by something
+visible and tangible, preferably by the sort of ‘action’ that may
+be seen at a cinema—never omit to express their doubts of how
+“mere talk can possibly cure anybody.” Their reasoning is
+of course as illogical as it is inconsistent. For they are the same
+people who are always convinced that the sufferings of neurotics
+are purely “in their own imagination.” Words and magic were
+in the beginning one and the same thing, and even to-day words
+retain much of their magical power. By words one of us can give
+to another the greatest happiness or bring about utter despair;
+by words the teacher imparts his knowledge to the student;
+by words the orator sweeps his audience with him and determines
+its judgements and decisions. Words call forth emotions and
+are universally the means by which we influence our fellow-creatures.
+Therefore let us not despise the use of words in psycho-therapy
+and let us be content if we may overhear the words which
+pass between the analyst and the patient.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But even that is impossible. The dialogue which constitutes
+the analysis will admit of no audience; the process cannot be
+demonstrated. One could, of course, exhibit a neurasthenic
+or hysterical patient to students at a psychiatric lecture. He
+would relate his case and his symptoms, but nothing more.
+He will make the communications necessary to the analysis
+only under the conditions of a special affective relationship to
+the physician; in the presence of a single person to whom he
+was indifferent he would become mute. For these communications
+relate to all his most private thoughts and feelings, all
+that which as a socially independent person he must hide from
+others, all that which, being foreign to his own conception of
+himself, he tries to conceal even from himself.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It is impossible, therefore, for you to be actually present
+during a psycho-analytic treatment; you can only be told
+about it, and can learn psycho-analysis, in the strictest sense of
+the word, only by hearsay. This tuition at second hand, so to
+say, puts you in a very unusual and difficult position as regards
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_14'>14</span>forming your own judgement on the subject, which will therefore
+largely depend on the reliance you can place on your informant.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now imagine for a moment that you were present at a lecture
+in history instead of in psychiatry, and that the lecturer was
+dealing with the life and conquests of Alexander the Great.
+What reason would you have to believe what he told you?
+The situation would appear at first sight even more unsatisfactory
+than in the case of psycho-analysis, for the professor of history
+had no more part in Alexander’s campaigns than you yourselves;
+the psycho-analyst at least informs you of matters in which he
+himself has played a part. But then we come to the question
+of what evidence there is to support the historian. He can
+refer you to the accounts of early writers who were either contemporaries
+or who lived not long after the events in question,
+such as Diodorus, Plutarch, Arrian, and others; he can lay
+before you reproductions of the preserved coins and statues of
+the king, and pass round a photograph of the mosaic at Pompeii
+representing the battle at Issus. Yet, strictly speaking, all
+these documents only prove that the existence of Alexander
+and the reality of his deeds were already believed in by former
+generations of men, and your criticism might begin anew at
+this point. And then you would find that not everything reported
+of Alexander is worthy of belief or sufficiently authenticated in
+detail, but I can hardly suppose that you would leave the lecture-room
+in doubt altogether as to the reality of Alexander the Great.
+Your conclusions would be principally determined by two considerations:
+first, that the lecturer could have no conceivable
+motive for attempting to persuade you of something which he
+did not himself believe to be true, and secondly, that all the
+available authorities agree more or less in their accounts of the
+facts. In questioning the accuracy of the early writers you
+would apply these tests again, the possible motives of the authors
+and the agreement to be found between them. The result of
+such tests would certainly be convincing in the case of Alexander,
+probably less so in regard to figures like Moses and Nimrod.
+Later on you will perceive clearly enough what doubts can be
+raised against the credibility of an exponent of psycho-analysis.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now you will have a right to ask the question: If no objective
+evidence for psycho-analysis exists, and no possibility
+of demonstrating the process, how is it possible to study it at
+all or to convince oneself of its truth? The study of it is indeed
+not an easy matter, nor are there many people who have thoroughly
+learned it; still, there is, of course, some way of learning
+it. Psycho-Analysis is learnt first of all on oneself, through
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_15'>15</span>the study of one’s own personality. This is not exactly what
+is meant by introspection, but it may be so described for want of
+a better word. There is a whole series of very common and
+well-known mental phenomena which can be taken as material
+for self-analysis when one has acquired some knowledge of the
+method. In this way one may obtain the required conviction
+of the reality of the processes which psycho-analysis describes,
+and of the truth of its conceptions, although progress on these
+lines is not without its limitations. One gets much further by
+submitting oneself to analysis by a skilled analyst, undergoing
+the working of the analysis in one’s own person and using the
+opportunity to observe the finer details of the technique which
+the analyst employs. This, eminently the best way, is of course
+only practicable for individuals and cannot be used in a class of
+students.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The second difficulty you will find in connection with psycho-analysis
+is not, on the other hand, inherent in it, but is one for
+which I must hold you yourselves responsible, at least in so far
+as your medical studies have influenced you. Your training
+will have induced in you an attitude of mind very far removed
+from the psycho-analytical one. You have been trained to establish
+the functions and disturbances of the organism on an
+anatomical basis, to explain them in terms of chemistry and
+physics, and to regard them from a biological point of view; but
+no part of your interest has ever been directed to the mental
+aspects of life, in which, after all, the development of the marvellously
+complicated organism culminates. For this reason a
+psychological attitude of mind is still foreign to you, and you
+are accustomed to regard it with suspicion, to deny it a scientific
+status, and to leave it to the general public, poets, mystics, and
+philosophers. Now this limitation in you is undoubtedly detrimental
+to your medical efficiency; for on meeting a patient
+it is the mental aspects with which one first comes into contact,
+as in most human relationships, and I am afraid you will pay
+the penalty of having to yield a part of the curative influence
+at which you aim to the quacks, mystics, and faith-healers whom
+you despise.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I quite acknowledge that there is an excuse for this defect
+in your previous training. There is no auxiliary philosophical
+science that might be of service to you in your profession.
+Neither speculative philosophy nor descriptive psychology,
+nor even the so-called experimental psychology which is studied
+in connection with the physiology of the sense-organs, as they
+are taught in the schools, can tell you anything useful of the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_16'>16</span>relations existing between mind and body, or can give you a key
+to comprehension of a possible disorder of the mental functions.
+It is true that the psychiatric branch of medicine occupies itself
+with describing the different forms of recognizable mental disturbances
+and grouping them in clinical pictures, but in their
+best moments psychiatrists themselves are doubtful whether
+their purely descriptive formulations deserve to be called science.
+The origin, mechanism, and interrelation of the symptoms which
+make up these clinical pictures are undiscovered: either they
+cannot be correlated with any demonstrable changes in the
+brain, or only with such changes as in no way explain them. These
+mental disturbances are open to therapeutic influence only when
+they can be identified as secondary effects of some organic disease.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This is the lacuna which psycho-analysis is striving to fill.
+It hopes to provide psychiatry with the missing psychological
+foundation, to discover the common ground on which a correlation
+of bodily and mental disorder becomes comprehensible.
+To this end it must dissociate itself from every foreign preconception,
+whether anatomical, chemical, or physiological, and must
+work throughout with conceptions of a purely psychological order,
+and for this very reason I fear that it will appear strange to you at
+first.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>For the next difficulty I shall not hold you, your training or
+your mental attitude, responsible. There are two tenets of
+psycho-analysis which offend the whole world and excite its
+resentment; the one conflicts with intellectual, the other with
+moral and æsthetic, prejudices. Let us not underestimate
+these prejudices; they are powerful things, residues of valuable,
+even necessary, stages in human evolution. They are maintained
+by emotional forces, and the fight against them is a hard one.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The first of these displeasing propositions of psycho-analysis is
+this: that mental processes are essentially unconscious, and
+that those which are conscious are merely isolated acts and
+parts of the whole psychic entity. Now I must ask you to remember
+that, on the contrary, we are accustomed to identify
+the mental with the conscious. Consciousness appears to us as
+positively the characteristic that defines mental life, and we
+regard psychology as the study of the content of consciousness.
+This even appears so evident that any contradiction of it seems
+obvious nonsense to us, and yet it is impossible for psycho-analysis
+to avoid this contradiction, or to accept the identity between
+the conscious and the psychic. The psycho-analytical definition
+of the mind is that it comprises processes of the nature of feeling,
+thinking, and wishing, and it maintains that there are such
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_17'>17</span>things as unconscious thinking and unconscious wishing. But
+in doing so psycho-analysis has forfeited at the outset the sympathy
+of the sober and scientifically-minded, and incurred the
+suspicion of being a fantastic cult occupied with dark and unfathomable
+mysteries.<a id='r1'></a><a href='#f1' class='c015'><sup>[1]</sup></a> You yourselves must find it difficult
+to understand why I should stigmatize an abstract proposition,
+such as “The psychic is the conscious,” as a prejudice; nor can
+you guess yet what evolutionary process could have led to the
+denial of the unconscious, if it does indeed exist, nor what advantage
+could have been achieved by this denial. It seems
+like an empty wrangle over words to argue whether mental life
+is to be regarded as co-extensive with consciousness or whether
+it may be said to stretch beyond this limit, and yet I can assure
+you that the acceptance of unconscious mental processes represents
+a decisive step towards a new orientation in the world and in
+science.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>As little can you suspect how close is the connection between
+this first bold step on the part of psycho-analysis and the second
+to which I am now coming. For this next proposition, which
+we put forward as one of the discoveries of psycho-analysis,
+consists in the assertion that impulses, which can only be described
+as sexual in both the narrower and the wider sense, play a
+peculiarly large part, never before sufficiently appreciated, in
+the causation of nervous and mental disorders. Nay, more,
+that these sexual impulses have contributed invaluably to the
+highest cultural, artistic, and social achievements of the human
+mind.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In my opinion, it is the aversion from this conclusion of
+psycho-analytic investigation that is the most significant source
+of the opposition it has encountered. Are you curious to know
+how we ourselves account for this? We believe that civilization
+has been built up, under the pressure of the struggle for existence,
+by sacrifices in gratification of the primitive impulses, and that
+it is to a great extent for ever being re-created, as each individual,
+successively joining the community, repeats the sacrifice of
+his instinctive pleasures for the common good. The sexual are
+amongst the most important of the instinctive forces thus utilized:
+they are in this way sublimated, that is to say, their energy is
+turned aside from its sexual goal and diverted towards other
+ends, no longer sexual and socially more valuable. But the
+structure thus built up is insecure, for the sexual impulses are
+with difficulty controlled; in each individual who takes up his
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_18'>18</span>part in the work of civilization there is a danger that a rebellion
+of the sexual impulses may occur, against this diversion of their
+energy. Society can conceive of no more powerful menace to
+its culture than would arise from the liberation of the sexual
+impulses and a return of them to their original goal. Therefore
+society dislikes this sensitive place in its development being
+touched upon; that the power of the sexual instinct should be
+recognized, and the significance of the individual’s sexual life
+revealed, is very far from its interests; with a view to discipline
+it has rather taken the course of diverting attention away from
+this whole field. For this reason, the revelations of psycho-analysis
+are not tolerated by it, and it would greatly prefer to
+brand them as æsthetically offensive, morally reprehensible, or
+dangerous. But since such objections are not valid arguments
+against conclusions which claim to represent the objective results
+of scientific investigation, the opposition must be translated into
+intellectual terms before it can be expressed. It is a characteristic
+of human nature to be inclined to regard anything which is disagreeable
+as untrue, and then without much difficulty to find
+arguments against it. So society pronounces the unacceptable
+to be untrue, disputes the results of psycho-analysis with logical
+and concrete arguments, arising, however, in affective sources,
+and clings to them with all the strength of prejudice against
+every attempt at refutation.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But we, on the other hand, claim to have yielded to no
+tendency in propounding this objectionable theory. Our intention
+has been solely to give recognition to the facts as we
+found them in the course of painstaking researches. And we
+now claim the right to reject unconditionally any such introduction
+of practical considerations into the field of scientific
+investigation, even before we have determined whether the
+apprehension which attempts to force these considerations upon
+us is justified or not.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>These, now, are some of the difficulties which confront you
+at the outset when you begin to take an interest in psycho-analysis.
+It is probably more than enough for a beginning. If you can
+overcome their discouraging effect, we will proceed further.</p>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_19'>19</span>
+ <h3 class='c002'><span class='c014'>SECOND LECTURE</span><br> THE PSYCHOLOGY OF ERRORS</h3>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c006'>We shall now begin, not with postulates, but with an investigation.
+For this purpose we shall select certain phenomena which
+are very frequent, very familiar and much overlooked, and which
+have nothing to do with illness, since they may be observed in
+every healthy person. I refer to the errors that everyone commits:
+as when anyone wishes to say a certain thing but uses the wrong
+word (‘slip of the tongue’);<a id='r2'></a><a href='#f2' class='c015'><sup>[2]</sup></a> or when the same sort of mistake
+is made in writing (‘slip of the pen’),<a id='r3'></a><a href='#f3' class='c015'><sup>[3]</sup></a> in which case one may
+or may not notice it; or when anyone reads in print or writing
+something other than what is actually before him (‘misreading’);<a id='r4'></a><a href='#f4' class='c015'><sup>[4]</sup></a>
+or when anyone mis-hears<a id='r5'></a><a href='#f5' class='c015'><sup>[5]</sup></a> what is said to him, naturally when
+there is no question of any disease of the auditory sense-organ.
+Another series of such phenomena are those based on forgetting<a id='r6'></a><a href='#f6' class='c015'><sup>[6]</sup></a>
+something temporarily, though not permanently; as, for instance,
+when anyone cannot think of a name which he knows
+quite well and is always able to recognize whenever he sees it;
+or when anyone forgets to carry out some intention, which he
+afterwards remembers, and has therefore forgotten only for a
+certain time. This element of transitoriness is lacking in a third
+class, of which mislaying<a id='r7'></a><a href='#f7' class='c015'><sup>[7]</sup></a> things so that they cannot be found
+is an example. This is a kind of forgetfulness which we regard
+differently from the usual kind; one is amazed or annoyed at
+it, instead of finding it comprehensible. Allied to this are
+certain <em>mistakes</em>, in which the temporary element is again
+noticeable, as when one believes something for a time which
+both before and afterwards one knows to be untrue, and a
+number of similar manifestations which we know under various
+names.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Some inner relation between all these kinds of occurrences
+is indicated in German, by the use of the prefix “<em>ver</em>” which
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_20'>20</span>is common to all the words designating them.<a id='r8'></a><a href='#f8' class='c015'><sup>[8]</sup></a> These words
+almost all refer to acts of an unimportant kind, generally temporary
+and without much significance in life. It is only rarely
+that anything of the kind, such as the loss of some object, attains
+any practical importance. For this reason little attention is
+paid to such happenings and they arouse little feeling.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I am now going to ask you to consider these phenomena.
+But you will object, with annoyance: “There are so many tremendous
+puzzles both in the wide world and in the narrower
+life of the soul, so many mysteries in the field of mental disorder
+which demand and deserve explanation, that it really seems
+frivolous to waste labour and interest on these trifles. If you
+could explain to us how it is possible for anyone with sound
+sight and hearing, in broad daylight, to see and hear things which
+do not exist, or how anyone can suddenly believe that his nearest
+and dearest are persecuting him, or can justify with the most
+ingenious arguments a delusion which would seem nonsensical
+to any child, then we might be willing to take psycho-analysis
+seriously. But if psycho-analysis cannot occupy us with anything
+more interesting than the question why a speaker uses
+a wrong word or why a <i><span lang="de">Hausfrau</span></i> mislays her keys and similar
+trivialities, then we shall find something better to do with our
+time and our interest.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>My reply is: Patience! Your criticism is not on the
+right track. It is true that psycho-analysis cannot boast that
+it has never occupied itself with trifles. On the contrary, the
+material of its observations is usually those commonplace
+occurrences which have been cast aside as all too insignificant
+by other sciences, the refuse, so to speak, of the phenomenal
+world. But in your criticism are you not confounding the
+magnitude of a problem with the conspicuous nature of its manifestations?
+Is it not possible, under certain conditions and at
+certain times, for very important things to betray themselves
+in very slight indications? I could easily cite many instances
+of this. What slight signs, for instance, convey to the young
+men in my audience that they have gained a lady’s favour?
+Do they expect an explicit declaration, a passionate embrace, or
+are they not content with a glance which is almost imperceptible
+to others, a fleeting gesture, a handshake prolonged by a second?
+Or suppose you are a detective engaged in the investigation
+of a murder, do you actually expect to find that the murderer
+will leave his photograph with name and address on the scene
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_21'>21</span>of the crime? Are you not perforce content with slighter and
+less certain traces of the person you seek? So let us not undervalue
+small signs: perhaps from them it may be possible to
+come upon the tracks of greater things. Besides, I think as
+you do that the larger problems of the world and of science
+have the first claim on our interest. But on the whole it avails
+little to form a definite resolution to devote oneself to the investigation
+of this or that great problem. One is then often at a
+loss how to set about the next step. In scientific work it is
+more profitable to take up whatever lies before one whenever a
+path towards its exploration presents itself. And then, if one
+carries it through thoroughly, without prejudice or pre-conceptions,
+one may, with good fortune and by virtue of the interrelationship
+linking each thing to every other (hence, also, the
+small to the great), find, even in the course of such humble labour,
+a road to the study of the great problems.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It is from this point of view that I hope to enlist your interest
+in considering the apparently trivial errors made by normal
+people. I propose now that we question someone who has no
+knowledge of psycho-analysis as to how he explains these occurrences.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>His first answer is sure to be: “Oh, they are not worth any
+explanation; they are little accidents.” What does the man
+mean by this? Does he mean to maintain that there are any
+occurrences so small that they fail to come within the causal
+sequence of things, that they might as well be other than they
+are? Anyone thus breaking away from the determination of
+natural phenomena, at any single point, has thrown over the
+whole scientific outlook on the world (<i><span lang="de">Weltanschauung</span></i>). One
+may point out to him how much more consistent is the religious
+outlook on the world, which emphatically assures us that “not
+one sparrow shall fall to the ground” except God wills it. I
+think our friend would not be willing to follow his first answer
+to its logical conclusion; he would give way and say that if he
+were to study these things he would soon find some explanation
+of them. It must be a matter of slight functional disturbances,
+of inaccuracies of mental performance, the conditions of which
+could be discovered. A man who otherwise speaks correctly
+may make a slip of the tongue, (1) when he is tired or unwell,
+(2) when he is excited, or (3) when his attention is concentrated
+on something else. It is easy to confirm this. Slips of the
+tongue do indeed occur most frequently when one is tired, or has
+a headache, or feels an attack of migraine coming on. Forgetting
+proper names very often occurs in these circumstances; many
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_22'>22</span>people are habitually warned of the onset of an attack of migraine
+by the inability to recall proper names. In excitement, too, one
+mixes up words or even things, one performs actions erroneously<a id='r9'></a><a href='#f9' class='c015'><sup>[9]</sup></a>;
+and the forgetting of intentions, as well as a number of other
+undesigned acts, comes to the fore when one is distracted, in
+other words, when the attention is concentrated on other things.
+A familiar instance of such distraction is the professor in
+<i><span lang="de">Fliegende Blätter</span></i> who forgets his umbrella and takes the wrong
+hat, because he is thinking of the problems which are to be the
+subject of his next book. We all know from our own experience
+how one can forget to carry out intentions or promises when something
+has happened in the interval that absorbs one very deeply.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This seems so entirely comprehensible and also irrefutable.
+It is perhaps not very interesting or not so much so as we expected.
+Let us look at this explanation of errors more closely. The various
+conditions which have been cited as necessary for the occurrence
+of these phenomena are not all similar in kind. Illness and
+disorders of the circulation afford a physiological basis for an
+affection of the normal functions; excitement, tiredness, and
+distraction are conditions of a different kind which could be
+described as psycho-physiological. These last could easily be
+converted into a theory. Fatigue, as well as distraction, and
+perhaps also general excitement, cause a dissipation of the attention
+from which it may follow that the act in question has insufficient
+attention devoted to it. It can then very easily be
+disturbed and inexactly performed. Slight illness or a change
+in the distribution of blood in the central organ of the nervous
+system can have the same effect, by these conditions affecting
+the determining factor, the distribution of attention, in a similar
+way. In all cases it would be a question of the effects of a disturbance
+of the attention from organic or psychical causes.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But all this doesn’t seem to promise much of interest for a
+psycho-analytic investigation. We might feel tempted to give
+up the topic. To be sure, a closer inspection of the facts shows
+that they are not all in accord with the ‘attention’ theory of
+errors of this sort, or at least that not everything can be directly
+deduced from it. We find that such errors and such forgetfulness
+also take place when people are not fatigued or excited, but are
+in every way in their normal condition; unless, just because of
+the errors, we were subsequently to attribute to them a condition
+of excitement which they themselves did not acknowledge. Nor
+can the matter be quite so simple as that the successful performance
+of an act will be ensured by an intensification of attention,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_23'>23</span>or endangered by a diminution of it. For a great number of
+actions may be carried out in a purely automatic way with very
+little attention and yet quite successfully. In walking, a man
+may perhaps scarcely know where he is going but keep to the
+right road and stop at his destination without having gone astray.
+At least, this is what usually happens. A practised pianist strikes
+the right notes without thinking of them. He may of course also
+make an occasional mistake, but if automatic playing increased
+the danger of errors the virtuoso, whose constant practice has
+made his playing entirely automatic, would be the most exposed
+to this danger. Yet we see, on the contrary, that many acts
+are most successfully carried out when they are not the objects
+of particularly concentrated attention, and that mistakes may
+occur just on occasions when one is most eager to be accurate,
+that is, when a distraction of the necessary attention is most
+certainly not present. One could then say that this is the effect
+of the ‘excitement,’ but we do not understand why the excitement
+does not rather intensify the concentration on the end so
+much desired. So that if in an important speech anyone says the
+opposite of what he intends, it can hardly be explained according
+to the psycho-physiological or the attention theory.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>There are also many other minor features in connection with
+these errors which we do not understand and which are not
+rendered more comprehensible by these explanations. For
+instance, when one has temporarily forgotten a name one is annoyed,
+one is determined to recall it and cannot desist from the
+attempt. Why is it that despite this annoyance the person so
+often cannot succeed, as he wishes, in directing his attention to
+the word which, as he says, is “on the tip of his tongue,” and
+which he instantly recognizes when it is supplied to him? Or,
+to take another example, there are cases in which the errors
+multiply, link themselves together or act as substitutes for one
+another. The first time, one forgets an appointment; the next
+time, after having made a special resolution not to forget it, one
+discovers that one has made a mistake in the day or hour. Or
+one tries by devious ways to remember a forgotten word, and
+in the course of so doing loses track of a second name which would
+have been of use in finding the first. If one then pursues the second
+name, a third gets lost, and so on. It is notorious that the same
+thing happens with misprints, which are of course errors on
+the part of the compositor. A stubborn error of this sort is said
+once to have crept into a Social-Democratic newspaper, where,
+in the account of a festivity, the following words were printed:
+“Amongst those present was His Highness, the Clown Prince.”
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_24'>24</span>The next day a correction was attempted. The paper apologized
+and said: “The sentence should of course have read, ‘the
+Crow-Prince.’” Again, in a war-correspondent’s account of
+meeting a famous general whose infirmities were pretty well
+known, a reference to the general was printed as “this battle-scared
+veteran.” Next day an apology appeared which read
+“the words of course should have been ‘the bottle-scarred
+veteran!’”<a id='r10'></a><a href='#f10' class='c015'><sup>[10]</sup></a> We like to attribute these occurrences to a devil in
+the type-setting machine or to some malevolent goblin—figurative
+expressions which at least imply something more than a psycho-physiological
+theory of the misprint.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I do not know if you are aware of the fact that slips of the
+tongue can be provoked, called forth by suggestion, as it were.
+An anecdote will serve to illustrate this. Once when a novice
+on the stage was entrusted with the important part in <cite>The Maid
+of Orleans</cite> of announcing to the King: “The Constable sends
+back his sword,” the principal player, during the rehearsal,
+played the joke of several times repeating to the timid beginner,
+instead of the text, the following: “The <i><span lang="de">Komfortabel</span></i> sends
+back his steed.”<a id='r11'></a><a href='#f11' class='c015'><sup>[11]</sup></a> At the performance the unfortunate actor
+actually made his début with this perverse announcement,
+though he had been amply warned against so doing, or perhaps
+just because he had been.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>All these little characteristics of errors are not much illuminated
+by the theory of diverted attention. But that does not necessarily
+prove the theory wrong. There may be something missing,
+a link, by the addition of which the theory might be made completely
+satisfactory. But many of the errors themselves can
+be considered from another aspect.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Let us select slips of the tongue, as the type of error best
+suited to our purpose. We might equally well choose slips
+of the pen or of reading. Now we must first remind ourselves
+that, so far, we have only enquired when and under
+what conditions the wrong word is said, and have received
+an answer on that point only. Interest may be directed
+elsewhere, though, and the question raised why just this
+particular slip is made and no other: one can consider
+the nature of the mistake. You will see that so long as this
+question remains unanswered, and the <em>effect</em> of the mistake is
+not explained, the phenomenon remains a pure accident on the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_25'>25</span>psychological side, even if a physiological explanation has been
+found for it. When it happens that I make a mistake in a word
+I could obviously do this in an infinite number of ways, in place
+of the right word substitute any one of a thousand others, or
+make innumerable distortions of the right word. Now, is there
+anything which forces upon me in a specific instance just this
+one special slip, out of all those which are possible, or does that
+remain accidental and arbitrary, and can nothing rational be
+found in answer to this question?</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Two authors, Meringer and Mayer (a philologist and a
+psychiatrist) did indeed in 1895 make an attempt to approach
+the problem of slips of the tongue from this side. They collected
+examples and first treated them from a purely descriptive standpoint.
+This of course does not yet furnish any explanation, but
+it may lead the way to one. They differentiated the distortions
+which the intended phrase suffered through the slip into: interchanges
+(in the positions of words, syllables or letters), anticipations,
+perseverations, compoundings (contaminations), and substitutions.
+I will give you examples of these authors’ main
+categories. As an instance of an interchange (in the position of
+words) someone might say “The Milo of Venus” instead of “The
+Venus of Milo.” The well-known slip of the hotel-boy who,
+knocking at the bishop’s door, nervously replied to the question
+“Who is it?” “The Lord, my boy!” is another example of
+such an interchange in the position of words.<a id='r12'></a><a href='#f12' class='c015'><sup>[12]</sup></a> In the typical
+Spoonerism the position of certain letters is interchanged, as
+when the preacher said: “How often do we feel a half-warmed
+fish within us!”<a href='#f12' class='c015'><sup>[12]</sup></a> It is a case of anticipation if anyone says:
+“The thought lies heartily...” instead of: “The thought lies
+heavily on my heart.” A perseveration is illustrated by the well-known
+ill-fated toast, “Gentlemen, I call upon (<i><span lang="de">auf</span></i>) you
+to (<i><span lang="de">auf</span></i>) <span class='fraction'><em>hiccough</em> (= <i><span lang="de">auf</span></i>zustossen)<br>(drink) (= <em>anz</em>ustossen)</span> to the health of our Chief.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>And when a member of the House of Commons referred to
+another as the “honourable member for Central <em>Hell</em>,” instead
+of “Hull,” it was a case of perseveration; as also when a soldier
+said to a friend “I wish there were a thousand of our men <em>mortified</em>
+on that hill, Bill,” instead of “fortified.” In one case the <em>ell</em>
+sound has perseverated from the previous words “m<em>e</em>mber for
+C<em>e</em>ntra<em>l</em>,” and in the other the <em>m</em> sound in “<em>m</em>en” has perseverated
+to form “mortified.”<a href='#f12' class='c015'><sup>[12]</sup></a> These three types of slip are not very
+common. You will find those cases much more frequent in
+which the slip happens by a compounding or contraction, as for
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_26'>26</span>example when a gentleman asks a lady if he may <em>insort</em> her on
+her way (<i><span lang="de">begleit-digen</span></i>); this contraction is made up of <i><span lang="de">begleiten</span></i> =
+to escort, and <i><span lang="de">beleidigen</span></i> = to insult. (And by the way, a young
+man addressing a lady in this way will not have much success
+with her.) A substitution takes place when a poor woman says
+she has an “incurable <em>infernal</em> disease,”<a id='r13'></a><a href='#f13' class='c015'><sup>[13]</sup></a> or in Mrs. Malaprop’s
+mind when she says, for instance, “few gentlemen know how
+to value the <em>ineffectual</em> qualities in a woman.”<a href='#f13' class='c015'><sup>[13]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The explanation which the two authors attempt to formulate
+as the basis of their collection of examples is peculiarly inadequate.
+They hold that the sounds and syllables of a word have different
+values and that the innervation of the sounds of higher value
+can interfere with those of lower value. They obviously base
+this conclusion on the cases of anticipation and perseveration
+which are not at all frequent; in other forms of slips of the
+tongue the question of such sound priorities, even if they exist,
+does not enter at all; for the most frequent type of slip is that
+in which instead of a certain word one says another which resembles
+it, and this resemblance is considered by many people
+sufficient explanation of it. For instance, a professor may say
+in his opening lecture, “I am not inclined (<i><span lang="de">geneigt</span></i> instead of
+<i><span lang="de">geeignet</span></i> = fitted) to estimate the merits of my predecessor.”
+Or another professor says, “In the case of the female genital,
+in spite of the <em>tempting</em>&#160;... I mean, the <em>attempted</em>&#160;...”
+(<i><span lang="de">Versuchungen</span></i> instead of <i><span lang="de">Versuche</span></i>).</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The commonest and also the most noticeable form of slip of
+the tongue, however, is that of saying the exact opposite of
+what one meant to say. These cases are quite outside the effect
+of any relations between sounds or confusion due to similarity,
+and in default one may therefore turn to the fact that opposites
+have a strong conceptual connection with one another and are
+psychologically very closely associated. There are well-known
+examples of this sort. For instance, the President of our Parliament
+once opened the session with the words “Gentlemen, I
+declare a quorum present and herewith declare the session <em>closed</em>.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Any other common association may work in a way as insidious
+as the association of opposites and may on occasion lead to
+results as inopportune. So there is a story to the effect that, at
+a festivity in honour of the marriage of a child of H. Helmholtz
+with a child of the well-known inventor and captain of industry,
+W. Siemens, the famous physiologist Dubois-Reymond was
+asked to speak. He concluded his doubtless brilliant speech
+with the toast “Success to the new partnership, Siemens and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_27'>27</span><em>Halske</em>!” which was of course the name of the old firm. The
+association of the two names must have been as familiar to a
+resident in Berlin as “Crosse &#38; Blackwell” to a Londoner.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>So the effect of word associations must be taken into account,
+as well as that of sound-values and similarities between words.
+But even that is not enough. In one type of case, before we
+can arrive at an adequate explanation of the slip we must consider
+some phrase which had been said, or perhaps only thought,
+previously. Again, that is, a case of perseveration, as Meringer
+insists, but arising in a more distant source.—I must confess
+that altogether I have the impression that we are further than
+ever from comprehension of slips of the tongue.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>However, I hope I am not mistaken in thinking that in the
+course of our examination of the above examples an impression
+has formed itself in us which may be of a kind to repay further
+attention. We were considering the general conditions under
+which slips of the tongue occur and then the influences which
+determine the kind of distortion effected in the slip, but so far
+we have not examined at all the result of the slip itself, as an
+object of interest without regard to its origin. If we bring
+ourselves to do this we shall in the end have to assert courageously
+that in some of the examples the slip itself makes sense. Now
+what does it mean when we say “it makes sense”? Well, it
+means that the result of the slip may perhaps have a right to
+be regarded in itself as a valid mental process following out its
+own purpose, and as an expression having content and meaning.
+Hitherto we have only spoken of errors, but now it appears as
+if the error could sometimes be quite a proper act, except that
+it has intruded itself in the place of one more expected or intended.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In certain cases the sense belonging to the slip itself appears
+obvious and unmistakable. When the President in his opening
+speech closes the session of Parliament, a knowledge of the
+circumstances under which the slip was made inclines us to see
+a meaning in it. He expects no good result from the session
+and would be glad to be able to disperse forthwith; there is
+no difficulty in discovering the meaning, or interpreting the
+sense, of this slip. Or when a lady, appearing to compliment
+another, says: “I am sure <em>you</em> must have <em>thrown</em> this delightful
+hat together” instead of “sewn it together” (<i><span lang="de">aufgepatzt</span></i> instead
+of <i><span lang="de">aufgeputzt</span></i>), no scientific theories in the world can prevent us
+from seeing in her slip the thought that the hat is an amateur
+production. Or when a lady who is well known for her determined
+character says: “My husband asked his doctor what sort
+of diet ought to be provided for him. But the doctor said he
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_28'>28</span>needed no special diet, he could eat and drink whatever <em>I</em> choose,”
+the slip appears clearly as the unmistakable expression of a
+consistent scheme.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now supposing it should turn out that not only a few cases
+of slips of the tongue and errors in general, but the great majority
+of them, have a meaning, then the meaning of the error, to which
+we have hitherto paid no attention, would become the point of
+greatest interest to us and would justifiably drive all other points
+of view into the background. All physiological and psycho-physiological
+conditions could then be ignored and attention
+could be devoted to the purely psychological investigation of
+the <em>sense</em>, that is, the meaning, the intention, in the errors. With
+this in view, therefore, we shall soon consider further material.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Before undertaking this, however, I should like to invite you
+to follow up another clue with me. It often happens that a poet
+makes use of a slip of the tongue or some other error as a means
+of artistic expression. This fact in itself proves that he thinks
+the error, for instance, a slip of the tongue, has a meaning; for
+he constructs it intentionally. It could hardly happen that a
+poet accidentally made a slip of the pen and then allowed his
+slip of the pen to stand as a slip of the tongue of the character.
+He wishes to reveal something by means of the slip and we may
+well enquire what that may be—whether perhaps he wishes to
+indicate that the person in question is distracted or overtired,
+or is expecting a headache. Of course we should not exaggerate
+the importance of it if poets do make use of slips to express their
+meaning. Slips might be in reality without meaning, accidents
+in the mental world, or only occasionally have a meaning, and
+poets would still be entitled to refine them by infusing sense into
+them for their own purposes. However, it would not be surprising
+if more were to be learned from poets about slips of the
+tongue than from philologists and psychiatrists.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>There is an example of a slip of this kind in Schiller’s <cite>Wallenstein</cite>
+(Piccolomini, Act I, Scene 5). In the foregoing scene, young
+Max Piccolomini had taken up Duke Wallenstein’s cause ardently,
+and had been passionately describing the blessings of peace, which
+he had become aware of in the course of a journey accompanying
+Wallenstein’s beautiful daughter to the camp. As he leaves the
+stage, his father (Octavio) and the courtier Questenberg are
+plunged in consternation. The fifth scene continues:—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c016'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Questenberg.</span> Alas! and stands it so?</div>
+ <div class='line in5'>Friend, do we let him go</div>
+ <div class='line in5'>In this delusion? let him go from us?</div>
+ <div class='line in5'>Not call him back at once, not</div>
+ <div class='line in5'>Open his eyes here and now?</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_29'>29</span><span class='sc'>Octavio</span> (<em>recovering himself out of deep thought</em>).</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>He has now opened <em>mine</em></div>
+ <div class='line in2'>And I see more than pleases me.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Questenberg.</span> What is it?</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Octavio.</span> A curse upon this journey!</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Questenberg.</span> But why so? What is it?</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Octavio.</span> Come, come, friend! I must up</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>And follow the ill-omened clue at once</div>
+ <div class='line in2'>And see with mine own eyes—come with me now!</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Questenberg.</span> What now? Where go you then?</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Octavio</span> (<em>hastily</em>). <em>To her, herself!</em></div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Questenberg.</span> <em>To</em>&#160;...</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Octavio</span> (<em>corrects himself</em>). To the Duke! Come, let us go!</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c007'>Octavio meant to say: “To him, to the Duke,” but his tongue
+slips and he betrays (to us, at least) by the words “<em>to her</em>” that
+he has clearly recognized the influence at work behind the famous
+young warrior’s rhapsodies in favour of peace.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>A still more impressive example was found by O. Rank in
+Shakespeare. It occurs in the <cite>Merchant of Venice</cite>, in the famous
+scene in which the fortunate suitor makes his choice among the
+three caskets; and I can perhaps not do better than read to
+you now Rank’s short account of it.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“A slip of the tongue which occurs in Shakespeare’s
+<cite>Merchant of Venice</cite> (Act III, Sc. 2) is exceedingly fine in the poetic
+feeling it shows and in the brilliant way in which it is applied
+technically. Like the slip in Wallenstein quoted by Freud
+in his <cite>Psychopathology of Everyday Life</cite>, it shows that the poets
+well understand the mechanism and meaning of such slips and
+assume that the audience will also understand them. Portia,
+who by her father’s wish has been bound to the choice of a husband
+by lot, has so far escaped all the unwelcome suitors by
+the luck of fortune. Having at last found in Bassanio the suitor
+to whom she is inclined, she fears that he too will choose the
+wrong casket. She would like to tell him that even so he may
+rest assured of her love, but she is prevented by her oath. In
+this inner conflict the poet makes her say to her chosen suitor:</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c016'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>I pray you tarry; pause a day or two,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Before you hazard: for, in choosing wrong,</div>
+ <div class='line'>I lose your company; therefore, forbear awhile:</div>
+ <div class='line'>There’s something tells me (but it is not love)</div>
+ <div class='line'>I would not lose you&#160;...</div>
+ <div class='line in28'>... I could teach you</div>
+ <div class='line'>How to choose right, but then I am forsworn;</div>
+ <div class='line'>So will I never be; so may you miss me;</div>
+ <div class='line'>But if you do you’ll make me wish a sin,</div>
+ <div class='line'>That I had been forsworn. Beshrew your eyes,</div>
+ <div class='line'>They have o’erlooked me, and divided me;</div>
+ <div class='line'><em>One half of me is yours, the other half yours,—</em></div>
+ <div class='line'><em>Mine own, I would say</em>; but if mine, then yours,</div>
+ <div class='line'>And so all yours.</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_30'>30</span>Just that which she only meant to indicate subtly to him
+because she should really have concealed it from him altogether,
+namely, that even before the lot she was his and loved him, this
+the poet with exquisite fineness of psychological feeling causes
+to come to expression in her slip; and is able, by this artistic
+device, to relieve the unbearable uncertainty of the lover as well
+as the suspense of the audience as to the issue of the choice.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>And notice, at the end, how subtly Portia reconciles the
+two declarations which are contained in the slip, how she resolves
+the contradiction between them, and finally even justifies the
+slip.</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c016'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line in22'>... but if mine, then yours,</div>
+ <div class='line'>And so all yours.</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c007'>It has happened that other thinkers outside the field of
+medicine have disclosed by an observation the meaning of some
+error and so anticipated our efforts in this direction. You all
+know the witty satirist Lichtenberg (1742–1799) of whom Goethe
+said: “Where he makes a joke, a problem lies concealed.”
+And occasionally the solution of the problem is revealed in the
+joke. Lichtenberg writes in his witty and satirical <cite>Notes</cite>, “He
+always read ‘Agamemnon’ for ‘angenommen’ (verb meaning
+‘to take for granted’), so deeply versed was he in Homer.”
+This really contains the whole theory of slips in reading.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>At the next lecture we will see whether we can agree with the
+poets in their conception of the meaning of psychological errors.</p>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_31'>31</span>
+ <h3 class='c002'><span class='c014'>THIRD LECTURE</span><br> THE PSYCHOLOGY OF ERRORS (<em>continuation</em>)</h3>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c006'>At the last lecture it occurred to us to consider the error by
+itself alone, apart from its relation to the intended act with which
+it had interfered, and we perceived that in certain cases it seemed
+to betray a meaning of its own. We said to ourselves that if this
+conclusion, that the error has its own meaning, could be established
+on a larger scale, that meaning would soon prove more interesting
+to us than the investigation of the conditions under which errors
+arise.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Let us once more agree upon what we understand by the
+“meaning” of a mental process. This is nothing else but the
+intention which it serves and its place in a mental sequence.
+In most of the cases we examined we could substitute for the word
+“meaning” the words “intention” and “tendency.” Now was
+it only a deceptive appearance, or a poetic glorification of the
+error, that led us to believe that we could see an intention in it?</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Let us still keep to the examples of slips of the tongue and
+review a larger number of such manifestations. We then find
+whole categories of cases in which the intention, the meaning, of
+the slip is quite obvious, particularly so in those instances in
+which the opposite of what was intended is said. The President
+says in his opening speech: “I declare the session <em>closed</em>.”
+That is surely not ambiguous. The meaning and intention of
+this slip is that he wants to close the session. One might well
+say, “he said so himself”; we only take him at his word. Please
+do not interrupt me with the objection that this is impossible,
+that we know quite well that he wished to open the session, not
+to close it, and that he himself whom we have just recognized
+as the best judge of his intention will affirm that he meant to
+open it. In doing so you forget that we agreed to consider the
+error by itself; its relation to the intention which it disturbs
+will be discussed later. <em>You</em> would be guilty of an error in logic,
+by which you would conveniently dispose of the whole problem
+under discussion, which in English is called “begging the
+question.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_32'>32</span>In other cases, where the form of the slip is not exactly the
+opposite of what is intended, a contradictory sense may still
+often come to expression. “I am not <em>inclined</em> (<i><span lang="de">geneigt</span></i>) to appreciate
+my predecessor’s merits.” “Inclined” is not the opposite
+of “in a position to” (<i><span lang="de">geeignet</span></i>), but it is an open confession of
+a thought in sharpest contradiction to the speaker’s duty to
+meet the situation gracefully.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In still other cases the slip simply adds a second meaning
+to the one intended. The sentence then sounds like a contraction,
+an abbreviation, a condensation of several sentences into
+one. Thus the determined lady who said: “He may eat and
+drink whatever <em>I</em> choose.” That is as if she had said: “He
+can eat and drink what he chooses, but what does it matter what
+he chooses? It is for me to do the choosing!” Slips of the
+tongue often give this impression of abbreviation; for instance,
+when a professor of anatomy at the end of his lecture on the
+nasal cavities asks whether his class has thoroughly understood
+it and, after a general reply in the affirmative, goes on to say:
+“I can hardly believe that that is so, since persons who can
+thoroughly understand the nasal cavities can be counted, even
+in a city of millions, on <em>one finger</em>&#160;... I mean, on the fingers of
+one hand.” The abbreviated sentence has its own meaning: it
+says that there is only one person who understands the subject.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In contrast to these types in which the slip plainly discloses
+its meaning are others in which the slip of the tongue conveys
+nothing intelligible, and therefore directly controverts our
+expectations. The mis-pronunciation by mistake of proper
+names, or the enunciation of meaningless sounds, is such a frequent
+occurrence that this alone would appear to dispose at
+once of the question whether all errors have a meaning. Yet
+closer inspection of such examples discloses the fact that it is
+easily possible to understand such distortions; indeed, that
+the difference between these unintelligible cases and the previous
+more comprehensible ones is not so very great.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The owner of a horse, on being asked how it was, replied:
+“O, it may <em>stad</em>—it may <em>take</em> another month.”<a id='r14'></a><a href='#f14' class='c015'><sup>[14]</sup></a> Asked what
+he really meant to say, he answered that he was thinking it was
+a <em>sad</em> business, and the words “sad” and “take” together gave
+rise to <em>stad</em>. (Meringer and Mayer.)</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Another man was relating some objectionable incidents and
+went on: “and then certain facts were <em>refilled</em>.”<a id='r15'></a><a href='#f15' class='c015'><sup>[15]</sup></a> He explained
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_33'>33</span>that he meant to say these facts were “filthy.” “Revealed”
+and “filthy” together combine to form <em>refilled</em>. (Meringer
+and Mayer.)</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>You will recall the case of the young man who offered to
+“insort” an unknown lady. We took the liberty of resolving
+this word into “insult” and “escort,” and were quite convinced
+of this interpretation without requiring proof of it.<a id='r16'></a><a href='#f16' class='c015'><sup>[16]</sup></a> From these
+examples you can see that even these more obscure cases can be
+explained as the concurrence, or <em>interference</em>, of two different
+intentions of speech with one another; the differences arise
+only in that in the first type of slip the one intention has entirely
+excluded the other, as when the opposite is said; while in the
+second type the one intention only succeeds in distorting or
+modifying the other, from which arise combinations of a more
+or less senseless appearance.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>We believe that we have now discovered the secret of a large
+number of slips of the tongue. If we keep this clear in mind we
+shall be able to comprehend still further groups hitherto entirely
+mysterious. Although, for instance, in a case of distortion of a
+name we cannot suppose that it is always a matter of a contest
+between two similar but different names, yet the second intention
+is easily perceived. Distortions of names are common enough
+apart from slips of the tongue; they are attempts to liken the
+name to something derogatory or degrading, a common form
+of abuse, which educated persons soon learn to avoid but nevertheless
+do not willingly give up. It may be dressed up as a joke,
+although one of a very low order. To quote one gross and ugly
+example of such a distortion of a name, the name of the President
+of the French Republic, <em>Poincaré</em>, has lately been transformed into
+“<i><span lang="la">Schweinskarré</span></i>.” It is not going much further to assume that
+some such abusive intention may also be behind distortions of
+names produced by a slip of the tongue. In pursuing our idea,
+similar explanations suggest themselves for cases of slips
+where the effect is comic or absurd. In the case of the member
+of parliament who referred to the “honourable member for
+Central Hell,” the sober atmosphere of the House is unexpectedly
+disturbed by the intrusion of a word that calls up a ludicrous and
+unflattering image; we are bound to conclude from the analogy
+with certain offensive and abusive expressions that an impulse
+has interposed here, to this effect: “You needn’t be taken in.
+I don’t mean a word of this. To hell with the fellow!” The
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_34'>34</span>same applies to slips of the tongue which transform quite harmless
+words into obscene and indecent ones.<a id='r17'></a><a href='#f17' class='c015'><sup>[17]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='c007'>We are familiar with this tendency in certain people intentionally
+to convert harmless words into indecent ones for the
+sake of the amusement obtained; it passes for wit, and in fact
+when one hears of a case one at once asks whether it was intended
+as a joke or occurred unintentionally as a slip of the tongue.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Well, we seem to have solved the riddle of errors with comparatively
+little trouble! They are not accidents; they are
+serious mental acts; they have their meaning; they arise through
+the concurrence—perhaps better, the mutual interference—of
+two different intentions. But now I can well understand that
+you want to overwhelm me with a flood of questions and doubts,
+which must be answered and resolved before we can enjoy this
+first result of our efforts. I certainly do not want to press any
+hasty conclusions upon you. Let us coolly consider everything
+in turn.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>What would you like to say? Whether I think that this
+explanation accounts for all cases of slips of the tongue or only
+for a certain number? Whether this conception can be extended
+to the many other types of errors, to misreading, slips of the
+pen, forgetting, wrongly performed actions, mislaying things
+and so on? What part the factors of fatigue, excitement,
+absent-mindedness and distraction of attention play in regard
+to the mental nature of errors? Besides this, it is clearly seen
+that of the two competing meanings in the slip one is always
+manifest, but not always the other. How is one to arrive at
+the latter? And if one believes that one has guessed it, how is
+one to find proof that this is not merely a probability but the
+only true meaning? Is there anything else you wish to ask?
+If not, then I myself will continue. I will remind you that we
+are not really greatly concerned with errors in themselves, but
+that we wished to learn from a study of them something of value
+from the point of view of psycho-analysis. Therefore I will put
+this question: What sort of purposes or tendencies are these
+which thus interfere with other intentions, and what is the relation
+between the interfering tendency and the other? Thus, as soon
+as we have found the answer to the riddle, our efforts begin
+again.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Very well then; is this the explanation of all cases of slips
+of the tongue? I am very much inclined to think so, and for
+this reason, because whenever one examines an instance of it
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_35'>35</span>this type of solution may be found. Still, one cannot prove that
+a slip of the tongue cannot come to pass without the agency of
+this mechanism. It may be so: for our purposes it is a matter
+of indifference, theoretically; for the conclusions which we wish
+to draw by way of an introduction to psycho-analysis remain
+valid, even if only a small proportion of the total incidence of
+slips of the tongue comes under our explanation, and this is
+certainly not so. The next question, whether this explanation
+extends to other forms of errors, may be answered by way of
+anticipation in the affirmative. You can convince yourselves
+of it when we turn to consider examples of slips of the pen, of
+wrongly performed acts, and so on. I propose, however, for
+technical reasons that we should postpone doing this until we
+have investigated the slip of the tongue itself more thoroughly.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The question what significance those factors, which some
+writers have placed in the foreground, can now have for us—such
+factors as disturbances of the circulation, fatigue, excitement,
+distraction, disturbances of attention—demands a more exhaustive
+reply if we assume the mental mechanism of slips described
+above. You will notice that we do not deny these factors.
+Indeed, in general it doesn’t often happen that psycho-analysis
+contests anything which is maintained in other quarters; as a
+rule, psycho-analysis only adds something new to what has been
+said; and it does certainly happen on occasion that what has
+hitherto been overlooked, and is now supplied by psycho-analysis,
+is the most essential part of the matter. The influence of such
+physiological predispositions as arise in slight illness, circulatory
+disturbances and conditions of fatigue, upon the occurrence of
+slips of the tongue is to be admitted without more ado; everyday
+personal experience may convince you of it. But how little is
+explained by this admission! Above all, these are not necessary
+conditions of errors. Slips of the tongue may just as well occur
+in perfect health and normal conditions. These bodily factors,
+therefore, are merely contributory; they only favour and facilitate
+the peculiar mental mechanism which produces slips of the tongue.
+I once used an illustration for this state of things which I will
+repeat here, as I know of no better. Just suppose that on some
+dark night I am walking in a lonely neighbourhood and am
+assaulted by a rogue who seizes my watch and money, whereupon,
+since I could not see the robber’s face clearly, I make my complaint
+at the police-station in these words: “Loneliness and darkness
+have just robbed me of my valuables.” The police officer might
+reply to me: “You seem to carry your support of the extreme
+mechanistic point of view too far for the facts. Suppose we
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_36'>36</span>put the case thus: Under cover of darkness and encouraged by
+the loneliness of the spot, some unknown thief has made away
+with your valuables. It appears to me that the essential thing
+to be done is to look about for the thief. Perhaps we shall then
+be able to take the plunder from him again.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Psycho-physiological factors such as excitement, absent-mindedness,
+distraction of attention, obviously provide very
+little in the way of explanation. They are mere phrases; they
+are screens, and we should not be deterred from looking behind
+them. The question is rather what has here called forth the
+excitement or the particular diversion of attention. The influence
+of sound-values, resemblances between words, and common
+associations connecting certain words, must also be recognized
+as important. They facilitate the slip by pointing out a path
+for it to take. But if there is a path before me does it necessarily
+follow that I must go along it? I also require a motive to determining
+my choice and, further, some force to propel me forward.
+These sound-values and word associations are, therefore, just
+like the bodily conditions, the facilitating causes of slips of the
+tongue, and cannot provide the real explanation of them. Consider
+for a moment the enormous majority of cases in which the
+words I am using in my speech are not deranged on account of
+sound-resemblance to other words, intimate associations with
+opposite meanings, or with expressions in common use. It
+yet remains to suppose, with the philosopher Wundt, that a slip
+of the tongue arises when the tendency to associations gains an
+ascendance over the original intention owing to bodily fatigue.
+This would be quite plausible if experience did not controvert
+it by the fact that in a number of cases the bodily, and in another
+large group the associative, predisposing causes are absent.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Particularly interesting to me, however, is your next question,
+namely, by what means the two mutually disturbing tendencies
+may be ascertained. You probably do not suspect how portentous
+this question is. You will agree that one of these tendencies, the
+one which is interfered with, is always unmistakable; the person
+who commits the slip knows it and acknowledges it. Doubt
+and hesitation only arise in regard to the other, what we have
+called the interfering, tendency. Now we have already heard,
+and you will certainly not have forgotten, that in a certain
+number of cases this other tendency is equally plain. It is evident
+in the result of the slip if only we have the courage to let the slip
+speak for itself. The President who said the opposite of what
+he meant—it is clear that he wishes to open the session, but
+equally clear that he would also like to close it. That is so
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_37'>37</span>plain that it needs no interpreting. But in the other cases, in
+which the interfering tendency merely distorts the original
+without itself coming to full expression,—how can the interfering
+tendency be detected in the distortion?</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In one group of cases by a very safe and simple method, by
+the same method, that is, by which we establish the tendency
+that is interfered with. We enquire of the speaker, who tells
+us then and there; after making the slip he restores the word
+he originally intended. “O, it may <em>stad</em>—no, it may <em>take</em> another
+month.” Well, the interfering tendency may be likewise supplied
+by him. We say, “Now why did you first say stad?” He
+replies, “I meant to say it was a sad business”; and in the
+other case in which “refilled” was said, the speaker informs you
+that he first meant to say it was a filthy business, but controlled
+himself and substituted another expression. The discovery of
+the disturbing tendency is here as definitely established as
+that of the disturbed tendency. It is not without intention
+that I have selected as examples cases which owe neither their
+origin nor their explanation to me or to any supporter of mine.
+Still, in both these cases, a certain intervention was necessary
+in order to produce the explanation. One had to ask the speaker
+why he made the slip, what explanation he could give. Without
+that he might have passed it by without seeking to explain it.
+Being asked, however, he gave as his answer the first idea that
+occurred to him. And see now, this little intervention and the
+result of it constitute already a psycho-analysis, a prototype of
+every psycho-analytic investigation that we may undertake
+further.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now, should I be too suspicious if I were to surmise that, at
+the very moment at which psycho-analysis begins to dawn upon
+you, a resistance to it instantly raises itself within your mind?
+Are you not eager to object that information supplied by the
+person enquired of, who committed the slip, is not completely
+reliable evidence. He naturally wishes, you think, to meet
+your request to explain his slip, and so he says the first thing
+that he can think of, if it will do at all. There is no proof that
+that is actually how the slip arose. It may have been so, but
+it may just as well have been otherwise. Something else also
+might have occurred to him that would have met the case as
+well or even better.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It is remarkable how little respect you have, in your hearts,
+for a mental fact! Imagine that someone had undertaken a
+chemical analysis of a certain substance and had ascertained
+that one ingredient of it is of a certain weight, so and so many
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_38'>38</span>milligrams. From this weight, thus arrived at, certain conclusions
+may be drawn. Do you think now it would ever occur
+to a chemist to discredit these conclusions on the ground that
+the isolated substance might as well have had some other weight?
+Everyone recognizes the fact that it actually had this weight
+and no other, and builds further conclusions confidently on that
+fact. But when it is a question of a mental fact, that it <em>was</em> such
+an idea and no other that occurred to the person when questioned,
+you will not accept that as valid, but say that something else
+might as well have occurred to him! The truth is that you
+have an illusion of a psychic freedom within you which you do
+not want to give up. I regret to say that on this point I find
+myself in sharpest opposition to your views.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now you will break off here only to take up your resistance
+at another point. You will continue: “We understand that
+it lies in the peculiar technique of psycho-analysis to bring the
+person analysed to give the solution of its problems. Let us take
+another example, that in which the after-dinner speaker calls
+upon the company to <em>hiccough</em> to the health of their guest. The
+interfering tendency is, you say, in this case to ridicule; this
+it is which opposes the intention to do honour. But this is a
+mere interpretation on your part, based on observations made
+independently of the slip. If in this case you were to question
+the perpetrator of the slip he would not confirm your view that
+he intended an insult; on the contrary, he would vehemently
+deny it. Why do you not abandon your undemonstrable interpretation
+in the face of this flat denial?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Yes, this time you have lighted upon something formidable.
+I can picture to myself that unknown speaker; he is probably
+an assistant of the guest of honour, perhaps already a junior
+lecturer himself, a young man with the brightest prospects.
+I will press him and ask whether he is sure he did not perceive
+some feeling in himself antagonistic to the demand that he should
+pay honour to his chief. A nice fuss there is! He becomes
+impatient and suddenly bursts out at me: “Look here, enough
+of this cross-examination, or I’ll make myself disagreeable!
+You will ruin my career with your suspicions. I simply said
+“<i><span lang="de">aufstossen</span></i>” instead of “<i><span lang="de">anstossen</span></i>,” because I’d already said
+“<i><span lang="de">auf</span></i>” twice before it. It’s the thing that Meringer calls a
+perseveration, and there’s nothing else to be read into it. Do you
+understand me? That’s enough.” H’m, this is a startling
+reaction, a truly energetic repudiation. I see that there is
+nothing more to be done with the young man, but I think to
+myself that he betrays a strong personal interest in making out
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_39'>39</span>that his slip has no meaning. You will perhaps agree too that
+he has no right to become so uncivil over a purely theoretical
+investigation, but after all, you will think, he must know what
+he wanted to say and what not.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>O, so he must? That is perhaps still open to question.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now you think you have me in a trap. “So that is your
+technique,” I hear you say. “When the person who commits
+a slip gives an explanation which fits your views then you declare
+him to be the final authority on the subject. He says so himself!
+But if what he says does not suit your book, then you suddenly
+assert that what he says does not count, one need not believe it.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Certainly that is so. But I can give you another instance of
+a similarly monstrous procedure. When an accused man confesses
+to a deed the judge believes him, but when he denies it
+the judge does not believe him. Were it otherwise the law
+could not be administered, and in spite of occasional miscarriages
+you will admit that the system, on the whole, works well.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Well, but are you a judge, and is the person who commits
+a slip to be accused before you? Is a slip of the tongue a crime?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Perhaps we need not reject even this comparison. But see
+now to what deep-seated differences our attempt to investigate
+the apparently harmless problems of errors has brought us,
+differences which at this stage we do not know in the least how
+to reconcile. I suggest that we should make a temporary compromise
+on the basis of the analogy with the judge and the prisoner.
+You shall grant me that the meaning of an error admits of no
+doubt when the subject of the analysis acknowledges it himself.
+I, in turn, will admit that a direct proof for the suspected meaning
+cannot be obtained if the subject refuses us the information, and,
+of course, this applies also when the subject is not present to
+give us the information. As also in legal proceedings, we are
+then thrown back upon indications in order to form a decision,
+the truth of which is sometimes more and sometimes less probable.
+At law, for practical reasons, guilt has to be declared also on
+circumstantial evidence. There is no such necessity here; but
+neither are we bound to refrain from considering such evidence.
+It is a mistake to believe that a science consists in nothing but
+conclusively proved propositions, and it is unjust to demand
+that it should. It is a demand only made by those who feel
+a craving for authority in some form and a need to replace
+the religious catechism by something else, even if it be a scientific
+one. Science in its catechism has but few apodictic precepts;
+it consists mainly of statements which it has developed to varying
+degrees of probability. The capacity to be content with these
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_40'>40</span>approximations to certainty and the ability to carry on constructive
+work despite the lack of final confirmation are actually
+a mark of the scientific habit of mind.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But where shall we find a starting-point for our interpretations,
+and the indications for our proof, in cases where the subject
+under analysis says nothing to explain the meaning of the error?
+From various sources. First, by analogy with similar phenomena
+not produced by error, as when we maintain that the distortion
+of a name by mistake has the same intention to ridicule behind
+it as intentional distortion of names. And then, from the mental
+situation in which the error arose, from our knowledge of the
+character of the person who commits it, and of the feelings active
+in him before the error, to which it may be a response. As a
+rule what happens is that we find the meaning of the error according
+to general principles; and this, to begin with, is only a conjecture,
+a tentative solution, proof being discovered later by an
+examination of the mental situation. Sometimes it is necessary
+to await further developments, which have been, so to speak,
+foreshadowed by the error, before we can find confirmation of
+our conjecture.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I cannot easily give you evidence of this if I have to limit
+myself to the field of slips of the tongue, although even here
+I have a few good examples. The young man who offered to
+“insort” the lady is in fact very shy; the lady whose husband may
+eat and drink what <em>she</em> likes I know to be one of those managing
+women who rule the household with a rod of iron. Or take the
+following case: At a general meeting of a club a young member
+made a violent attack in a speech, in the course of which he spoke
+of the officers of the society as “<em>Lenders</em> of the Committee,”
+which appears to be a substitute for <em>Members</em> of the Committee.<a id='r18'></a><a href='#f18' class='c015'><sup>[18]</sup></a>
+We should conjecture that against his attack some interfering
+tendency was active which was itself in some way connected with
+the idea of <em>lending</em>. As a matter of fact an informant tells us
+that the speaker is in constant money difficulties and was actually
+attempting to raise money at the time. So the interfering
+tendency really is to be translated into the thought: “Be more
+moderate in your opposition: these are the people whom you
+want to lend you money.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>If I diverge into the field of other kinds of errors I can give
+you a wide selection of examples of such circumstantial evidence.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>If anyone forgets an otherwise familiar proper name and has
+difficulty in retaining it in his memory—even with an effort—it
+is not hard to guess that he has something against the owner
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_41'>41</span>of the name and does not like to think of him; consider in the
+light of this the following notes on the mental situation in which
+an error of this kind was made.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>A Mr. Y. fell in love with a lady, who did not return the feeling
+and shortly after married a Mr. X. Although Mr. Y. had already
+known Mr. X. for some time, and even had business relations
+with him, he forgets his name over and over again, so that he
+frequently has to ask someone the man’s name when it is necessary
+to write to him.<a id='r19'></a><a href='#f19' class='c015'><sup>[19]</sup></a> Obviously Mr. Y. wants to obliterate
+all knowledge of his fortunate rival. “Never thought of shall
+he be.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Another example: a lady inquires of a doctor about a common
+acquaintance, calling her by her maiden name. She has forgotten
+the married name. She admits that she strongly objected to
+the marriage and dislikes the husband intensely.<a id='r20'></a><a href='#f20' class='c015'><sup>[20]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Later we shall have much to say in other connections in
+regard to the forgetting of names; at the moment we are chiefly
+interested in the ‘mental situation’ in which the lapse of
+memory occurs.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The forgetting of resolutions can in general be referred to an
+opposing current of feeling which is against carrying out
+the intention. It is not only we psycho-analysts who hold
+this view, however; it is the ordinary attitude of everyone in
+their daily affairs, which they only deny in theory. The protégé
+whose patron apologizes for having forgotten his request is not
+pacified by such an apology. He thinks immediately: “It’s
+evidently nothing to him; he promised, but he doesn’t mean to
+do it.” Forgetting is therefore criticized even in life, in certain
+connections, and the difference between the popular and the
+psycho-analytic conception of these errors seems to be dispelled.
+Imagine a hostess receiving a guest with the words: “What,
+is it to-day you were coming? I quite forgot that I had asked you
+for to-day”; or a young man confessing to his beloved that he
+had forgotten all about the appointment they had arranged on
+the last occasion. He will never admit it; he will rather invent
+on the spur of the moment the most wildly improbable hindrances
+which prevented his coming and made it impossible for him to
+communicate with her from that day to this. We all know that
+in military service the excuse of having forgotten is worthless
+and saves no one from punishment; the system is recognized
+as justifiable. Here everyone is suddenly agreed that a certain
+mistake has a meaning and what that meaning is. Why are
+they not consistent enough to extend their insight to other errors
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_42'>42</span>and then openly acknowledge it? There is naturally also an
+answer to this.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>If the meaning of forgetting resolutions is so little open to
+doubt in the minds of people in general you will be the less surprised
+to find that writers employ such mistakes in a similar
+sense. Those of you who have seen or read Shaw’s <cite>Cæsar and
+Cleopatra</cite> will recall that Cæsar, when departing in the last scene,
+is pursued by the feeling that there was something else he intended
+to do which he had now forgotten. At last it turns out what
+it is: to say farewell to Cleopatra. By this small device the
+author attempts to ascribe to the great Cæsar a feeling of
+superiority which he did not possess and to which he did not
+at all aspire. You can learn from historical sources that Cæsar
+arranged for Cleopatra to follow him to Rome and that she
+was living there with her little Cæsarion when Cæsar was
+murdered, whereupon she fled the city.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The cases of forgetting resolutions are as a rule so clear that
+they are of little use for our purpose, which is to discover in
+the mental situation indications of the meaning of the error.
+Let us turn, therefore, to a particularly ambiguous and obscure
+form of error, that of losing and mislaying objects. It will
+certainly seem incredible to you that the person himself could
+have any purpose in losing things, which is often such a painful
+accident. But there are innumerable instances of this kind:
+A young man loses a pencil to which he was much attached. A
+few days before he had had a letter from his brother-in-law
+which concluded with these words: “I have neither time nor
+inclination at present to encourage you in your frivolity and
+idleness.”<a id='r21'></a><a href='#f21' class='c015'><sup>[21]</sup></a> Now the pencil was a present from this brother-in-law.
+Had it not been for this coincidence we could not of course
+have maintained that the loss involved any intention to get
+rid of the gift. Similar cases are very numerous. One loses
+objects when one has quarrelled with the giver and no longer
+wants to be reminded of him, or again, when one has tired of
+them and wants an excuse to provide oneself with something
+different and better. Dropping, breaking, and destroying things
+of course serves a similar purpose in regard to the object. Can
+it be considered accidental when, just before his birthday, a child
+loses and damages his possessions, for instance, his watch and
+his schoolbag?</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Anyone who has experienced often enough the annoyance of
+not being able to find something which he has himself put away
+will certainly be unwilling to believe that he could have had
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_43'>43</span>any intention in so doing. And yet cases are not at all rare in
+which the circumstances attendant on the act of mislaying
+point to a tendency to put the object aside temporarily or permanently.
+Perhaps the best example of this kind is the following.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>A young man told me this story: “A few years ago there
+were misunderstandings between me and my wife; I thought
+her too cold, and though I willingly acknowledged her excellent
+qualities we lived together without affection. One day, on
+coming in from a walk, she brought me a book which she had
+bought me because she thought it would interest me. I thanked
+her for her little attention, promised to read the book, put it
+among my things and never could find it again. Months passed
+by and occasionally I thought of this derelict book and tried
+in vain to find it. About six months later my dear mother,
+who lived some distance away, fell ill. My wife left our house
+to go and nurse her mother-in-law, who became seriously ill,
+giving my wife an opportunity of showing her best qualities.
+One evening I came home full of enthusiasm and gratitude
+towards my wife. I walked up to my writing desk and opened
+a certain drawer in it, without a definite intention but with a
+kind of somnambulistic sureness, and there before me lay the
+lost book which I had so often looked for.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>With the disappearance of the motive the inability to find the
+mislaid object also came to an end.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I could multiply this collection of examples indefinitely;
+but I will not do so now. In my <cite>Psycho-pathology of Everyday
+Life</cite> (first published in 1901) you will find plenty of examples
+for the study of errors.<a id='r22'></a><a href='#f22' class='c015'><sup>[22]</sup></a> All these examples demonstrate the
+same thing over and over again; they make it probable to you
+that mistakes have a meaning and they show you how the meaning
+can be guessed or confirmed from the attendant circumstances.
+I restrict myself rather to-day, because our intention here was
+limited to studying these phenomena with a view to obtaining
+an introduction to psycho-analysis. There are only two groups
+of occurrences into which I must still go, the accumulated and
+combined errors, and the confirmation of our interpretations
+by subsequent events.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Accumulated and combined errors are certainly the finest
+flowers of the species. If we were only concerned to prove that
+errors had a meaning, we should have limited ourselves to them
+at the outset, for the meaning in them is unmistakable, even
+to the dullest intelligence, and strong enough to impress the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_44'>44</span>most critical judgement. The repetition of the occurrences
+betrays a persistence which is hardly ever an attribute of chance,
+but which fits well with the idea of design. Further, the exchanging
+of one kind of mistake for another shows us what is
+the most important and essential element in the error; and
+that is, not its form, or the means of which it makes use, but
+the <em>tendency</em> which makes use of it and can achieve its end in
+the most various ways. Thus I will give you a case of repeated
+forgetting: Ernest Jones relates that he once allowed a letter
+to lie on his writing desk for several days for some unknown
+reason. At last he decided to post it, but received it back from
+the dead-letter office, for he had forgotten to address it. After
+he had addressed it he took it to post but this time without a
+stamp. At this point he finally had to admit to himself his objection
+to sending the letter at all.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In another case, taking up a thing by mistake is combined
+with mislaying it. A lady travelled to Rome with her brother-in-law,
+a famous artist. The visitor was much fêted by the
+Germans living in Rome and received, among other things, a
+present of an antique gold medal. The lady was vexed because
+her brother-in-law did not appreciate the fine specimen highly
+enough. After her sister had arrived she returned home and
+discovered, upon unpacking, that she had brought the medal with
+her—how, she did not know. She wrote at once to her brother-in-law
+telling him that she would send the stolen property back
+to him the next day. But the next day the medal was so cleverly
+mislaid that it could not be discovered and could not be returned,
+and then it began to dawn upon the lady what her “absent-mindedness”
+had meant, namely, that she wanted to keep the
+work of art for herself.<a id='r23'></a><a href='#f23' class='c015'><sup>[23]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I have already given you an example of a combination of
+forgetfulness with an error, in the case in which someone forgets
+an appointment, and a second time, with the firm intention of
+not forgetting it again, appears at an hour which is not the appointed
+one. A quite analogous case was told me from his own
+experience by a friend who pursues literary as well as scientific
+interests. He said: “Some years ago I accepted election to
+the Council of a certain literary society because I hoped that
+the society might at some time be useful to me in getting a play
+of mine produced; and, although not much interested, I attended
+the meetings regularly every Friday. A few months ago I
+received an assurance that my play would be produced at a
+theatre in F. and since then it has invariably happened that
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_45'>45</span>I <em>forget</em> to attend the meetings of the society. When I read your
+writings on this subject, I reproached myself with my meanness
+in staying away now that these people can no longer be of use
+to me and determined on no account to forget on the following
+Friday. I kept reminding myself of my resolution until I carried
+it out and stood at the door of the meeting-room. To my
+amazement it was closed and the meeting was already over!
+I had made a mistake in the day of the week and it was then
+Saturday!”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It would be tempting to collect more of these examples, but
+I will pass on and, instead, let you glance at those cases in which
+interpretation has to wait for confirmation in the future.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The main condition in these cases is, as we might expect,
+that the mental situation at the time is unknown or cannot be
+ascertained. At the moment, therefore, our interpretation is
+no more than a supposition to which we ourselves would not
+ascribe too much weight. Later, however, something happens
+which shows us how well justified our previous interpretation
+was. I was once the guest of a young married couple and heard
+the young wife laughingly describe her latest experience, how
+the day after the return from the honeymoon she had called for
+her sister and gone shopping with her as in former times, while
+her husband went to his business. Suddenly she noticed a man
+on the other side of the street and, nudging her sister, said,
+“Look, there goes Mr. K.” She had forgotten that this man
+had been her husband for some weeks. A shudder went over
+me as I heard the story, but I dared not draw the inference.
+Several years later the little incident came back to my mind after
+this marriage had come to a most unhappy end.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Maeder tells a story of a lady who had forgotten to try on
+her wedding-dress the day before the wedding, to the despair
+of the dressmaker, and remembered it only late in the evening.
+He connects it with the fact that soon after the marriage she
+was divorced by her husband. I know a woman now divorced
+from her husband who, in managing her money-affairs, frequently
+signed documents with her maiden name, many years before she
+really resumed it. I know of other women who lost their wedding-rings
+on the honeymoon and know, too, that the course of the
+marriage lent meaning to this accident. And now one striking
+example more, with a better ending. It is told of a famous
+German chemist that his marriage never took place because
+he forgot the hour of the ceremony and went to the laboratory
+instead of to the church. He was wise enough to let the matter
+rest with one attempt, and died unmarried at a ripe age.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_46'>46</span>Perhaps the idea has also come to you that in these examples
+mistakes seem to have replaced the omens or portents of the
+ancients. And indeed, certain kinds of portents were nothing
+but errors, for instance, when anyone stumbled or fell down.
+It is true that another group of omens bore the character of
+objective events rather than of subjective acts. But you would
+not believe how difficult it is sometimes to decide whether a
+specific instance belongs to the first category or to the second.
+The act knows so often how to disguise itself as a passive experience.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Everyone of us who can look back over a fairly long experience
+of life would probably say that he might have spared himself
+many disappointments and painful surprises, if he had had
+the courage and resolution to interpret as omens the little mistakes
+which he noticed in his intercourse with others, and to regard
+them as signs of tendencies still in the background. For the
+most part one does not dare to do this; one has an impression
+that one would become superstitious again by a circuitous
+scientific path. And then, not all omens come true, and our
+theories will show you how it is that they need not all come
+true.</p>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_47'>47</span>
+ <h3 class='c002'><span class='c014'>FOURTH LECTURE</span><br> THE PSYCHOLOGY OF ERRORS (<em>conclusion</em>)</h3>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c006'>That errors have a meaning we may certainly set down as established
+by our efforts up to this point, and may take this conclusion
+as a basis for our further investigations. Let me once more
+emphasize the fact that we do not maintain—and for our purposes
+do not need to maintain—that every single mistake which occurs
+has a meaning, although I think that probable. It is enough
+for us to prove that such a meaning is relatively frequent in
+the various forms of errors. In this respect, by the way, the
+various forms show certain differences. Some cases of slips
+of the tongue, slips of the pen, and so on, may be the effect of
+a purely physiological cause, though I cannot believe this possible
+of those errors which depend upon forgetfulness (forgetting of
+names or intentions, mislaying, and so on); losing possessions
+is in all probability to be recognized as unintentional in some
+cases; altogether our conceptions are only to a certain extent
+applicable to the mistakes which occur in daily life. These
+limitations should be borne in mind by you when we proceed
+on the assumption that errors are mental acts arising from the
+mutual interference of two intentions.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This is the first result of our psycho-analysis. Hitherto
+psychology has known nothing of such interferences or of the
+possibility that they could occasion manifestations of this kind.
+We have widened the domain of mental phenomena to a very
+considerable extent and have won for psychology phenomena
+which were never before accredited to it.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Let us dwell for a moment on the proposition that errors
+are “mental acts.” Does this mean any more than our former
+statement, that they have a meaning? I do not think so;
+on the contrary, it is a more indefinite statement and one more
+open to misunderstanding. Everything that can be observed
+in mental life will be designated at one time or another as a
+mental phenomenon. It depends, however, whether the particular
+mental phenomenon is directly due to bodily, organic or material
+agencies, in which case it does not fall to psychology for investigation;
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_48'>48</span>or whether it arose directly from other mental processes,
+behind which at some point the succession of organic agencies
+then begins. We have in mind the latter state of things when
+we describe a phenomenon as a mental process, and it is therefore
+more expedient to put our statement in this form: The phenomenon
+has meaning; and by meaning we understand significance,
+intention, tendency and a position in a sequence of mental
+concatenations.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>There is another group of occurrences which is very closely
+related to errors but for which this name is not suitable. We call
+them ‘accidental’ and symptomatic acts. They also appear to
+be unmotivated, insignificant and unimportant but, in addition
+to this, they have very clearly the feature of superfluity. They
+are, on the one hand, distinguishable from errors by the absence
+of any second intention to which they are opposed and which
+they disturb; on the other hand, they merge without any definite
+line of demarcation into the gestures and movements which
+we regard as expressions of the emotions. To this class of accidental
+performances belong all those apparently purposeless
+acts which we carry out, as though in play, with clothing, parts
+of the body, objects within reach; also the omission of such
+acts; and again the tunes which we hum to ourselves. I maintain
+that all such performances have meaning and are explicable
+in the same way as are errors, that they are slight indications
+of other more important mental processes, and are genuine
+mental acts. I propose, however, not to linger over this further
+extension of the field of mental phenomena, but to return to the
+errors; for by a consideration of them problems of importance
+in the enquiry into psycho-analysis can be worked out much
+more clearly.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Undoubtedly, the most interesting questions which we formulated
+while considering errors, and have not yet answered, are
+the following: We said that errors result from the mutual interference
+of two different intentions, of which one may be called
+the intention interfered with, and the other the interfering tendency.
+The intentions interfered with give rise to no further
+questions, but concerning the others we wish to know, first,
+what kind of intentions these are that arise as disturbers of
+others, and secondly, what are the relations between the interfering
+tendencies and those which suffer the interference?</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Allow me to take slips of the tongue again as representative
+of the whole series, and to answer the second question before
+the first.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The interfering tendency in the slip of the tongue may be
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_49'>49</span>connected in meaning with the intention interfered with, in
+which case the former contains a contradiction of the latter, or
+corrects, or supplements it. Or, in other more obscure and
+more interesting cases, the interfering tendency may have no
+connection whatever in meaning with the intention interfered
+with.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Evidence for the first of these two relationships can be found
+without difficulty in the examples already studied and in others
+similar to them. In almost all cases of slips of the tongue where
+the opposite of what is meant is said the interfering tendency
+expresses the opposite meaning to that of the intention interfered
+with, and the slip is the expression of the conflict between two
+incompatible impulses. “I declare the meeting open, but would
+prefer to have closed it” is the meaning of the President’s slip.
+A political paper which had been accused of corruption defends
+itself in an article meant to culminate with the words: “Our
+readers will testify that we have always laboured for the public
+benefit in the most <em>disinterested</em> manner.” But the editor entrusted
+with the composition of the defence wrote “in the most
+<em>interested</em> manner.” That is to say, he thinks, “I have to write
+this stuff, but I know better.” A representative of the people,
+urging that the Kaiser should be told the truth “<i><span lang="de">rückhaltslos</span></i>”
+(unreservedly), hears an inner voice terrified at his boldness, and
+by a slip of the tongue transforms <i><span lang="de">rückhaltslos</span></i> into “<em>rückgratslos</em>”
+(without backbone, ineffectually).</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In the examples already given, which produce an impression of
+contraction and abbreviation, the process represents a correction,
+addition, or continuation, in which a second tendency manifests
+itself alongside the first. “Things were then revealed, but better
+say it straight out, they were filthy, therefore,—things were then
+<em>refilled</em>.” “The people who understand this subject may be
+counted on the fingers of one hand, but no, there is really only
+one person who understands it, very well then,—can be counted
+on <em>one finger</em>.” Or, “my husband can eat and drink what he
+likes, but, you know, <em>I</em> don’t permit him to like this and that;
+so then,—he may eat and drink what <em>I</em> like.” In all these cases
+the slip arises from the content of the intention interfered with,
+or is directly connected with it.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The other kind of relationship between the two interfering
+tendencies seems strange. If the interfering tendency has
+nothing to do with the content of the one interfered with, whence
+comes it then, and how does it happen to make itself manifest
+just at that point? Observation, which alone can supply the
+answer to this, shows that the interfering tendency proceeds
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_50'>50</span>from a train of thought which has occupied the person shortly
+before and then reveals itself in this way as an after-effect,
+irrespective of whether or not it has already been expressed in
+speech. It is really therefore to be described as a perseveration,
+though not necessarily a perseveration of spoken words. An
+associative connection between the interfering tendency and
+that interfered with is not lacking here either, though it is not
+found in the content but is artificially established, sometimes
+with considerable “forcing” of the connections.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Here is a simple example of this which I observed myself.
+Once in the beautiful Dolomites I met two Viennese ladies who
+were starting for a walking-tour. I accompanied them part of
+the way and we discussed the pleasures, but also the trials, of
+this way of life. One of the ladies admitted that spending
+the day like this entailed much discomfort. “It certainly is
+very unpleasant to tramp all day in the sun till one’s blouse&#160;...
+and things are soaked through.” In this sentence she had to
+overcome a slight hesitation at one point. Then she continued:
+“But then, when one gets <i><span lang="de">nach Hose</span></i> and can change....”
+(<i><span lang="de">Hose</span></i> means drawers: the lady meant to say <i><span lang="de">nach Hause</span></i> which
+means <em>home</em>). We did not analyse this slip, but I am sure you
+will easily understand it. The lady’s intention had been to
+enumerate a more complete list of her clothes, “blouse, chemise
+and drawers.” From motives of propriety, mention of the
+drawers (<i><span lang="de">Hose</span></i>) was omitted; but in the next sentence, the
+content of which is quite independent, the unuttered word came
+to light as a distortion of the word it resembled in sound, <em>home</em>
+(<i><span lang="de">Hause</span></i>).</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now we can turn at last to the main question which has been
+so long postponed, namely, what kind of tendencies these are
+which bring themselves to expression in this unusual way by
+interfering with other intentions. They are evidently very
+various, yet our aim is to find some element common to them
+all. If we examine a series of examples for this purpose we shall
+soon find that they fall into three groups. To the <em>first</em> group
+belong the cases in which the interfering tendency is known
+to the speaker and, moreover, was felt by him before the slip.
+Thus, in the case of the slip “refilled,” the speaker not only
+admitted that he had criticized the events in question as “filthy,”
+but further, that he had had the intention, which he subsequently
+reversed, of expressing this opinion in words. A <em>second</em> group
+is formed by other cases in which the interfering tendency is
+likewise recognized by the speaker as his own, but he is not
+aware that it was active in him before the slip. He therefore
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_51'>51</span>accepts our interpretation, but remains to some extent surprised
+by it. Examples of this attitude are probably more easily found
+in other errors than in slips of the tongue. In the <em>third</em> group
+the interpretation of the interfering tendency is energetically
+repudiated by the speaker; not only does he dispute that it
+was active in him before the slip, but he will maintain that it
+is altogether entirely alien to him. Recall the case about hiccoughing
+and the positively discourteous rebuff which I brought
+upon myself by detecting the interfering tendency. You know
+that in our attitude towards these cases you and I are still far
+from an agreement. I should make nothing of the after-dinner
+speaker’s denial and hold fast to my interpretation unwaveringly,
+while you, I imagine, are still impressed by his vehemence and
+are wondering whether one should not forego the interpretation
+of such errors and let them pass for purely physiological acts,
+as in the days before analysis. I can imagine what it is that
+alarms you. My interpretation includes the assumption that
+tendencies of which a speaker knows nothing can express themselves
+through him and that I can deduce them from various
+indications. You hesitate before a conclusion so novel and so
+pregnant with consequences. I understand that, and admit
+that up to a point you are justified. But let one thing be clear:
+if you intend to carry to its logical conclusion the conception of
+errors which has been confirmed by so many examples, you must
+decide to make this startling assumption. If you cannot do
+this, you will have to abandon again the understanding of errors
+which you had only just begun to obtain.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Let us pause a moment on that which unites the three groups
+and is common to the three mechanisms of a slip of the tongue.
+Fortunately this common element is unmistakable. In the
+first two groups the interfering tendency is admitted by the
+speaker; in the first, there is the additional fact that it showed
+itself immediately before the slip. But in both cases <em>it has been
+forced back.<a id='r24'></a><a href='#f24' class='c015'><sup>[24]</sup></a> The speaker had determined not to convert the idea
+into speech and then it happens that he makes a slip of the tongue;
+that is to say, the tendency which is debarred from expression asserts
+itself against his will and gains utterance, either by altering
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_52'>52</span>the expression of the intention permitted by him, or by mingling
+with it, or actually by setting itself in place of it.</em> This then is
+the mechanism of a slip of the tongue.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>For my own part I can bring the process in the third group
+also into perfect harmony with the mechanism here described.
+I need only assume that these three groups are differentiated by
+the varying degrees to which the forcing back of an intention
+is effective. In the first group, the intention is present and
+makes itself perceptible before the words are spoken; not until
+then does it suffer the rejection for which it indemnifies itself
+in the slip. In the second group the rejection reaches further
+back; the intention is no longer perceptible even before the
+speech. It is remarkable that this does not hinder it in the
+least from being the active cause of the slip! But this state of
+things simplifies the explanation of the process in the third
+group. I shall be bold enough to assume that a tendency can
+still express itself by an error though it has been debarred from
+expression for a long time, perhaps for a very long time, has
+not made itself perceptible at all, and can therefore be directly
+repudiated by the speaker. But leaving aside the problem of
+the third group, you must conclude from the other cases that
+<em>a suppression (Unterdrückung) of a previous intention to say something
+is the indispensable condition for the occurrence of a slip of
+the tongue</em>.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>We may now claim to have made further progress in the
+understanding of errors. We not only know them to be mental
+phenomena in which meaning and purpose are recognizable, not
+only know that they arise from the mutual interference of two
+different intentions, but in addition we know that, for one of these
+intentions to be able to express itself by interfering with another,
+it must itself have been subject to some hindrance against its
+operation. It must first be itself interfered with, before it can
+interfere with others. Naturally this does not give us a complete
+explanation of the phenomena which we call errors. We see
+at once further questions arising, and in general we suspect that
+as we progress towards comprehension the more numerous will
+be the occasions for new questions. We might ask, for instance,
+why the matter does not proceed much more simply. If the
+intention to restrain a certain tendency instead of carrying it
+into effect is present in the mind, then this restraint ought to
+succeed, so that nothing whatever of the tendency gains expression,
+or else it might fail so that the restrained tendency achieves full
+expression. But errors are <em>compromise</em>-formations; they express
+part-success and part-failure for each of the two intentions;
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_53'>53</span>the threatened intention is neither entirely suppressed nor, apart
+from some instances, does it force itself through intact. We
+can imagine that special conditions must be present for the
+occurrence of such interference (or compromise)-formations,
+but we cannot even conjecture of what kind they may be. Nor
+do I think that we could discover these unknown circumstances
+by penetrating further into the study of errors. It will be necessary
+first to examine thoroughly yet other obscure fields of mental
+life: only the analogies to be met with there can give us courage
+to form those assumptions which are requisite for a more searching
+elucidation of errors. And one other point! To work from
+slight indications, as we constantly do in this field, is not without
+its dangers. There is a mental disorder called combinatory
+paranoia in which the practice of utilizing such small indications
+is carried beyond all limits, and I naturally do not contend
+that the conclusions which are built up on such a basis are throughout
+correct. Only by the breadth of our observations, by the
+accumulation of similar impressions from the most varied forms
+of mental life, can we guard against this danger.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>So now we will leave the analysis of errors. But there is
+one thing more which I might impress upon you: to keep in
+mind, as a model, the method by which we have studied these
+phenomena. You can perceive from these examples what the
+aim of our psychology is. Our purpose is not merely to describe
+and classify the phenomena, but to conceive them as brought
+about by the play of forces in the mind, as expressions of tendencies
+striving towards a goal, which work together or against one
+another. We are endeavouring to attain a <em>dynamic conception</em>
+of mental phenomena. In this conception, the trends we merely
+infer are more prominent than the phenomena we perceive.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>So we will probe no further into errors; but we may still
+take a fleeting glimpse over the breadth of this whole field, in
+the course of which we shall both meet with things already known
+and come upon the tracks of others that are new. In so doing,
+we will keep to the division into three groups of slips of the tongue,
+made at the beginning of our study, together with the co-ordinate
+forms of slips of the pen, misreading, mis-hearing; of forgetting
+with its subdivisions according to the object forgotten (proper
+names, foreign words, resolutions, impressions); and of mislaying,
+mistaking, and losing, objects. Mistakes, in so far as
+they concern us, are to be grouped partly under the head of
+forgetting, partly under acts erroneously performed (picking up
+the wrong objects, etc.).</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>We have already treated slips of the tongue in great detail,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_54'>54</span>yet there is still something to add. There are certain small
+affective manifestations related to slips of the tongue which
+are not entirely without interest. No one likes to think he has
+made a slip of the tongue; one often fails to hear it when made
+by oneself, but never when made by someone else. Slips of the
+tongue are in a certain sense infectious; it is not at all easy to
+speak of them without making them oneself. It is not hard
+to detect the motivation of even the most trifling forms of them,
+although these do not throw any particular light on hidden
+mental processes. If, for instance, anyone pronounces a long
+vowel as a short one, in consequence of a disturbance over the
+word, no matter how motivated, he will as a result soon after
+lengthen a short vowel and commit a new slip in compensation
+for the first. The same thing occurs if anyone pronounces
+a diphthong indistinctly and carelessly, for instance, “ew” or
+“oy” as “i”; he tries to correct it by changing a subsequent
+“i” into “ew” or “oy.” Some consideration relating to the
+hearer seems to be behind this behaviour, as though he were not
+to be allowed to think that the speaker is indifferent how he
+treats his mother-tongue. The second, compensating distortion
+actually has the purpose of drawing the hearer’s attention to the
+first and assuring him that it has not escaped the speaker either.
+The most frequent, insignificant, and simple forms of slips consist
+in contractions and anticipations in inconspicuous parts of the
+speech. In a long sentence, for instance, slips of the tongue
+would be of the kind in which the last word intended influences
+the sound of an earlier word. This gives an impression of a certain
+impatience to be done with the sentence, and in general it points
+to a certain resistance against the communication of this sentence,
+or the speech altogether. From this we come to border-line
+cases, in which the differences between the psycho-analytical
+and the ordinary physiological conception of slips of the tongue
+become merged. We assume that in these cases a disturbing
+tendency is opposing the intended speech; but it can only betray
+its presence and not what its own purpose is. The interference
+which it causes follows some sound-influence or associative
+connection and may be regarded as a distraction of attention
+away from the intended speech. But neither in this distraction
+of attention, nor in the associative tendency which has been
+activated, lies the essence of the occurrence; the essence lies
+rather in the hint the occurrence gives of the presence of some
+other intention interfering with the intended speech, the nature
+of which cannot in this case be discovered from its effects, as is
+possible in all the more pronounced cases of slips of the tongue.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_55'>55</span>Slips of the pen, to which I now turn, are so like slips of the
+tongue in their mechanism that no new points of view are to
+be expected from them. Perhaps a small addition to our knowledge
+from this group will content us. Those very common
+little slips of the pen, contractions, anticipations of later words,
+particularly of the last words, point to a general distaste for
+writing and to an impatience to be done; more pronounced
+effects in slips of the pen allow the nature and intention of the
+interference to be recognized. In general, if one finds a slip
+of the pen in a letter one knows that the writer’s mind was not
+working smoothly at the moment; what was the matter one
+cannot always establish. Slips of the pen are frequently as little
+noticed by those who make them as slips of the tongue. The
+following observation is striking in this connection. There are,
+of course, some persons who have the habit of always re-reading
+every letter they write before sending it. Others do not do this;
+but if the latter make an exception and re-read a letter they then
+always have an opportunity of finding and correcting a striking
+slip of the pen. How is this to be explained? It almost looks
+as if such people knew that they had made a slip in writing the
+letter. Are we really to believe that this is so?</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>There is an interesting problem connected with the practical
+significance of slips of the pen. You may recall the case of the
+murderer H. who managed, by asserting himself to be a bacteriologist,
+to obtain cultures of highly dangerous disease-germs
+from scientific institutions, but used them for the purpose of
+doing away in this most modern fashion with people connected
+with him. This man once complained to the authorities of one
+of these institutions about the ineffectiveness of the cultures
+sent him, but committed a slip of the pen and, instead of the
+words “in my experiments on mice and guinea-pigs (<i><span lang="de">Mäusen und
+Meerschweinchen</span></i>)”, the words “in my experiments on people
+(<i><span lang="de">Menschen</span></i>)” were plainly legible. This slip even attracted the
+attention of the doctors at the institute but, so far as I know,
+they drew no conclusion from it. Now, what do you think?
+Would it not have been better if the doctors had taken the slip
+of the pen as a confession and started an investigation so that
+the murderer’s proceedings might have been arrested in time?
+In this case, does not ignorance of our conception of errors result
+in neglect which, in actuality, may be very important? Well,
+I know that such a slip of the pen would certainly rouse great
+suspicion in me; but there is an important objection against
+regarding it as a confession. The matter is not so simple. The
+slip of the pen is certainly an indication but, alone, it would not
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_56'>56</span>have justified an enquiry. It does indeed betray that the man
+is occupied with the thought of infecting human beings; but it
+does not show with certainty whether this thought is a definite
+plan to do harm or a mere phantasy of no practical importance.
+It is even possible that a person making such a slip will deny,
+with the soundest subjective justification, the existence of such
+a phantasy in himself, and will reject the idea as a thing utterly
+alien to him. Later, when we come to consider the difference
+between psychical reality and material reality you will be better
+able to appreciate these possibilities. But this again is a case
+in which an error was found subsequently to have unsuspected
+significance.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Misreading brings us to a mental situation which is clearly
+different from that of slips of the tongue or the pen. One of the
+two conflicting tendencies is here replaced by a sensory excitation
+and is perhaps therefore less tenacious. What one is reading
+is not a product of one’s own mind, as is that which one is going
+to write. In the large majority of cases, therefore, misreading
+consists in complete substitution. A different word is substituted
+for the word to be read, without there necessarily being any
+connection in the content between the text and the effect of the
+mistake, and usually by means of a resemblance between the
+words. Lichtenberg’s example of this, “<em>Agamemnon</em>” instead
+of “<i><span lang="de">angenommen</span></i>,” is the best of this group. To discover the
+interfering tendency which causes the mistake one may put aside
+the original text altogether; the analytic investigation may
+begin with two questions: What is the first idea occurring in
+free association to the effect of the misreading (the substitute),
+and in what circumstances did the misreading occur? Occasionally
+a knowledge of the latter is sufficient in itself to explain
+the misreading, as, for instance, when someone wandering about
+a strange town, driven by urgent needs, reads the word “<em>Closethaus</em>”
+on a large sign on the first storey. He has just time to
+wonder that the board has been fixed at that height when he
+discovers that the word on it is actually “<em>Corsethaus</em>.” In
+other cases where there is a lack of connection in content between
+the text and the slip a thorough analysis is necessary, which
+cannot be accomplished without practice in psycho-analytic
+technique and confidence in it. But it is not usually so difficult
+to come by the explanation of a case of misreading. In the
+example “<em>Agamemnon</em>,” the substituted word betrays without
+further difficulty the line of thought from which the disturbance
+arose. In this time of war, for instance, it is very common
+for one to read everywhere names of towns, generals, and military
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_57'>57</span>expressions, which are continually in one’s ears, wherever one
+sees a word at all resembling them. Whatever interests and
+occupies the mind takes the place of what is alien and as yet
+uninteresting. The shadows of thoughts in the mind dim the
+new perceptions.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Another kind of misreading is possible, in which the text
+itself arouses the disturbing tendency, whereupon it is usually
+changed into its opposite. Someone is required to read something
+which he dislikes, and analysis convinces him that a strong
+wish to reject what is read is responsible for the alteration.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In the first-mentioned, more frequent cases of misreading
+two factors to which we ascribed great importance in the mechanism
+of errors are inconspicuous; these are, the conflict between
+two tendencies and the forcing back of one of them which compensates
+itself by producing the error. Not that anything
+contradictory of this occurs in misreading, but nevertheless
+the importunity of the train of thought tending to the mistake
+is far more conspicuous than the restraint which it may have
+previously undergone. Just these two factors are most clearly
+observable in the different situations in which errors occur through
+forgetfulness.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The forgetting of resolutions has positively but one meaning;
+the interpretation of it, as we have heard, is not denied even
+by the layman. The tendency interfering with the resolution
+is always an opposing one, an unwillingness, concerning which
+it only remains to enquire why it does not come to expression
+in a different and less disguised form; for the existence of this
+opposing tendency is beyond doubt. Sometimes it is possible,
+too, to infer something of the motives which necessitate the
+concealment of this antipathy; one sees that it would certainly
+have been condemned if it declared its opposition openly, whereas
+by craft, in the error, it always achieves its end. When an
+important change in the mental situation occurs between the
+formation of the resolution and its execution, in consequence
+of which the execution would no longer be required, then if it
+were forgotten the occurrence could no longer come within the
+category of errors. There would be nothing to wonder at in the
+error, for one recognizes that it would have been superfluous to
+remember the resolution; it had been either permanently or
+temporarily cancelled. Forgetting to carry out a resolution
+can only be called an error when there is no reason to believe
+that any such cancellation has occurred.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Cases of forgetting to carry out resolutions are usually so
+uniform and transparent, that they are of no interest for our
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_58'>58</span>researches. There are two points, nevertheless, at which something
+new can be learnt by studying this type of error. We
+have said that forgetting and not executing a resolution indicates
+an antagonistic tendency in opposition to it. This is certainly
+true, but our own investigations show that this ‘counter-will’ may
+be of two kinds, either immediate or mediate. What is meant
+by the latter is best explained by one or two examples. When
+the patron forgets to say a good word for his protégé to some
+third person, it may happen because he is actually not much
+interested in the protégé and therefore has no great inclination
+to do it. This, in any case, will be the protégé’s view of the
+patron’s omission. But the matter may be more complicated.
+The antipathy against executing the resolution may come from
+some other source in the patron and be directed to some other
+point. It need have nothing at all to do with the protégé, but
+is perhaps directed against the third person to whom the recommendation
+was to be made. Here again, you see, what objections
+there are against applying our interpretations practically. In
+spite of having correctly interpreted the error, the protégé is
+in danger of becoming too suspicious and of doing his patron
+a grave injustice. Again, if someone forgets an appointment
+which he had promised and was resolved to attend, the commonest
+cause is certainly a direct disinclination to meet the other person.
+But analysis might produce evidence that the interfering tendency
+was concerned, not with the person, but with the place of meeting,
+which was avoided on account of some painful memory associated
+with it. Or if one forgets to post a letter the opposing tendency
+may be concerned with the contents of the letter; but this does not
+exclude the possibility that the letter in itself is harmless and
+becomes the subject of a counter-tendency only because something
+in it reminds the writer of another letter, written previously,
+which did in fact afford a direct basis for antipathy. It may then
+be said that the antipathy has been <em>transferred</em> from the earlier
+letter, where it was justified, to the present one where it actually
+has no object. So you see that restraint and caution must be
+exercised in applying our quite well-founded interpretations;
+that which is psychologically equivalent may in actuality have
+many meanings.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>That such things should be must seem very strange to you.
+Perhaps you will be inclined to assume that the “indirect”
+counter-will is enough to characterize the incident as pathological.
+But I can assure you that it is also found within the boundaries
+of health and normality. And further, do not misunderstand
+me; this is in no sense a confession on my part that our analytic
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_59'>59</span>interpretations are not to be relied on. I have said that forgetting
+to execute a plan may bear many meanings, but this is so only
+in those cases where no analysis is undertaken and which we
+have to interpret according to our general principles. If an
+analysis of the person in the case is carried out it can always
+be established with sufficient certainty whether the antipathy
+is a direct one, or what its source is otherwise.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The following is a second point: when we find proof in a
+large majority of cases that the forgetting of an intention proceeds
+from a counter-will, we gain courage to extend this solution to
+another group of cases in which the person analysed does not
+confirm, but denies, the presence of the counter-will inferred by
+us. Take as an example of this such exceedingly frequent
+occurrences as forgetting to return borrowed books or to pay bills
+or debts. We will be so bold as to suggest, to the person in
+question, that there is an intention in his mind of keeping the
+books and not paying the debts, whereupon he will deny this
+intention but will not be able to give us any other explanation
+of his conduct. We then insist that he has this intention but
+is not aware of it; it is enough for us, though, that it betrays
+itself by the effect of the forgetting. He may then repeat that
+he had merely forgotten about it. You will recognize the situation
+as one in which we have already been placed once before. If
+we intend to carry through, to their logical conclusions, the
+interpretations of errors which have been proved justified in
+so many cases, we shall be unavoidably impelled to the assumption
+that tendencies exist in human beings which can effect results
+without their knowing of them. With this, however, we place
+ourselves in opposition to all views prevailing in life and in
+psychology.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Forgetting proper names, and foreign names and words,
+can be traced in the same way to a counter-tendency aiming
+either directly or indirectly against the name in question. I
+have already given you several examples of such direct antipathy.
+Indirect causation is particularly frequent here and careful analysis
+is generally required to elucidate it. Thus, for instance,
+in the present time of war which forces us to forego so many of
+our former pleasures, our ability to recall proper names suffers
+severely by connections of the most far-fetched kind. It happened
+to me lately to be unable to remember the name of the harmless
+Moravian town of Bisenz; and analysis showed that I was
+guilty of no direct antagonism in the matter, but that the resemblance
+to the name of the Palazzo Bisenzi in Orvieto, where I
+had spent many happy times in the past, was responsible. As
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_60'>60</span>a motive of the tendency opposing the recollection of this name,
+we here for the first time encounter a principle which will later on
+reveal itself to be of quite prodigious importance in the causation
+of neurotic symptoms: namely, the aversion on the part of
+memory against recalling anything connected with painful
+feelings that would revive the pain if it were recalled. In this
+tendency towards <em>avoidance of pain</em> from recollection or other
+mental processes, this flight of the mind from that which is
+unpleasant, we may perceive the ultimate purpose at work behind
+not merely the forgetting of names, but also many other errors,
+omissions, and mistakes.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The forgetting of names seems, however, to be especially
+facilitated psycho-physiologically, and therefore does occur on
+occasions where the intervention of an unpleasantness-motive
+cannot be established. When anyone has a tendency to forget
+names, it can be confirmed by analytic investigation that names
+escape, not merely because he does not like them or because
+they remind him of something disagreeable, but also because the
+particular name belongs to some other chain of associations of
+a more intimate nature. The name is anchored there, as it
+were, and is refused to the other associations activated at the
+moment. If you recall the devices of memory systems you will
+realize with some surprise that the same associations which are
+there artificially introduced, in order to save names from being
+forgotten, are also responsible for their being forgotten. The
+most conspicuous example of this is afforded by proper names of
+persons, which naturally possess quite different values for different
+people. For instance, take a first name, such as Theodore.
+For some of you it will have no particular significance; for
+others it will be the name of father, brother, friend, or your
+own name. Analytic experience will show you that the former
+among you will be in no danger of forgetting that some stranger
+bears this name; whereas the latter will be continually inclined
+to grudge to strangers a name which to them seems reserved for
+an intimate relationship. Now let us assume that this inhibition
+due to associations may coincide with the operation of the “pain”-principle,
+and in addition with an indirect mechanism; you will
+then be able to form a commensurate idea of the complexity,
+in causation, of such temporary forgetting of names. An adequate
+analysis that does justice to the facts will, however, completely
+disclose all these complications.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The forgetting of impressions and experiences shows the
+working of the tendency to ward off from memory that which is
+unpleasant much more clearly and invariably than the forgetting
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_61'>61</span>of names. It does not of course belong in its entirety to the
+category of errors, but only in so far as it appears to us remarkable
+and unjustified, judged by the standard of general experience;
+as, for instance, where recent or important impressions are forgotten,
+or where one memory is forgotten out of an otherwise
+well-remembered sequence. How and why we have the capacity
+of forgetting in general, particularly how we are able to forget
+experiences which have certainly left the deepest impression
+on us, such as the events of our childhood, is quite a different
+problem, in which the defence against painful associations plays
+a certain part but is far from explaining everything. That unwelcome
+impressions are easily forgotten is an indubitable fact.
+Various psychologists have remarked it; and the great Darwin
+was so well aware of it that he made a golden rule for
+himself of writing down with particular care observations which
+seemed unfavourable to his theory, having become convinced
+that just these would be inclined to slip out of recollection.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Those who bear for the first time of this principle of defence
+against unpleasant memory by forgetfulness seldom fail to
+raise the objection that, on the contrary, in their experience
+it is just that which is painful which it is hard to forget, since
+it always comes back to mind to torture the person against his
+will—as, for example, the recollection of grievances or humiliations.
+This fact is quite correct, but the objection is not sound.
+It is important to begin early to reckon with the fact that the
+mind is an arena, a sort of tumbling-ground, for the struggles
+of antagonistic impulses; or, to express it in non-dynamic terms,
+that the mind is made up of contradictions and pairs of opposites.
+Evidence of one particular tendency does not in the least preclude
+its opposite; there is room for both of them. The material questions
+are: How do these opposites stand to one another and
+what effects proceed from one of them and what from the other?</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Losing and mislaying objects is of especial interest on account
+of the numerous meanings it may have, and the multiplicity of
+the tendencies in the service of which these errors may be employed.
+What is common to all the cases is the wish to lose
+something; what varies in them is the reason for the wish and
+the aim of it. One loses something if it has become damaged;
+if one has an impulse to replace it with a better; if one has ceased
+to care for it; if it came from someone with whom unpleasantness
+has arisen; or if it was acquired in circumstances that one no
+longer wishes to think of. Letting things fall, spoiling, or breaking
+things, serves the same tendency. In social life it is said that
+unwelcome and illegitimate children are found to be far more
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_62'>62</span>often weakly than those conceived in happier circumstances. This
+result does not imply that the crude methods of the so-called
+baby-farmer have been employed; some degree of carelessness
+in the supervision of the child should be quite enough. The
+preservation, or otherwise, of objects may well follow the same
+lines as that of children.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Then too it may happen that a thing will become destined
+to be lost without its having shed any of its value—that is,
+when there is an impulse to sacrifice something to fate in order
+to avert some other dreaded loss. According to the findings of
+analysis, such conjurings of fate are still very common among
+us, so that our losses are often voluntary sacrifices. Losing may
+equally well serve the impulses of spite or of self-punishment;
+in short, the more remote forms of motivation behind the impulse
+to do away with something by losing cannot easily be exhausted.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mistaking of objects, or erroneous performance of actions,
+like other errors, is often made use of to fulfil a wish which should
+be denied; the intention masquerades as a lucky chance. Thus,
+as once happened to one of our friends, one has to take a train,
+most unwillingly, in order to pay a visit in the suburbs and
+then, in changing trains at a connection, one gets by mistake
+into one which is returning to town; or, on a journey one would
+greatly like to make a halt at some stopping-place, which cannot
+be done owing to fixed engagements elsewhere, whereupon one
+mistakes or misses the connection, so that the desired delay
+is forced upon one. Or, as happened to one of my patients whom
+I had forbidden to telephone to the lady he was in love with,
+he “by mistake” and “thoughtlessly” gave the wrong number
+when he meant to telephone to me, so that he was suddenly
+connected with her. The following account by an engineer
+is a pretty example of the conditions under which damage to
+material objects may be done, and also demonstrates the practical
+significance of directly faulty actions.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“Some time ago I worked with several colleagues in the
+laboratory of a High School on a series of complicated experiments
+in elasticity, a piece of work we had undertaken voluntarily;
+it was beginning to take up more time, however, than we had
+anticipated. One day, as I went into the laboratory with my
+friend F., he remarked how annoying it was to him to lose so
+much time to-day as he had so much to do at home; I could
+not help agreeing with him and said half-jokingly, referring
+to an occasion the week before: ‘Let us hope the machine will
+break down again so that we can stop work and go home early.’
+In arranging the work it happened that F. was given the regulation
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_63'>63</span>of the valve of the press; that is to say, he was, by cautiously
+opening the valve, to let the liquid pressure out of the accumulator
+slowly into the cylinder of the hydraulic press. The man who
+was conducting the experiment stood by the pressure gauge,
+and, when the right pressure was reached, called out loudly,
+‘Stop.’ At this command F. seized the valve and turned with
+all his might—to the left! (All valves without exception close
+to the right.) Thereby the whole pressure in the accumulator
+suddenly came into the press, a strain for which the connecting-pipes
+are not designed, so that one of them instantly burst—quite
+a harmless accident, but one which forced us, nevertheless, to
+cease work for the day and go home. It is characteristic, by
+the way, that not long after, when we were discussing the affair,
+my friend F. had no recollection whatever of my remark, which
+I recalled with certainty.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>So with this in mind you may begin to suspect that it is not
+always a mere chance which makes the hands of your servants
+such dangerous enemies to your household effects. And you
+may also raise the question whether it is always an accident
+when one injures oneself or exposes oneself to danger—ideas
+which you may put to the test by analysis when you have an
+opportunity.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This is far from being all that could be said about errors.
+There is still much to be enquired into and discussed. But
+I shall be satisfied if you have been shaken somewhat in your
+previous beliefs by our investigations, so far as they have gone,
+and if you have gained a certain readiness to accept new ones.
+For the rest, I must be content to leave you with certain problems
+still unsolved. We cannot prove all our principles by the study
+of errors, nor are we indeed by any means solely dependent on
+this material. The great value of errors for our purpose lies in
+this, that they are such common occurrences, may easily be
+observed in oneself, and are not at all contingent upon illness.
+I should like to mention one more of your unanswered questions
+before concluding: “If, as we see from so many examples, people
+come so close to understanding errors and so often act as if they
+perceived their meaning, how is it possible that they should
+so generally consider them accidental, senseless, and meaningless,
+and so energetically oppose the psycho-analytic explanation
+of them?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>You are right: this is indeed striking and requires an explanation.
+But I will not give it to you; I will rather guide you slowly
+towards the connections by which the explanation will be forced
+upon you without any aid from me.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_65'>65</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'><span class='c014'><em>PART II</em></span><br> DREAMS</h2>
+</div>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_67'>67</span>
+ <h3 class='c002'><span class='c014'>FIFTH LECTURE</span><br> DIFFICULTIES AND PRELIMINARY APPROACH TO THE SUBJECT</h3>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c006'>One day the discovery was made that the symptoms of disease
+in certain nervous patients have meaning.<a id='r25'></a><a href='#f25' class='c015'><sup>[25]</sup></a> It was upon this
+discovery that the psycho-analytic method of treatment was
+based. In this treatment it happened that patients in speaking
+of their symptoms also mentioned their dreams, whereupon the
+suspicion arose that these dreams too had meaning.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>However, we will not pursue this historical path, but will
+strike off in the opposite direction. Our aim is to demonstrate
+the meaning of dreams, in preparation for the study of the
+neuroses. There are good grounds for this reversal of procedure,
+since the study of dreams is not merely the best preparation
+for that of the neuroses, but a dream is itself a neurotic symptom
+and, moreover, one which possesses for us the incalculable advantage
+of occurring in all healthy people. Indeed, if all human
+beings were healthy and would only dream, we could gather
+almost all the knowledge from their dreams which we have
+gained from studying the neuroses.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>So dreams become the object of psycho-analytic research—another
+of these ordinary, under-rated occurrences, apparently
+of no practical value, like “errors,” and sharing with them
+the characteristic of occurring in healthy persons. But in other
+respects the conditions of work are rather less favourable. Errors
+had only been neglected by science, people had not troubled
+their heads much about them, but at least it was no disgrace
+to occupy oneself with them. True, people said, there are things
+more important but still something may possibly come of it.
+To occupy oneself with dreams, however, is not merely unpractical
+and superfluous, but positively scandalous: it carries with it
+the taint of the unscientific and arouses the suspicion of personal
+leanings towards mysticism. The idea of a medical student
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_68'>68</span>troubling himself about dreams when there is so much in neuropathology
+and psychiatry itself that is more serious, tumours as
+large as apples compressing the organ of the mind, hæmorrhages,
+chronic inflammatory conditions in which the alterations in
+the tissues can be demonstrated under the microscope! No,
+dreams are far too unworthy and trivial to be objects of scientific
+research.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>There is yet another factor involved which, in itself, sets at
+defiance all the requirements of exact investigation. In investigating
+dreams even the object of research, the dream itself, is
+indefinite. A delusion, for example, presents clear and definite
+outlines. “I am the Emperor of China,” says your patient
+plainly. But a dream? For the most part it cannot be related
+at all. When a man tells a dream, has he any guarantee that
+he has told it correctly, and not perhaps altered it in the telling
+or been forced to invent part of it on account of the vagueness
+of his recollection? Most dreams cannot be remembered at all
+and are forgotten except for some tiny fragments. And is a
+scientific psychology or a method of treatment for the sick to
+be founded upon material such as this?</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>A certain element of exaggeration in a criticism may arouse
+our suspicions. The arguments brought against the dream as
+an object of scientific research are clearly extreme. We have
+met with the objection of triviality already in “errors,” and
+have told ourselves that great things may be revealed even by
+small indications. As to the indistinctness of dreams, that is
+a characteristic like any other—we cannot dictate to things their
+characteristics; besides, there are also dreams which are clear
+and well defined. Further, there are other objects of psychiatric
+investigation which suffer in the same way from the quality of
+indefiniteness, e.g. the obsessive ideas of many cases, with which
+nevertheless many psychiatrists of repute and standing have
+occupied themselves. I will recall the last case of the kind
+which came before me in medical practice. The patient, a
+woman, presented her case in these words: “I have a certain
+feeling, as if I had injured, or had meant to injure, some living
+creature—perhaps a child—no, no, a dog rather, as if perhaps
+I had pushed it off a bridge—or done something else.” Any
+disadvantage resulting from the uncertain recollection of dreams
+may be remedied by deciding that exactly what the dreamer
+tells is to count as the dream, and by ignoring all that
+he may have forgotten or altered in the process of recollection.
+Finally, one cannot maintain in so sweeping a fashion
+that dreams are unimportant things. We know from our own
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_69'>69</span>experience that the mood in which we awake from a dream may
+last throughout the day, and cases have been observed by medical
+men in which mental disorder began with a dream, the delusion
+which had its source in this dream persisting; further, it is
+told of historical persons that impulses to momentous deeds
+sprang from their dreams. We may therefore ask: what is
+the real cause of the disdain in which dreams are held in scientific
+circles? In my opinion it is the reaction from the overestimation
+of them in earlier times. It is well known that it is no easy
+matter to reconstruct the past, but we may assume with certainty
+(you will forgive my jest) that as early as three thousand years
+ago and more our ancestors dreamt in the same way as we do.
+So far as we know, all ancient peoples attached great significance
+to dreams and regarded them as of practical value; they obtained
+from them auguries of the future and looked for portents in
+them. For the Greeks and other Orientals, it was at times as
+unthinkable to undertake a campaign without a dream-interpreter
+as it would be to-day without air-scouts for intelligence. When
+Alexander the Great set out on his campaign of conquest the
+most famous interpreters of dreams were in his following. The
+city of Tyre, still at that time on an island, offered so stout a
+resistance to the king that he entertained the idea of abandoning
+the siege; then one night he dreamed of a satyr dancing in
+triumph, and when he related this dream to his interpreters
+they informed him that it foretold his victory over the city;
+he gave the order to attack and took Tyre by storm. Among
+the Etruscans and Romans other methods of foretelling the
+future were employed, but during the whole of the Græco-Roman
+period the interpretation of dreams was practised and
+held in high esteem. Of the literature on this subject the principal
+work at any rate has come down to us, namely, the book of
+Artemidorus of Daldis, who is said to have lived at the time
+of the Emperor Hadrian. How it happened that the art of
+dream-interpretation declined later and dreams fell into disrepute,
+I cannot tell you. The progress of learning cannot have had
+very much to do with it, for in the darkness of the middle ages
+things far more absurd than the ancient practice of the interpretation
+of dreams were faithfully retained. The fact remains
+that the interest in dreams gradually sank to the level of superstition
+and could hold its own only amongst the uneducated. In
+our day, there survive, as a final degradation of the art of dream-interpretation,
+the attempts to find out from dreams numbers
+destined to draw prizes in games of chance. On the other hand,
+exact science of the present day has repeatedly concerned itself
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_70'>70</span>with the dream, but always with the sole object of illustrating
+<em>physiological</em> theories. By medical men, naturally, a dream
+was never regarded as a mental process but as the mental expression
+of physical stimuli. Binz in 1876 pronounced the dream
+to be “a physical process, always useless and in many cases
+actually morbid, a process above which the conception of the
+world-soul and of immortality stands as high as does the blue
+sky above the most low-lying, weed-grown stretch of sand.”
+Maury compares dreams with the spasmodic jerkings of
+St. Vitus’ dance, contrasted with the co-ordinated movements of
+the normal human being; in an old comparison a parallel is
+drawn between the content of a dream and the sounds which
+would be produced if “someone ignorant of music let his ten
+fingers wander over the keys of an instrument.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>‘Interpretation’ means discovering a hidden meaning, but
+there can be no question of attempting this while such an attitude
+is maintained towards the dream-performance. Look up the
+description of dreams given in the writings of Wundt, Jodl and
+other recent philosophers: they are content with the bare
+enumeration of the divergences of the dream-life from waking
+thought with a view to depreciating the dreams; they emphasize
+the lack of connection in the associations, the suspended exercise
+of the critical faculty, the elimination of all knowledge, and other
+indications of diminished functioning. The single valuable
+contribution to our knowledge about dreams for which we are
+indebted to exact science relates to the influence upon the dream-content
+of physical stimuli operating during sleep. We have
+the work of a Norwegian author who died recently—J. Mourly
+Vold—two large volumes on experimental investigation of dreams
+(translated into German in 1910 and 1912), which are concerned
+almost entirely with the results obtained by change in the position
+of the limbs. These investigations have been held up to us
+as models of exact research in the subject of dreams. Now can
+you imagine what would be the comment of exact science on
+learning that we intend to try to find out the <em>meaning</em> of dreams?
+The comment that has perhaps been made already! However,
+we will not allow ourselves to be appalled at the thought. If
+it was possible for errors to have an underlying meaning, it is
+possible that dreams have one too; and errors have, in very
+many cases, a meaning which has eluded the researches of exact
+science. Let us adopt the assumption of the ancients and of
+simple folk, and follow in the footsteps of the dream-interpreters
+of old.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>First of all, we must take our bearings in this enterprise,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_71'>71</span>and make a survey of the field of dreams. What exactly is a
+dream? It is difficult to define it in a single phrase. Yet we
+need not seek after a definition, when all we need is to refer to
+something familiar to everyone. Still we ought to pick out
+the essential features in dreams. How are we to discover these
+features? The boundaries of the region we are entering comprise
+such vast differences, differences whichever way we turn. That
+which we can show to be common to all dreams is probably
+what is essential.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Well then—the first common characteristic of all dreams
+would be that we are asleep at the time. Obviously, the dream
+is the life of the mind during sleep, a life bearing certain resemblances
+to our waking life and, at the same time, differing
+from it widely. That, indeed, was Aristotle’s definition. Perhaps
+dream and sleep stand in yet closer relationship to each other.
+We can be waked by a dream; we often have a dream when
+we wake spontaneously or when we are forcibly roused from
+sleep. Dreams seem thus to be an intermediate condition between
+sleeping and waking. Hence, our attention is directed to sleep
+itself: what then is sleep?</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>That is a physiological or biological problem concerning
+which much is still in dispute. We can come to no decisive
+answer, but I think we may attempt to define one psychological
+characteristic of sleep. Sleep is a condition in which I refuse
+to have anything to do with the outer world and have withdrawn
+my interest from it. I go to sleep by retreating from
+the outside world and warding off the stimuli proceeding from
+it. Again, when I am tired by that world I go to sleep. I
+say to it as I fall asleep: “Leave me in peace, for I want to
+sleep.” The child says just the opposite: “I won’t go to sleep
+yet; I’m not tired, I want more things to happen to me!”
+Thus the biological object of sleep seems to be recuperation,
+its psychological characteristic the suspension of interest in the
+outer world. Our relationship with the world which we entered
+so unwillingly seems to be endurable only with intermission;
+hence we withdraw again periodically into the condition prior
+to our entrance into the world: that is to say, into intra-uterine
+existence. At any rate, we try to bring about quite similar
+conditions—warmth, darkness and absence of stimulus—characteristic
+of that state. Some of us still roll ourselves tightly
+up into a ball resembling the intra-uterine position. It looks
+as if we grown-ups do not belong wholly to the world, but only
+by two-thirds; one-third of us has never yet been born at all.
+Every time we wake in the morning it is as if we were newly
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_72'>72</span>born. We do, in fact, speak of the condition of waking from
+sleep in these very words: we feel “as if we were newly born,”—and
+in this we are probably quite mistaken in our idea
+of the general sensations of the new-born infant; it may be
+assumed on the contrary that it feels extremely uncomfortable.
+Again, in speaking of birth we speak of “seeing the light
+of day.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>If this is the nature of sleep, then dreams do not come into
+its scheme at all, but seem rather to be an unwelcome supplement
+to it; and we do indeed believe that dreamless sleep is
+the best, the only proper sleep. There should be no mental
+activity during sleep; if any such activity bestirs itself, then
+in so far have we failed to reach the true pre-natal condition
+of peace; we have not been able to avoid altogether some
+remnants of mental activity, and the act of dreaming would
+represent these remnants. In that event it really does seem
+that dreams do not need to have meaning. With errors it was
+different, for they were at least activities manifested in waking
+life; but if I sleep and have altogether suspended mental activity,
+with the exception of certain remnants which I have not been
+able to suppress, there is no necessity whatever that they should
+have any meaning. In fact, I cannot even make use of any
+such meaning, seeing that the rest of my mind is asleep. It
+can really then be a matter of spasmodic reactions only, of
+such mental phenomena only as have their origin in physical
+stimulation. Hence, dreams must be remnants of the mental
+activity of waking life disturbing sleep, and we might as well
+make up our minds forthwith to abandon a theme so unsuited
+to the purposes of psycho-analysis.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Superfluous as dreams may be, however, they do exist
+nevertheless, and we can try to account for their existence to
+ourselves. Why does not mental life go off to sleep? Probably
+because there is something that will not leave the mind in peace;
+stimuli are acting upon it and to these it is bound to react.
+Dreams therefore are the mode of reaction of the mind to stimuli
+acting upon it during sleep. We note here a possibility of access
+to comprehension of dreams. We can now endeavour to find
+out, in various dreams, what are the stimuli seeking to disturb
+sleep, the reaction to which takes the form of dreams. By doing
+this we should have worked out the first characteristic common
+to all dreams.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Is there any other common characteristic? Yes, there is
+another, unmistakable, and yet much harder to lay hold of and
+describe. The character of mental processes during sleep is
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_73'>73</span>quite different from that of waking processes. In dreams we
+go through many experiences, which we fully believe in, whereas
+in reality we are perhaps only experiencing the single disturbing
+stimulus. For the most part our experiences take the form of
+visual images; there may be feeling as well, thoughts, too,
+mixed up with them, and the other senses may be drawn in;
+but for the most part dreams consist of visual images. Part
+of the difficulty of reciting a dream comes from the fact that we
+have to translate these images into words. “I could draw it,”
+the dreamer often says to us, “but I do not know how to put
+it into words.” Now this is not exactly a diminution in the
+mental capacity, as seen in a contrast between a feeble-minded
+person and a man of genius. The difference is rather a qualitative
+one, but it is difficult to say precisely wherein it lies. G. T.
+Fechner once suggested that the stage whereon the drama of
+the dream (within the mind) is played out is other than that
+of the life of waking ideas. That is a saying which we really
+do not understand, nor do we know what it is meant to convey
+to us, but it does actually reproduce the impression of strangeness
+which most dreams make upon us. Again, the comparison of
+the act of dreaming with the performances of an unskilled hand
+in music breaks down here, for the piano will certainly respond
+with the same notes, though not with melodies, to a chance
+touch on its keys. We will keep this second common characteristic
+of dreams carefully in view, even though we may not
+understand it.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Are there any other qualities common to all dreams? I can
+think of none, but can see differences only, whichever way I
+look, differences too in every respect—in apparent duration,
+definiteness, the part played by affects, persistence in the mind,
+and so forth. This is really not what we should naturally
+expect in the case of a compulsive attempt, at once meagre and
+convulsive, to ward off a stimulus. As regards the length of
+dreams, some are very short, containing only one image, or
+very few, or a single thought, possibly even a single word;
+others are peculiarly rich in content, enact entire romances
+and seem to last a very long time. There are dreams as distinct
+as actual experiences, so distinct that for some time after waking
+we do not realize that they were dreams at all; others, which
+are ineffably faint, shadowy and blurred; in one and the same
+dream, even, there may be some parts of extraordinary vividness
+alternating with others so indistinct as to be almost wholly
+elusive. Again, dreams may be quite consistent or at any rate
+coherent, or even witty or fantastically beautiful; others again
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_74'>74</span>are confused, apparently imbecile, absurd or often absolutely
+mad. There are dreams which leave us quite cold, others in
+which every affect makes itself felt, pain to the point of tears,
+terror so intense as to wake us, amazement, delight, and so on.
+Most dreams are forgotten soon after waking; or they persist
+throughout the day, the recollection becoming fainter and more
+imperfect as the day goes on; others remain so vivid (as, for
+example, the dreams of childhood) that thirty years later we
+remember them as clearly as though they were part of a recent
+experience. Dreams, like people, may make their appearance
+once and never come back; or the same person may dream the
+same thing repeatedly, either in the same form or with slight
+alterations. In short, these scraps of mental activity at night-time
+have at command an immense repertory, can in fact create
+everything that by day the mind is capable of—only, it is
+never the same.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>One might attempt to account for these diversities in dreams
+by assuming that they correspond to different intermediate
+states between sleeping and waking, different levels of imperfect
+sleep. Very well; but then in proportion as the mind approached
+the waking state there should be not merely an increase in the
+value, content, and distinctness of the dream-performance,
+but also a growing perception that it <em>is</em> a dream; and it ought
+not to happen that side by side with a clear and sensible element
+in the dream there is one which is nonsensical or indistinct,
+followed again by a good piece of work. It is certain that the
+mind could not vary its depth of sleep so rapidly as that. This
+explanation therefore does not help; there is in fact no short
+cut to an answer.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>For the present we will leave the ‘meaning’ of the dream
+out of question, and try instead, by starting from the common
+element in dreams, to clear a path to a better understanding
+of their nature. From the relationship of dreams to sleep we
+have drawn the conclusion that dreams are the reaction to a
+stimulus disturbing sleep. As we have heard, this is also the
+single point at which exact experimental psychology can come
+to our aid; it affords proof of the fact that stimuli brought to
+bear during sleep make their appearance in dreams. Many
+investigations have been made on these lines, culminating in
+those of Mourly Vold whom I mentioned earlier; we have all,
+too, been in a position to confirm their results by occasional
+observations of our own. I will choose some of the earlier
+experiments to tell you. Maury had tests of this kind carried
+out upon himself. Whilst dreaming, he was made to smell some
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_75'>75</span>eau de Cologne, whereupon he dreamt he was in Cairo, in the
+shop of Johann Maria Farina, and this was followed by further
+crazy adventures. Again, someone gave his neck a gentle pinch,
+and he dreamt of the application of a blister and of a doctor
+who had treated him when he was a child. Again, they let a
+drop of water fall on his forehead and he was immediately in
+Italy, perspiring freely and drinking the white wine of Orvieto.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The striking feature about these dreams produced under
+experimental conditions will perhaps become still clearer to
+us in another series of “stimulus”-dreams. These are three
+dreams of which we have an account by a clever observer,
+Hildebrandt, and all three are reactions to the sound of an
+alarum-clock:</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“I am going for a walk on a spring morning, and I saunter
+through fields just beginning to grow green, till I come to a
+neighbouring village, where I see the inhabitants in holiday
+attire making their way in large numbers to the church, their
+hymn-books in their hands. Of course! it is Sunday and the
+morning service is just about to begin. I decide to take part
+in it, but first as I am rather overheated I think I will cool down
+in the churchyard which surrounds the church. Whilst reading
+some of the epitaphs there I hear the bell-ringer go up into the
+tower, where I now notice, high up, the little village bell which
+will give the signal for the beginning of the service. For some
+time yet it remains motionless, then it begins to swing, and
+suddenly the strokes ring out, clear and piercing—so clear and
+piercing that they put an end to my sleep. But the sound of
+the bell comes from the alarum-clock.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Here is another combination of images. “It is a bright
+winter day, and the roads are deep in snow. I have promised
+to take part in a sleighing expedition, but I have to wait a long
+time before I am told that the sleigh is at the door. Now follow
+the preparations for getting in, the fur rug is spread out and
+the foot-muff fetched and finally I am in my place. But there
+is still a delay while the horses wait for the signal to start. Then
+the reins are jerked and the little bells, shaken violently, begin
+their familiar janizary music, so loudly that in a moment the
+web of the dream is rent. Again it is nothing but the shrill
+sound of the alarum-clock.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now for the third example! “I see a kitchen-maid with
+dozens of piled-up plates going along the passage to the dining-room.
+It seems to me that the pyramid of china in her arms is
+in danger of overbalancing. I call out a warning: ‘Take care,
+your whole load will fall to the ground.’ Of course I receive
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_76'>76</span>the usual answer: that they are accustomed to carrying china
+in that way, and so on; meanwhile I follow her as she goes
+with anxious looks. I thought so—the next thing is a stumble
+on the threshold, the crockery falls, crashing and clattering
+in a hundred pieces on the ground. But—I soon become aware
+that that interminably prolonged sound is no real crash, but a
+regular ringing—and this ringing is due merely to the alarum-clock,
+as I realize at last on awakening.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>These dreams are very pretty, perfectly sensible, and by
+no means so incoherent as dreams usually are. We have no
+quarrel with them on those grounds. The thing common to
+them all is that in each case the situation arises from a noise,
+which the dreamer on waking recognizes as that of the alarum-clock.
+Hence we see here how a dream is produced, but we
+find out something more. In the dream there is no recognition
+of the clock, which does not even appear in it, but for the noise
+of the clock another noise is substituted; the stimulus which
+disturbs sleep is interpreted, but interpreted differently in each
+instance. Now why is this? There is no answer; it appears
+to be mere caprice. But to understand the dream we should
+be able to account for its choice of just this noise and no other
+to interpret the stimulus given by the alarum-clock. In analogous
+fashion we must object to Maury’s experiments that, although
+it is clear that the stimulus brought to bear on the sleeper does
+appear in the dream, yet his experiments don’t explain why
+it appears exactly in that form, which is one that does not seem
+explicable by the nature of the stimulus disturbing sleep. And
+further, in Maury’s experiments there was mostly a mass of other
+dream-material attached to the direct result of the stimulus,
+for example, the crazy adventures in the eau de Cologne dream,
+for which we are at a loss to account.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now will you reflect that the class of dreams which wake
+one up affords the best opportunity for establishing the influence
+of external disturbing stimuli. In most other cases it will be
+more difficult. We do not wake up out of all dreams, and if
+in the morning we remember a dream of the night before, how
+are we to assign it to a disturbing stimulus operating perhaps
+during the night? I once succeeded in subsequently establishing
+the occurrence of a sound-stimulus of this sort, but only, of
+course, because of peculiar circumstances. I woke up one
+morning at a place in the Tyrolese mountains knowing that I
+had dreamt that the Pope was dead. I could not explain the
+dream to myself, but later my wife asked me: “Did you hear
+quite early this morning the dreadful noise of bells breaking
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_77'>77</span>out in all the churches and chapels?” No, I had heard nothing,
+my sleep is too sound, but thanks to her telling me this I understood
+my dream. How often may such causes of stimulus as
+this induce dreams in the sleeper without his ever hearing of
+them afterwards? Possibly very often: and possibly not. If
+we can get no information of any stimulus we cannot be convinced
+on the point. And apart from this we have given up
+trying to arrive at an estimation of the sleep-disturbing external
+stimuli, since we know that they only explain a fragment of
+the dream and not the whole dream-reaction.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>We need not on that account give up this theory altogether;
+there is still another possible way of following it out. Obviously
+it is a matter of indifference what disturbs sleep and causes the
+mind to dream. If it cannot always be something external
+acting as a stimulus to one of the senses, it is possible that,
+instead, a stimulus operates from the internal organs—a so-called
+somatic stimulus. This supposition lies very close, and moreover
+it corresponds to the view popularly held with regard to
+the origin of dreams, for it is a common saying that they come
+from the stomach. Unfortunately, here again we must suppose
+that in very many cases information respecting a somatic stimulus
+operating during the night would no longer be forthcoming
+after waking, so that it would be incapable of proof. But we
+will not overlook the fact that many trustworthy experiences
+support the idea that dreams may be derived from somatic
+stimuli; on the whole it is indubitable that the condition of the
+internal organs can influence dreams. The relation of the content
+of many dreams to distention of the bladder or to a condition
+of excitation of the sex-organs is so plain that it cannot be
+mistaken. From these obvious cases we pass to others, in which,
+to judge by the content of the dream, we are at least justified
+in suspecting that some such somatic stimuli have been at work,
+since there is something in this content which can be regarded
+as elaboration, representation, or interpretation of these stimuli.
+Scherner, the investigator of dreams (1861), emphatically supported
+the view which traces the origin of dreams to organic
+stimuli, and contributed some excellent examples towards it.
+For instance, he sees in a dream “two rows of beautiful boys,
+with fair hair and delicate complexions, confronting each other
+pugnaciously, joining in combat, seizing hold of one another,
+and again letting go their hold, only to take up the former
+position and go through the whole process again”; his interpretation
+of the two rows of boys as the teeth is in itself plausible
+and seems to receive full confirmation when after this scene
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_78'>78</span>the dreamer “pulls a long tooth from his jaw.” Again, the
+interpretation of “long, narrow, winding passages” as being
+suggested by a stimulus originating in the intestine seems sound
+and corroborates Scherner’s assertion that dreams primarily
+endeavour to represent, by like objects, the organ from which
+the stimulus proceeds.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>We must therefore be prepared to admit that internal stimuli
+can play the same rôle in dreams as external ones. Unfortunately,
+evaluation of this factor is open to the same objections. In a
+great number of instances the attribution of dreams to somatic
+stimuli must remain uncertain or incapable of proof; not all
+dreams, but only a certain number of them, rouse the suspicion
+that stimuli from internal organs have something to do with
+their origin; and lastly, the internal somatic stimulus will
+suffice no more than the external sensory stimulus to explain
+any other part of the dream than the direct reaction to it. The
+origin of all the rest of the dream remains obscure.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now, however, let us direct our attention to a certain peculiarity
+of the dream-life which appears when we study the
+operation of these stimuli. The dream does not merely reproduce
+the stimulus, but elaborates it, plays upon it, fits it into a context,
+or replaces it by something else. This is a side of the dream-work
+which is bound to be of interest to us because
+possibly it may lead us nearer to the true nature of dreams.
+The scope of a man’s production is not necessarily limited to
+the circumstance which immediately gives rise to it. For instance,
+Shakespeare’s <cite>Macbeth</cite> was written as an occasional drama on
+the accession of the king who first united in his person the crowns
+of the three kingdoms. But does this historical occasion cover
+the whole content of the drama, or explain its grandeur and its
+mystery? Perhaps in the same way the external and internal
+stimuli operating upon the sleeper are merely the occasion of
+the dream and afford us no insight into its true nature.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The other element common to all dreams, their peculiarity
+in mental life, is on the one hand very difficult to grasp and on
+the other seems to afford no clue for further inquiry. Our experiences
+in dreams for the most part take the form of visual
+images. Can these be explained by the stimuli? Is it really
+the stimulus that we experience? If so, why is the experience
+visual, when it can only be in the very rarest instance that any
+stimulus has operated upon our eyesight? Or, can it be shown
+that when we dream of speech any conversation or sounds resembling
+conversation reached our ears during sleep? I venture
+to discard such a possibility without any hesitation whatever.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_79'>79</span>If we cannot get any further with the common characteristics
+of dreams as a starting-point, let us try beginning with their
+differences. Dreams are often meaningless, confused, and absurd,
+yet there are some which are sensible, sober, and reasonable.
+Let us see whether these latter sensible dreams can help to
+elucidate those which are meaningless. I will tell you the latest
+reasonable dream which was told to me, the dream of a young
+man: “I went for a walk in the Kärntnerstrasse and there I
+met Mr. X.; after accompanying him for a short time I went
+into a restaurant. Two ladies and a gentleman came and sat
+down at my table. At first I was annoyed and refused to look
+at them, but presently I glanced across at them and found that
+they were quite nice.” The dreamer’s comment on this was
+that the evening before he had actually been walking in the
+Kärntnerstrasse, which is the way he usually goes, and that
+he had met Mr. X. there. The other part of the dream was
+not a direct reminiscence, but only bore a certain resemblance
+to an occurrence of some time previously. Or here we have
+another prosaic dream, that of a lady. “Her husband says
+to her: ‘Don’t you think we ought to have the piano tuned?’
+and she replies: ‘It is not worth it, for the hammers need fresh
+leather anyhow.’” This dream repeats a conversation which
+took place in almost the same words between herself and her
+husband the day before the dream. What then do we learn
+from these two prosaic dreams? Merely that there occur in
+them recollections of daily life or of matters connected with it.
+Even that would be something if it could be asserted of all
+dreams without exception. But that is out of the question;
+this characteristic too belongs only to a minority of dreams.
+In most dreams we find no connection with the day before,
+and no light is thrown from this quarter upon meaningless and
+absurd dreams. All we know is that we have met with a new
+problem. Not only do we want to know what a dream is saying,
+but if as in our examples that is quite plain, we want to know
+further from what cause and to what end we repeat in dreams
+this which is known to us and has recently happened to us.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I think you would be as tired as I of continuing the kind of
+attempts we have made up to this point. It only shows that
+all the interest in the world will not help us with a problem
+unless we have also an idea of some path to adopt in order to
+arrive at a solution. Till now we have not found this path.
+Experimental psychology has contributed nothing but some
+(certainly very valuable) information about the significance of
+stimuli in the production of dreams. Of philosophy we have
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_80'>80</span>nothing to expect, unless it be a lofty repetition of the reproach
+that our object is intellectually contemptible; while from the
+occult sciences we surely do not choose to borrow. History
+and the verdict of the people tell us that dreams are full of
+meaning and importance, and of prophetic significance; but
+that is hard to accept and certainly does not lend itself to proof.
+So then our first endeavours are completely baffled.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But unexpectedly there comes a hint from a direction in
+which we have not hitherto looked. Colloquial speech, which
+is certainly no matter of chance but the deposit, as it were, of
+ancient knowledge—a thing which must not indeed be made
+too much of—our speech, I say, recognizes the existence of
+something to which, strangely enough, it gives the name of
+“day-dreams.” Day-dreams are phantasies (products of phantasy);
+they are very common phenomena, are observable in
+healthy as well as in sick persons, and they also can easily be
+studied by the subject himself. The most striking thing about
+these ‘phantastic’ creations is that they have received the name
+of “day-dreams,” for they have nothing in common with the
+two universal characteristics of dreams. Their name contradicts
+any relationship to the condition of sleep and, as regards the
+second universal characteristic, no experience or hallucination
+takes place in them, we simply imagine something; we recognize
+that they are the work of phantasy, that we are not seeing
+but thinking. These day-dreams appear before puberty, often
+indeed in late childhood, and persist until maturity is reached
+when they are either given up or retained as long as life lasts.
+The content of these phantasies is dictated by a very transparent
+motivation. They are scenes and events which gratify either
+the egoistic cravings of ambition or thirst for power, or the erotic
+desires of the subject. In young men, ambitious phantasies
+predominate; in women, whose ambition centres on success
+in love, erotic phantasies; but the erotic requirement can often
+enough in men too be detected in the background, all their
+heroic deeds and successes are really only intended to win the
+admiration and favour of women. In other respects these
+day-dreams show great diversity and their fate varies. All of
+them are either given up after a short time and replaced by a
+new one, or retained, spun out into long stories, and adapted
+to changing circumstances in life. They march with the times,
+receiving as it were “date-stamps” upon them which show
+the influence of new situations. They form the raw material
+of poetic production; for the writer by transforming, disguising,
+or curtailing them creates out of his day-dreams the situations
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_81'>81</span>which he embodies in his stories, novels, and dramas. The
+hero of a day-dream is, however, always the subject himself,
+either directly imagined in the part or transparently identified
+with someone else.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Perhaps day-dreams are so called on account of their similar
+relation to reality, as an indication that their content is no
+more to be accepted as real than is that of dreams. But it is
+possible that they share the name of dreams because of some
+mental characteristic of the dream which we do not yet know
+but after which we are seeking. On the other hand, it is possible
+that we are altogether wrong in regarding this similarity of name
+as significant. That is a question which can only be answered
+later.</p>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_82'>82</span>
+ <h3 class='c002'><span class='c014'>SIXTH LECTURE</span><br> PRELIMINARY HYPOTHESES AND TECHNIQUE OF INTERPRETATION</h3>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c006'>We thus realize our need of a new way of approach, a definite
+method, if we are to make any advance in our researches into
+dreams. I will now offer an obvious suggestion: let us accept
+as the basis of the whole of our further enquiry the following
+hypothesis—that dreams are not a somatic, but a mental, phenomenon.
+You know what this means; but what is our justification
+in making this assumption? We have none, but on the
+other hand there is nothing to prevent us. The position is
+this: if the dream is a somatic phenomenon it does not concern
+us; it can only be of interest to us on the hypothesis that it
+is a mental phenomenon. So we will assume that this hypothesis
+is true, in order to see what happens if we do so. The results
+of our work will determine whether we may adhere to the
+assumption, and uphold it in its turn as an inference fairly
+drawn. Now what exactly is the object of this enquiry of ours, or
+to what are we directing our efforts? Our object is that of
+all scientific endeavour—namely, to achieve an understanding of
+the phenomena, to establish a connection between them, and,
+in the last resort, wherever it is possible to increase our power
+over them.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>So we continue our work on the assumption that dreams
+are a mental phenomenon. In that event, they are a performance
+and an utterance on the part of the dreamer, but of a kind
+that conveys nothing to us, and which we do not understand.
+Now supposing that I give utterance to something that you do
+not understand, what do you do? You ask me to explain,
+do you not? Why may not we do the same—<em>ask the dreamer
+the meaning of the dream</em>?</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Remember, we have already found ourselves in a similar
+position. It was when we were enquiring into certain errors,
+and the instance we took was a slip of the tongue. Someone
+had said: “Then certain things were <em>refilled</em>,” and thereupon
+we asked—no, fortunately it was not <em>we</em> who asked, but other
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_83'>83</span>people who had nothing to do with psycho-analysis—<em>they</em> asked
+what he meant by this enigmatic expression. He answered at
+once that what he had intended to say was: “That was a
+filthy business,” but had checked himself and substituted
+the milder words: “Things were revealed there.” I explained
+to you then that this enquiry was the model for every psycho-analytic
+investigation, and you understand now that psycho-analytic
+technique endeavours as far as possible to let the persons
+being analysed give the answer to their own problems. The
+dreamer himself then should interpret his dream for us.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>That is not so simple with dreams, however, as we all know.
+Where errors were concerned, this method proved possible in
+many cases; there were others where the person questioned
+refused to say anything and even indignantly repudiated the
+answer suggested to him. With dreams, instances of the first
+type are entirely lacking; the dreamer always says he knows
+nothing about it. He cannot very well repudiate our interpretation,
+since we have none to offer him. Shall we have to
+give up our attempt then? Since <em>he</em> knows nothing, and <em>we</em>
+know nothing, and a third person can surely know nothing
+either, there cannot be any prospect of finding the answer.
+Well, if you like, give up the attempt. But if you are not so
+minded, you can accompany me. For I assure you that it is
+not only quite possible, but highly probable, that the dreamer
+really does know the meaning of his dream; <em>only he does not
+know that he knows, and therefore thinks that he does not</em>.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>At this point you will probably call my attention to the
+fact that I am again introducing an assumption, the second in
+quite a short context, and that by so doing I greatly detract
+from the force of my claim to a trustworthy method of procedure.
+Given the hypothesis that dreams are a mental phenomenon,
+and given further the hypothesis that there are in the minds of
+men certain things which they know without knowing that they
+know them—and so forth! You have only to keep in view the
+intrinsic improbability of both these hypotheses, and you may
+with an easy mind abandon all interest in the conclusions to be
+drawn from them.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Well, I have not brought you here either to delude you or
+to conceal anything from you. True, I announced that I would
+give a course of lectures entitled Introductory Lectures on Psycho-Analysis;
+but it was no part of my purpose to play the oracle,
+professing to show you an easy sequence of facts, whilst carefully
+concealing all difficulties, filling up gaps, and glossing over
+doubtful points, so that you might comfortably enjoy the belief
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_84'>84</span>that you have learnt something new. No, it is the very fact
+that you are beginners that makes me anxious to show you
+our science as it is, with all its excrescences and crudities, the
+claims that it makes and the criticism to which it may give
+rise. I know indeed that it is the same in every science and
+that, especially in the beginnings, it cannot be otherwise. I
+know too that, in teaching other sciences, an effort is made
+at first to hide these difficulties and imperfections from the
+learner. But that cannot be done in psycho-analysis. So I
+really have set up two hypotheses, the one within the other;
+and anyone who finds it all too laborious, or too uncertain, or
+who is used to higher degrees of certainty, or to more refined
+deductions, need go no further with me. Only I should advise
+him to leave psychological problems altogether alone, for it is
+to be feared that this is a field in which he will find no access
+to such exact and sure paths as he is prepared to tread. And,
+further, it is quite superfluous for any science which can offer
+a real contribution to knowledge to strive to make itself heard
+and to win adherents. Its reception must depend upon its
+results, and it can afford to wait until these have compelled
+attention.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But I may warn those of you who are not to be deterred in
+this way that my two assumptions are not of equal importance.
+The first, that dreams are a mental phenomenon, is the hypothesis
+which we hope to prove by the results of our work. The second
+has already been proved in a different field, and I am merely
+taking the liberty of transferring it thence to our problems.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Where, and in what connection, is it supposed to have been
+proved that a man can possess knowledge without knowing
+that he does so, which is the assumption we are making of the
+dreamer? Surely that would be a remarkable and surprising
+fact, which would change our conception of mental life and
+would have no need of concealment. Incidentally, it would
+be a fact belied in the very statement of it, which yet attempts
+to be literally true—a contradiction in terms. There is not,
+however, any attempt at concealment. We cannot blame the
+fact for people’s ignorance of it, or lack of interest in it, any
+more than we ourselves are to blame because all these psychological
+problems have been passed in judgement by persons who
+have held aloof from all the observations and experiments which
+alone can be conclusive.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The proof to which I refer was found in the sphere of hypnotic
+phenomena. In the year 1889 I was present at the remarkably
+impressive demonstrations by Liébault and Bernheim, in Nancy,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_85'>85</span>and there I witnessed the following experiment. A man was
+placed in a condition of somnambulism, and then made to go
+through all sorts of hallucinatory experiences. On being wakened,
+he seemed at first to know nothing at all of what had taken
+place during his hypnotic sleep. Bernheim then asked him in
+so many words to tell him what had happened while he was
+under hypnosis. The man declared that he could not remember
+anything. Bernheim, however, insisted upon it, pressed him,
+and assured him that he did know and that he must remember,
+and lo and behold! the man wavered, began to reflect, and
+remembered in a shadowy fashion first one of the occurrences
+which had been suggested to him, then something else, his recollection
+growing increasingly clear and complete until finally
+it was brought to light without a single gap. Now, since in
+the end he had the knowledge without having learnt anything
+from any other quarter in the meantime, we are justified in
+concluding that these recollections were in his mind from the
+outset. They were merely inaccessible to him; he did not
+know that he knew them but believed that he did not know.
+In fact, his case was exactly similar to what we assume the
+dreamer’s to be.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I hope you are duly surprised that this fact is already established
+and that you will ask me: “Why did you not refer
+to this proof before, when we were considering errors and came
+to the point of ascribing to a man who had made a slip of the
+tongue intentions behind his speech, of which he knew nothing,
+and which he denied? If it is possible for a man to believe
+that he knows nothing of experiences of which nevertheless
+he does possess the recollection, it seems no longer improbable
+that there should be other mental processes going on within
+him about which also he knows nothing. We should certainly
+have been impressed by this argument and should have been
+in a better position to understand about errors.” Certainly, I
+might have brought forward this proof then, but I reserved it
+for a later occasion when there would be more need for it. Some
+of the errors explained themselves, others suggested to us that
+in order to understand the connection between the phenomena
+it would be advisable to postulate the existence of mental processes
+of which the person is entirely ignorant. With dreams
+we are compelled to seek our explanations elsewhere, and besides,
+I am counting on your being more ready to accept in this connection
+a proof from the field of hypnosis. The condition
+in which we perform errors must seem to you normal and, as
+such, to bear no similarity to that of hypnosis. On the other
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_86'>86</span>hand there exists a clear relationship between the hypnotic
+state and sleep, the essential condition of dreaming. Hypnosis
+is actually called artificial sleep; we say to the people whom
+we hypnotize: “Sleep,” and the suggestions made to them
+are comparable to the dreams of natural sleep. The mental
+situation is really analogous in the two cases. In natural sleep
+we withdraw our interest from the whole outer world; so also
+in hypnotic sleep, with the exception of the one person who has
+hypnotized us and with whom we remain in rapport. Again,
+the so-called “nurse’s sleep” in which the nurse remains in
+rapport with the child and can be wakened only by him is a
+normal counterpart of hypnotic sleep. So it does not seem so
+very audacious to carry over to natural sleep something which
+is a condition in hypnosis. The assumption that some knowledge
+about his dream exists in the dreamer and that this knowledge
+is merely inaccessible to him, so that he himself does not believe
+he has it, is not a wild invention. Incidentally, we observe
+here that a third way of approaching the study of dreams is
+thus opened out for us; we may approach it by the avenue of
+sleep-disturbing stimuli, by that of day-dreams, and now by
+that of the dreams suggested during hypnosis.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now perhaps we shall return to our task with greater confidence.
+We see it is very probable that the dreamer knows
+something about his dream; the problem is how to make it
+possible for him to get at his knowledge and impart it to us.
+We do not expect him immediately to tell us what his dream
+means, but we do think he will be able to discover its source,
+from what circle of thoughts and interests it is derived. With
+errors, you will remember the man was asked how the slip of
+the tongue “refilled” had come about, and his first association
+gave us the explanation. The technique we employ in the
+case of dreams is very simple and is modelled on this example.
+Here again we shall ask the dreamer how he came to have the
+dream, and his next words must be regarded as giving the explanation
+in this case also. It makes no difference to us therefore,
+whether he thinks that he does or does not know anything
+about it, and we treat both cases alike.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This technique is certainly very simple, nevertheless I am
+afraid it will provoke most strenuous opposition in you. You
+will say: “Another assumption, the third! And the most
+improbable of all! When I ask the dreamer what ideas come
+to him about the dream, do you mean to say that his very first
+association will give the desired explanation? But surely he
+might have no association at all, or heaven only knows what
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_87'>87</span>the association might be. We cannot imagine upon what grounds
+such an expectation is based. It really implies too much trust
+in Providence, and this at a point where rather more exercise
+of the critical faculty would better meet the case. Besides, a
+dream is not like a single slip of the tongue but is made up of
+many elements. That being so, upon which association is one
+to rely?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>You are right in all the unessentials. It is true that a dream
+differs from a slip of the tongue in the matter of its many elements
+as well as in other points. We must take account of
+that in our technique. So I suggest to you that we divide the
+dream up into its various elements, and examine each element
+separately; then we shall have re-established the analogy with
+a slip of the tongue. Again, you are right in saying that the
+dreamer when questioned on the single elements of the dream
+may reply that he has no ideas about them. There are cases
+in which we accept this answer, and later I will tell you which
+these are; curiously enough, they are cases about which we
+ourselves may have certain definite ideas. But in general,
+when the dreamer declares that he has no ideas, we shall contradict
+him, press him to answer, assure him that he must have
+some idea and—shall find we are right. He will produce an
+association, any one, it does not matter to us what it is. He
+will be especially ready with information which we may term
+historical. He will say: “That is something which happened
+yesterday” (as in the instance of the two “prosaic” dreams
+quoted above) or: “That reminds me of something which
+happened recently,” and in this way we shall come to notice
+that dreams are much more often connected with impressions
+of the day before than we thought at first. Finally, with
+the dream as his starting-point, he will recall events which
+happened less recently, and at last even some which lie very
+far back in the past.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In regard to the main issue, however, you are wrong. When
+you think it arbitrary to assume that the first association of
+the dreamer must give us just what we are looking for, or at
+any rate lead to it, and further, that the association is much
+more likely to be quite capricious and to have no connection
+with what we are looking for, and that it only shows my blind
+trust in Providence if I expect anything else—then you make
+a very great mistake. I have already taken the liberty of
+pointing out to you that there is within you a deeply-rooted
+belief in psychic freedom and choice, that this belief is quite
+unscientific, and that it must give ground before the claims of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_88'>88</span>a determinism which governs even mental life. I ask you to
+have some respect for the <em>fact</em> that that one association, and
+nothing else, occurs to the dreamer when he is questioned. Nor
+am I setting up one belief against another. It can be proved
+that the association thus given is not a matter of choice, not
+indeterminate, and that it is not unconnected with what we
+are looking for. Indeed, I have recently learnt—not that I
+attach too much importance to the fact—that experimental
+psychology itself has brought forward similar proofs.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Because of the importance of the matter I ask you to pay
+special attention to this. When I ask a man to say what comes
+to his mind about any given element in a dream, I require him
+to give himself up to the process of <span class='fss'>FREE ASSOCIATION</span> <em>which
+follows when he keeps in mind the original idea</em>. This necessitates
+a peculiar attitude of the attention, something quite
+different from reflection, indeed, precluding it. Many people
+adopt this attitude without any difficulty, but others when
+they attempt to do so display an incredible inaptitude. There
+is a still higher degree of freedom in association which appears
+when I dispense with any particular stimulus-idea and perhaps
+only describe the kind and species of association that I want;
+for example, ask someone to let a proper name or a number
+occur to him. An association of this sort should, one would
+say, be even more subject to choice and unaccountable than
+the kind used in our technique. Nevertheless, it can be shown
+that in every instance it will be strictly determined by important
+inner attitudes of mind, which are unknown to us at the moment
+when they operate, just as much unknown as are the disturbing
+tendencies which cause errors, and those tendencies which bring
+about so-called “chance” actions.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I myself and many after me have repeatedly made an examination
+of names and numbers called up without any particular
+idea as a starting-point; some of these experiments have been
+published. The method is this: a train of associations is stirred
+up by the name which occurred, and these associations, as you
+see, are no longer quite free, but are attached just so far as the
+associations to the different elements of the dream are attached;
+this train of associations is then kept up until the thoughts arising
+from the impulse have been exhausted. By that time, however,
+you will have explained the motivation and significance of the
+free association with a name. The experiments yield the same
+result again and again; the information they give us often
+includes a wealth of material and necessitates going far afield
+into its ramifications. The associations to numbers that arise
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_89'>89</span>spontaneously are perhaps the most demonstrative; they follow
+upon one another so swiftly and make for a hidden goal with
+such astounding certainty that one is really quite taken aback.
+I will give you just one example of a name-analysis of this sort,
+because it happens to be one which does not involve the handling
+of a great mass of material.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Once, when I was treating a young man, I happened to say
+something on this subject and to assert that in spite of our
+apparent freedom of choice in such matters we cannot, in point
+of fact, think of any name which cannot be shown to be narrowly
+determined by the immediate circumstances, the idiosyncrasies,
+of the person experimented with and his situation at the moment.
+As he was inclined to be sceptical, I proposed that he should
+make the experiment himself then and there. I knew that
+he had unusually numerous relationships of all sorts with women
+and girls, so I told him that I thought he would have an exceptionally
+large number to choose from if he were to let the name
+of a woman occur to him. He agreed. To my surprise, or rather
+perhaps to his own, he did not overwhelm me with an avalanche
+of women’s names, but remained silent for a time, and then
+confessed that the only name which came into his mind at all
+was “Albine.” “How curious! What do you connect with
+this name? How many Albines do you know?” Strangely
+enough, he knew no one of the name of Albine, and he found
+no associations to the name. One might infer that the analysis
+had failed; but no, it was already complete, and no further
+association was required. The man himself was unusually fair
+in colouring, and whilst talking to him in analysis I had often
+jokingly called him an <em>albino</em>; moreover, we were just in the
+midst of tracing the <em>feminine</em> element in his nature. So it was
+he himself who was this female albino, the “woman” who
+interested him most at the moment.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In the same way, the tunes which suddenly come into a
+man’s head can be shown to be conditioned by some train of
+thought to which they belong, and which for some reason is
+occupying his mind without his knowing anything about it.
+It is easy to show that the connection with the tune is to be
+sought either in the words which belong to it or in the source
+from which it comes: I must, however, make this reservation,
+that I do not maintain this in the case of really musical people
+of whom I happen to have had no experience; in them the
+musical value of the tune may account for its suddenly emerging
+into consciousness. The first case is certainly much more
+common; I know of a young man who for some time was absolutely
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_90'>90</span>haunted by the tune (a charming one, I admit) of the
+song of Paris in <cite>Helen of Troy</cite>, until his attention was drawn
+in analysis to the fact that at that time an “Ida” and a
+“Helen” were rivals in his interest.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>If then the associations which arise quite freely are determined
+in this way and belong to some definite context, we are
+surely justified in concluding that associations attached to one
+single stimulus-idea must be equally narrowly conditioned.
+Examination shows as a fact that they are not only attached
+in the first place to the stimulus-idea which we have
+provided for them, but that they are also dependent, in the
+second place, on circles of thoughts and interests of strong
+affective value (<em>complexes</em>, as we call them) of whose influence
+at the time nothing is known, that is to say, on unconscious
+activities.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Associations attached in this way have been made the subject
+of very instructive experiments, which have played a notable
+part in the history of psycho-analysis. Wundt’s school originated
+the so-called ‘association-experiment,’ in which the subject
+of the experiment is bidden to reply to a given ‘stimulus-word’
+as quickly as possible with whatever ‘reaction-word’ occurs
+to him. The following points may then be noted: the interval
+which elapses between the sounding of the stimulus-word and
+of the reaction-word, the nature of the latter, and possibly any
+mistake which comes in when the same experiment is repeated
+later, and so on. The Zurich School, under the leadership of
+Bleuler and Jung, arrived at the explanation of the reactions
+to the association-experiment by asking the person experimented
+upon to throw light upon any associations which seemed
+at all remarkable, by means of subsequent associations. In
+this way it became clear that these unusual reactions were
+most strictly determined by the complexes of the person concerned.
+By this discovery Bleuler and Jung built the first
+bridge between experimental psychology and psycho-analysis.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Having heard this you may possibly say: “We admit now
+that free associations are subject to determination and not a
+matter of choice, as we thought at first, and we admit this also
+in the case of associations to the elements of dreams. But it
+is not this that we are bothering about. You maintain that
+the association to each element in the dream is determined by
+some mental background to this particular element, a background
+of which we know nothing. We cannot see that there
+is any proof of this. Naturally we expect that the association
+to the dream-element will be shown to be conditioned by one
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_91'>91</span>of the complexes of the dreamer, but what good is that to us?
+That does not help us to understand the dream; it merely leads
+to some knowledge of these so-called complexes, as did the
+association-experiment; but what have these to do with the
+dream?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>You are right, but you are overlooking an important point,
+the very thing which deterred me from choosing the association-experiment
+as a starting-point for this discussion. In this
+experiment the stimulus-word, the single thing which determines
+the reaction, is chosen by us at will, and the reaction
+stands as intermediary between this stimulus-word and the
+complex aroused in the person experimented upon. In the
+dream, the stimulus-word is replaced by something derived
+from the mental life of the dreamer, from sources unknown
+to him, and hence may very probably be itself a ‘derivative
+of a complex.’ It is not, therefore, altogether fantastic to
+suppose that the further associations connected with the elements
+of the dream are determined by no other complex than
+that which has produced the particular element itself, and that
+they will lead to the discovery of that complex.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Let me give you another instance which may serve to show
+that, in the case of dreams, the facts bear out our expectations.
+The forgetting of proper names is really an excellent prototype
+of what happens in dream-analysis, only that in the former
+case one person alone is concerned, while in the interpretation
+of dreams there are two. When I forget a name temporarily,
+I am still certain that I know it, and by way of a détour through
+Bernheim’s experiment, we are now in a position to achieve a
+similar certainty in the case of the dreamer. Now this name
+which I have forgotten, and yet really know, eludes me. Experience
+soon teaches me that no amount of thinking about it,
+even with effort, is any use. I can, however, always think of
+another or of several other names instead of the forgotten one.
+When such a substitute name occurs to me spontaneously, only
+then is the similarity between this situation and that of dream-analysis
+evident. The dream-element also is not what I am
+really looking for; it is only a substitute for something else,
+for the real thing which I do not know and am trying to discover
+by means of dream-analysis. Again the difference is that when
+I forget a name I know perfectly well that the substitute is not
+the right one, whereas we only arrived at this conception of the
+dream-element by a laborious process of investigation. Now
+there also is a way in which, when we forget a name, we can by
+starting from the substitute, arrive at the real thing eluding
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_92'>92</span>our consciousness at the moment, i.e. the forgotten name. If
+I turn my attention to these substitute names and let further
+associations to them come into my mind, I arrive after a short
+or a long way round at the name I have forgotten, and in so
+doing I discover that the substitutes I have spontaneously produced
+had a definite connection with, and were determined by,
+the forgotten name.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I will give you an instance of an analysis of this sort: one
+day I found that I could not call to mind the name of the small
+country on the Riviera, of which Monte Carlo is the capital.
+It was most annoying, but so it was. I delved into all my
+knowledge about the country; I thought of Prince Albert of
+the House of Lusignan, of his marriages, of his passion for deep-sea
+exploration—in fact of everything I could summon up, but
+all to no purpose. So I gave up trying to think and, instead
+of the name I had lost, let substitute names come into my mind.
+They came quickly: Monte Carlo itself, then Piedmont, Albania,
+Montevideo, Colico. Albania was the first to attract my attention;
+it was immediately replaced by Montenegro, probably
+because of the contrast between black and white. Then I
+noticed that four of the substitute names have the same syllable
+“mon,” and immediately I recalled the forgotten word and
+cried out “Monaco.” You see the substitutes really originated
+in the forgotten name; the four first came from the first syllable
+and the last gave the sequence of the syllables and the whole
+of the final syllable. Incidentally, I could quite easily find
+out what had made me forget the name for the time being.
+Monaco is the Italian name for Munich, and it was some
+thoughts connected with this town which had acted as an
+inhibition.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now that is a very pretty example, but it is too simple. In
+other cases you might have to take a longer succession of associations
+to the substitute name, and then the analogy to dream-analysis
+would be clearer. I have had experiences of that sort,
+too. A stranger once invited me to drink some Italian wine
+with him, and in the inn he found he had forgotten the name
+of the wine which he had meant to order on account of his very
+pleasant recollections of it. A number of dissimilar substitute
+names occurred to him, and from these I was able to infer that
+the thought of someone called Hedwig had made him forget
+the name of the wine. Sure enough, not only did he tell me
+that there had been a Hedwig with him on the occasion when
+he first tasted the wine, but this discovery brought back to
+him the name he wanted. He was now happily married, and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_93'>93</span>“Hedwig” belonged to earlier days which he did not care to
+recall.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>What is possible in the case of forgotten names must be
+also possible in the interpretation of dreams: starting from the
+substitute, we must be able to arrive at the real object of our
+search by means of a train of associations; and further, arguing
+from what happens with forgotten names, we may assume that
+the associations to the dream-element will have been determined
+not only by that element but also by the real thought which
+is not in consciousness. If we could do this, we should have
+gone some way towards justifying our technique.</p>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_94'>94</span>
+ <h3 class='c002'><span class='c014'>SEVENTH LECTURE</span><br> MANIFEST CONTENT AND LATENT THOUGHTS</h3>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c006'>You see that our study of errors has not been fruitless. Thanks
+to our exertions in that direction, we have—reasoning from the
+hypotheses with which you are familiar—secured two results:
+a conception of the nature of the dream-element and a technique
+of dream-interpretation. The conception of the dream-element
+is as follows: it is not in itself a primary and essential thing,
+a ‘thought proper,’ but a substitute for something else unknown
+to the person concerned, just as is the underlying intention
+of the error, a substitute for something the knowledge of which
+is indeed possessed by the dreamer but is inaccessible to him.
+We hope to be able to carry over the same conception on to the
+dream as a whole, which consists of a number of such elements.
+Our method is to allow other substitute-ideas, from which we
+are able to divine that which lies hidden, to emerge into consciousness
+by means of free association to the said elements.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I am now going to propose that we introduce an alteration
+in our nomenclature in order to make our terminology more
+flexible. Instead of using the words “hidden,” “inaccessible,”
+or “proper,” let us give a more precise description and say
+“inaccessible to the consciousness of the dreamer” or “unconscious.”
+By that we mean nothing more than was implied
+in the case of the forgotten word, or the underlying intention
+responsible for the error; that is to say, <em>unconscious at the
+moment</em>. It follows that in contradistinction we may call the
+dream-elements themselves, and those substitute-ideas arrived at
+by the process of association, <em>conscious</em>. No theoretical implication
+is so far contained in these terms; no exception can be
+taken to the use of the word “unconscious” as a description
+at once applicable and easy to understand.<a id='r26'></a><a href='#f26' class='c015'><sup>[26]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_95'>95</span>Now, transferring our conception from the single element
+to the dream as a whole, it follows that the latter is the distorted
+substitute for something else, something unconscious, and that
+the task of dream-interpretation is to discover these unconscious
+thoughts. Hence are derived three important rules which
+should be observed in the work of dream-interpretation:</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>1. We are not to trouble about the surface meaning of the
+dream, whether it be reasonable or absurd, clear or confused;
+in no case does it constitute the unconscious thoughts we are
+seeking. (An obvious limitation of this rule will force itself
+upon us later.)</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>2. We are to confine our work to calling up substitute-ideas
+for every element and not to ponder over them and try to see
+whether they contain something which fits in, nor to trouble
+ourselves about how far they are taking us from the dream-element.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>3. We must wait until the hidden unconscious thoughts
+which we are seeking appear of their own accord, just as in
+the case of the missing word “Monaco” in the experiment
+which I described.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now we understand also how entirely indifferent it is
+whether we remember much or little of our dreams, above all
+whether we remember them accurately or not. The dream as
+remembered is not the real thing at all, but <em>a distorted substitute</em>
+which, by calling up other substitute-ideas, provides us with a
+means of approaching the thought proper, of bringing into
+consciousness the unconscious thoughts underlying the dream.
+If our recollection was at fault, all that has happened is that a
+further distortion of the substitute has taken place, and this
+distortion itself cannot be without motivation.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>We can interpret our own dreams as well as those of others;
+indeed, we learn more from our own and the process carries
+more conviction. Now if we experiment in this direction, we
+notice that something is working against us. Associations
+come, it is true, but we do not admit them all; we are moved
+to criticize and to select. We say to ourselves of one association:
+“No, that does not fit in—it is irrelevant,” and of another:
+“That is too absurd,” and of a third: “That is quite beside
+the point”; and then we can observe further that in making
+such objections we stifle, and in the end actually banish, the
+associations before they have become quite clear. So on the
+one hand we tend to hold too closely to the initial idea, that is,
+the dream-element itself, and on the other, by allowing ourselves
+to select, we vitiate the results of the process of free association.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_96'>96</span>If we are not attempting the interpretation by ourselves, but
+are allowing someone else to interpret, we shall clearly perceive
+another motive impelling us to this selection, forbidden as we
+know it to be. We find ourselves thinking at times: “No,
+this association is too unpleasant; I cannot, or will not, tell
+it to him.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Clearly these objections threaten to spoil the success of our
+work. We must guard against them when we are interpreting
+our own dreams by resolving firmly not to yield to them, and,
+in interpreting those of someone else, by laying down the hard
+and fast rule that he must not withhold any association, even
+if one of the four objections I have named rises up against it,
+namely, that it is too unimportant, too absurd, too irrelevant
+or too unpleasant to speak of. He promises to keep this rule,
+and we may well feel annoyed when we find how badly he fulfils
+his promise later on. At first we account for this by imagining
+that in spite of our authoritative assurance he is not convinced
+that the process of free association will be justified by its results;
+and perhaps our next idea will be to win him over first to our
+theory, by giving him books to read or sending him to lectures
+so that he may be converted to our views on the subject. But
+we shall be saved from any such false steps by observing that
+the same critical objections against certain associations arise
+even in ourselves, whom we surely cannot suspect of doubt,
+and can only subsequently, on second thoughts as it were, be
+overcome.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Instead of being annoyed at the dreamer’s disobedience,
+we can turn this experience to good account as a means of
+learning something new, something which is the more important
+the more unprepared we were for it. We realize that the work
+of dream-interpretation is encountering opposition by a <em>resistance</em>
+which expresses itself in this very form of critical objections.
+This resistance is independent of the theoretical conviction of
+the dreamer. We learn even more than this. Experience
+shows that a critical objection of this nature is never justified.
+On the contrary, the associations which people wish to suppress
+in this way prove <em>without exception</em> to be the most important, to
+be decisive for the discovery of the unconscious thought. When
+an association is accompanied by an objection of this sort it
+positively calls for special notice.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This resistance is something entirely new; a phenomenon
+which we have found by following out our hypotheses, although
+it was not included in them. We are not altogether agreeably
+surprised by this new factor which we have to reckon with,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_97'>97</span>for we suspect already that it will not make our work any easier:
+it might almost tempt us to give up the effort with dreams
+altogether. To take such a trivial subject and then to have
+so much trouble, instead of spinning along smoothly with our
+technique! But we might on the other hand find these difficulties
+fascinating and be led to suspect that the work will be
+worth the trouble. Resistances invariably confront us when
+we try to penetrate to the hidden unconscious thought from the
+substitute offered by the dream-element. We may suppose,
+therefore, that something very significant must be concealed
+behind the substitute; for, if not, why should we meet with
+such difficulties, the purpose of which is to keep up the concealment?
+When a child will not open his clenched fist to show
+what is in it, we may be quite certain that it is something which
+he ought not to have.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>As soon as we introduce into our subject the dynamic conception
+of resistance, we must bear in mind that this factor is
+something quantitatively variable. There are greater and
+lesser resistances, and we are prepared to find these differences
+showing themselves in the course of our work. Perhaps we
+can connect with this another experience also met with in the
+process of dream-interpretation. I mean that sometimes only
+a few associations—perhaps not more than one—suffice to lead
+us from the dream-element to the unconscious thought behind
+it, whilst on other occasions long chains of associations are
+necessary and many critical objections have to be overcome.
+We shall probably think that the number of associations necessary
+varies with the varying strength of the resistances, and
+very likely we shall be right. If there is only a slight resistance,
+the substitute is not far removed from the unconscious thought;
+a strong resistance on the other hand causes great distortions
+of the latter, and thereby entails a long journey back from the
+substitute to the unconscious thought itself.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Perhaps this would be a good moment to select a dream
+and try our technique upon it, to see whether the expectations
+we have entertained are realized. Very well, but what dream
+shall we choose? You do not know how difficult it is for me
+to decide, nor can I make it clear to you yet what the difficulties
+are. Obviously there must be dreams in which on the
+whole there is very little distortion, and one would think it would
+be best to begin with these. But which are the least distorted
+dreams? Those which make good sense and are not confused,
+of which I have already given you two examples? In assuming
+this, we should make a great mistake, for examination shows
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_98'>98</span>that these dreams have undergone an exceptionally high degree
+of distortion. Supposing then that I make no special condition
+but take any dream at random, you would probably be very
+much disappointed. We might have to observe and record
+such a vast number of associations to the single dream-elements
+that it would be quite impossible to gain any clear view of the
+work as a whole. If we write the dream down and compare
+with it all the associations which it produces, we are likely to
+find that they have multiplied the length of the text of the dream
+many times. So the most practical method would seem to be
+that of selecting for analysis several short dreams, each of which
+can at least convey some idea to us or confirm some supposition.
+This will be the course we shall decide to take, unless experience
+gives us a hint where we ought really to look for slightly distorted
+dreams.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But I can suggest another means of simplifying matters,
+one which lies right before us. Instead of attempting the interpretation
+of whole dreams, let us confine ourselves to single
+dream-elements and find out by taking a series of examples
+how the application of our technique explains them:—</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>(<em>a</em>) A lady related that as a child she very often dreamt
+that <em>God had a pointed paper cap on his head</em>. How are you
+going to understand that without the help of the dreamer?
+It sounds quite nonsensical; but the absurdity disappears
+when the lady says that as a little girl she used to have a cap
+like that put on her head at table, because she wouldn’t give
+up looking at the plates of her brothers and sisters to see whether
+any of them had been given more than she. Evidently the
+cap was meant to serve the purpose of blinkers; this piece of
+historical information was given, by the way, without any
+difficulty. The interpretation of this element and, with it,
+of the whole short dream becomes easy enough with the help
+of a further association of the dreamer’s: “As I had been told
+that God knew everything and saw everything, the dream could
+only mean that I knew and saw everything as God did, even
+when they tried to prevent me.” This example is perhaps too
+simple.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>(<em>b</em>) A sceptical patient had a longer dream, in which certain
+people were telling her about my book on <em>Wit</em> and praising it
+very highly. Then something else came in about a <em>canal; it
+might have been another book in which the word canal occurred,
+or something else to do with a canal&#160;... she did not know&#160;...
+it was quite vague</em>.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now you will certainly be inclined to suppose that the <em>canal</em>
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_99'>99</span>in the dream will defy interpretation on account of its vagueness.
+You are right in expecting difficulty, but the difficulty is not
+caused by the vagueness; on the contrary, the difficulty in
+interpretation is caused by something else, by the same thing
+that makes the element vague. The dreamer had no association
+to the word “canal”; naturally I did not know what to say
+either. Shortly afterwards, to be accurate, on the next day,
+she told me that an association had occurred to her which
+<em>perhaps</em> had something to do with it. It was in fact a witty
+remark which some one had told her. On board ship between
+Dover and Calais a well-known author was talking to an Englishman
+who in some particular context quoted the words: “Du
+sublime au ridicule il n’y a qu’un pas.” The author answered:
+“Oui, le Pas-de-Calais,” meaning that he regarded France as
+sublime and England as ridiculous. Of course, the Pas-de-Calais
+is a <em>canal</em>—that is to say, the Canal la Manche—the
+English Channel. Now, you ask, do I think that this association
+had anything to do with the dream? Certainly I think so:
+it gives the true meaning of the puzzling dream-element. Or
+are you inclined to doubt that the joke already existed before the
+dream and was the unconscious thought behind the element
+“canal,” and to maintain that it was a subsequent invention?
+The association reveals the scepticism disguised under the
+obtrusive admiration, and resistance was no doubt the cause
+both of the association being so long in occurring to her, and of
+the corresponding dream-element being so vague. Observe here
+the relation between the dream-element and the unconscious
+thought underlying it: it is, as it were, a fragment of the thought,
+an allusion to it; by being isolated in that way it became quite
+incomprehensible.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>(<em>c</em>) A patient had a fairly long dream, part of which was
+as follows: <em>Several members of his family were seated at a table
+of a particular shape</em>&#160;... etc. This table reminded the dreamer
+that he had seen one of the same sort when he was visiting a
+certain family. From that his thoughts ran on thus: in this
+family the relationship between father and son was a peculiar
+one, and the patient presently added that his own relationship
+to his father was, as a matter of fact, of the same nature.
+So the table was introduced into the dream to indicate this
+parallelism.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It happened that this dreamer had long been familiar with
+the demands of dream-interpretation; otherwise he might
+have taken exception to the idea of investigating so trivial a
+detail as the shape of a table. We do literally deny that anything
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_100'>100</span>in the dream is a matter of chance or of indifference, and it is
+precisely by enquiring into such trivial and (apparently) unmotivated
+details that we expect to arrive at our conclusion.
+You may perhaps still be surprised that the dream-work
+should happen to choose the table, in order to express the thought
+“Our relationship is just like theirs.” But even this is explicable
+when you learn that the family in question was named “<i><span lang="de">Tischler</span></i>.”
+(<i><span lang="de">Tisch</span></i> = table.) In making his relations sit at this table the
+dreamer’s meaning was that they too were “<span lang="de">Tischler</span>.”<a id='r27'></a><a href='#f27' class='c015'><sup>[27]</sup></a> And
+notice another thing: that in relating dream-interpretations
+of this sort one is forced into indiscretion. There you have
+one of the difficulties I alluded to in the matter of choosing
+examples. I could easily have given you another example
+instead of this one, but probably I should have avoided this
+indiscretion only to commit another in its place.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This seems to me a good point at which to introduce two
+new terms which we might have used already. Let us call
+the dream as related <em>the manifest dream-content</em>, and the hidden
+meaning, which we should come by in following out the associations,
+<em>the latent dream-thoughts</em>. Then we must consider the
+relation between the manifest content and the latent thoughts,
+as shown in the above examples. There are many varieties
+of these relations. In examples (<em>a</em>) and (<em>b</em>) the manifest dream-element
+is also an integral part of the latent thoughts, but only
+a fragment of them. A small piece of a great, composite,
+mental structure in the unconscious dream-thoughts has made
+its way into the manifest dream also, in the form of a fragment
+or in other cases as an allusion, like a catch-word or an abbreviation
+in a telegraphic code. The interpretation has to complete
+the whole to which this scrap or allusion belongs, which it did
+most successfully in example (<em>b</em>). One method of the distorting
+process in which the dream-work consists is therefore
+that of substituting for something else a fragment or an allusion.
+In example (<em>c</em>) we notice, moreover, another possible relation
+between manifest content and latent thought, a relation which
+is even more plainly and distinctly expressed in the following
+examples:—</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>(<em>d</em>) <em>The dreamer was pulling a certain lady of his acquaintance
+out of a ditch.</em> He himself found the meaning of this dream-element
+by means of the first association. It meant: he
+“picked her out,” preferred her.<a id='r28'></a><a href='#f28' class='c015'><sup>[28]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_101'>101</span>(<em>e</em>) Another man dreamt <em>that his brother was digging up his
+garden all over again</em>. The first association was to deep-trenching
+for vegetables, the second gave the meaning. The brother
+was <em>retrenching</em>. (Retrenching his expenses).<a id='r29'></a><a href='#f29' class='c015'><sup>[29]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='c007'>(<em>f</em>) <em>The dreamer was climbing a mountain from which he had
+a remarkably wide view.</em> This sounds most reasonable; perhaps
+no interpretation is called for and we have only to find out
+what recollection is referred to in the dream, and what had
+aroused it. No, you are mistaken; it comes out that this
+dream needed interpretation just as much as any other, more
+confused. For the dreamer remembers nothing about mountain-climbing
+himself; instead, it occurs to him that an acquaintance
+is publishing a <em>Rundschau</em> (Review), on the subject of our
+relations with the most distant parts of the earth: hence, the
+latent thought is one in which the dreamer identifies himself
+with the “<em>reviewer</em>” (lit. one who takes a survey).</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Here you come across a new type of relation between the
+manifest and the latent element in dreams. The former is not
+so much a distortion of the latter as a representation—a plastic,
+concrete piece of imagery, originating in the sound of a word.
+It is true that this amounts in effect to a distortion, for we have
+long forgotten from what concrete image the word sprang, and
+hence fail to recognize it when that image is substituted for it.
+When you consider that the manifest dream consists of visual
+images in by far the greatest number of cases, and less frequently
+of thoughts and words, you will easily realize that this kind
+of relation between the manifest and the latent has a special
+significance in the structure of dreams. You see too that in
+this way it becomes possible for a long series of abstract thoughts
+to create substitute-images in the manifest dream which do
+indeed serve the purpose of concealment. This is how our
+picture-puzzles are made up. The source of the semblance of
+wit which goes with this type of representation is a special
+question which we need not touch on here.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>There is a fourth kind of relation between the manifest and
+the latent elements which I will say nothing about until the
+time comes for it in my account of our technique. Even then
+I shall not have given you a full list of these possible relations,
+but we shall have sufficient for our purpose.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now do you think you can summon up courage to venture
+on the interpretation of a whole dream? Let us see whether
+we are adequately equipped for the task. I shall not, of course,
+choose one of the most obscure, but all the same it shall be
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_102'>102</span>one which shows the characteristics of dreams in a well-marked
+form.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>A young woman who had already been married for a number
+of years dreamt as follows: <em>She was at the theatre with her husband,
+and one side of the stalls was quite empty. Her husband told her
+that Elise L. and her fiancé also wanted to come, but could only
+get bad seats, three for a florin and a half, and of course they could
+not take those. She replied that in her opinion they did not lose
+much by that.</em></p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The first thing stated by the dreamer is that the occasion
+giving rise to the dream is alluded to in the manifest content:
+her husband had really told her that Elise L., an acquaintance
+of about her own age, had become engaged, and the dream is
+the reaction to this piece of news. We know already that in
+many dreams it is easy to point to some such occasion occurring
+on the day before, and that this is often traced by the dreamer
+without any difficulty. This dreamer supplies us with further
+information of the same sort about other elements in the manifest
+dream. To what did she trace the detail of one side of the
+stalls being empty? It was an allusion to a real occurrence
+of the week before, when she had meant to go to a certain play
+and had therefore booked seats <em>early</em>, so early that she had to
+pay extra for the tickets. On entering the theatre it was evident
+that her anxiety had been quite superfluous, for one side of the
+stalls was almost empty. It would have been time enough if
+she had bought the tickets on the actual day of the performance
+and her husband did not fail to tease her about having
+been in <em>too great a hurry</em>. Next, what about the one florin and
+a half (1 fl. 50)? This was traced to quite another context which
+had nothing to do with the former, but it again refers to some news
+received on the previous day. Her sister-in-law had had a
+present of 150 florins from her husband and had rushed off
+<em>in a hurry</em>, like a silly goose, to a jeweller’s shop and spent it
+all on a piece of jewellery. What about the number three?
+She knew nothing about that unless this idea could be counted
+an association, that the engaged girl, Elise L., was only three
+months younger than she herself who had been married ten
+years. And the absurdity of taking three tickets for two people?
+She had nothing to say to this and refused to give any more
+associations or information whatever.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Nevertheless, her few associations have provided us with
+so much material that it is possible to discover the latent dream-thoughts.
+We are struck by the fact that in her statements
+references to time are noticeable at several points, which form
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_103'>103</span>a common basis for the different parts of this material. She
+had got the theatre tickets <em>too soon</em>, taken them in <em>too great a
+hurry</em>, so that she had to pay extra for them; in the same way
+her sister-in-law had <em>hurried</em> off to the jeweller’s with her money
+to buy an ornament with it, as though she might <em>miss something</em>.
+If the strongly emphasized points: “<em>too early</em>,” “<em>too great a
+hurry</em>,” are connected with the occasion for the dream (namely,
+the news that her friend, only three months <em>younger</em> than herself,
+had now found a good husband after all) and with the criticism
+expressed in her asperity about her sister-in-law, that it was
+<em>folly</em> to be so precipitate, there occurs to us almost spontaneously
+the following construction of the latent dream-thoughts,
+for which the manifest dream is a highly-distorted substitute:</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“It was really <em>foolish</em> of me to be in such a hurry to marry!
+Elise’s example shows me that I too could have found a husband
+later on.” (The over-haste is represented by her own conduct
+in buying the tickets and that of her sister-in-law in buying the
+jewellery. Going to the theatre is substituted for getting
+married.) This would be the main thought; perhaps we may
+go on, though with less certainty because the analysis in these
+passages ought not to be unsupported by statements of the
+dreamer: “And I might have had one a hundred times better
+for the money!” (150 florins is 100 times more than one florin
+and a half.) If we may substitute the dowry for the money,
+it would mean that the husband is bought with the dowry:
+both the jewellery and the bad seats would stand for the husband.
+It would be still more desirable if we could see some connection
+between the element “three tickets” and a husband; but our
+knowledge does not as yet extend to this. We have only found
+out that the dream expresses <em>depreciation</em> of her own husband
+and regret at having <em>married so early</em>.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In my opinion we shall be more surprised and confused by
+the result of this our first attempt at dream-interpretation than
+satisfied with it. Too many ideas force themselves upon us
+at once, more than as yet we can master. We see already that
+we shall not come to the end of what the interpretation of this
+dream can teach us. Let us immediately single out those points
+in which we can definitely see some new knowledge.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In the first place: we note that in the latent thoughts the
+chief emphasis falls upon the element of hurry; in the manifest
+dream that is exactly a feature about which we find nothing.
+Without analysis we could have had no suspicion that this
+thought entered in at all. It seems possible, therefore, that
+precisely the main point round which the unconscious thoughts
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_104'>104</span>centre does not appear in the manifest dream at all. This fact
+must radically change the impression made upon us by the
+whole dream. In the second place: in the dream there is a
+nonsensical combination of ideas (three for one florin and a
+half); in the dream-thoughts we detect the opinion: “It was
+folly (to marry so early).” Can one reject the conclusion that
+this thought, “It was <em>folly</em>,” is represented by the introduction
+into the manifest dream of an <em>absurd</em> element? In
+the third place: comparison shows us that the relation between
+manifest and latent elements is no simple one, certainly not
+of such a kind that a manifest always replaces a latent element.
+The relation between the two is of the nature of a relation between
+two different groups, so that a manifest element can represent
+several latent thoughts or a latent thought be replaced by several
+manifest elements.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>As regards the meaning of the dream and the dreamer’s
+attitude towards it, here again we might find many surprising
+things to say. The lady certainly admitted the interpretation,
+but she wondered at it; she had not been aware that she
+had such disparaging thoughts of her husband; she did not
+even know why she should so disparage him. So there is still
+much that is incomprehensible about it. I really think that
+as yet we are not properly equipped for interpreting a dream
+and that we need further instruction and preparation first.</p>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_105'>105</span>
+ <h3 class='c002'><span class='c014'>EIGHTH LECTURE</span><br> CHILDREN’S DREAMS</h3>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c006'>We had the impression that we had advanced too rapidly; let
+us therefore retrace our steps a little. Before we made our
+last experiment in which we tried to overcome the difficulty of
+dream-distortion by means of our technique, we said that it
+would be best to circumvent it by confining our attention to
+dreams in which distortion is absent or occurs only to a very
+slight extent, if there are any such dreams. In doing this, we
+are again departing from the actual course of development of
+our knowledge; for in reality it was only after consistently
+applying our method of interpretation, and after exhaustive
+analysis of dreams in which distortion occurred, that we became
+aware of the existence of those in which it is lacking.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The dreams we are looking for are met with in children:
+short, clear, coherent, and easy to understand, they are free
+from ambiguity and yet are unmistakable dreams. You must
+not think, however, that all dreams in children are of this type.
+Distortion in dreams begins to appear very early in childhood,
+and there are on record dreams of children between five and
+eight years old which already show all the characteristics of
+the dreams of later life. But, if you confine yourselves to those
+occurring in the period between the dawn of recognizable mental
+activity and the fourth or fifth year of life, you will discover
+a series which we should characterize as infantile, and, in the
+later years of childhood, you may find single dreams of the same
+type; indeed, even in grown-up people under certain conditions
+dreams appear which in no way differ from the typically infantile.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now from these children’s dreams it is possible to obtain
+without any difficulty trustworthy information about the essential
+nature of dreams, which we hope will prove to be decisive and
+universally valid.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>1. In order to understand these dreams there is no need
+for any analysis nor for the employment of any technique. It
+is not necessary to question the child who relates his dream.
+But we must know something about his life; in every instance
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_106'>106</span>there is some experience from the previous day which explains
+the dream. The dream is the mind’s reaction in sleep to the
+experience of the previous day.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Let us consider some examples in order to base our further
+conclusions upon them:</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>(<em>a</em>) A boy of a year and ten months old had to present
+someone with a basket of cherries as a birthday gift. He plainly
+did it very unwillingly, although he had been promised some of
+them for himself. The next morning he told his dream:
+“Hermann eaten all the cherries.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>(<em>b</em>) A little girl of three and a quarter years went for the
+first time for a trip on the lake. When they came to land, she
+did not wish to leave the boat and cried bitterly; the time on
+the water had evidently gone too quickly for her. Next morning
+she said: “Last night I was sailing on the lake.” We may
+probably infer that this trip lasted longer.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>(<em>c</em>) A boy five and a quarter years old was taken on an excursion
+to the Escherntal near Hallstatt. He had heard that
+Hallstatt lay at the foot of the Dachstein and had shown great
+interest in that mountain. From the lodgings in Aussee there
+was a fine view of the Dachstein, and with a telescope it was
+possible to make out the Simony Hut on top. The child had
+repeatedly endeavoured to see the hut through the telescope,
+but nobody knew whether he had succeeded. The excursion
+began in a mood of joyful expectation. Whenever a new
+mountain came into sight, the little boy asked: “Is that the
+Dachstein?” Every time his question was answered in the
+negative he grew more out of spirits and presently became silent
+and refused to climb a little way up to the waterfall with the
+others. He was thought to be overtired, but the next morning
+he said quite happily: “Last night I dreamt that we were in
+the Simony Hut.” So it was with this expectation that he
+had taken part in the excursion. The only detail he gave was
+one he had heard before: “You have to climb up steps for six
+hours.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>These three dreams will be enough to give us all the information
+we need at this point.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>2. We see that these childhood dreams are not meaningless;
+they are complete, comprehensible mental acts. Remember the
+medical verdict about dreams, which I told you, and the comparison
+with unskilled fingers wandering over the keys of the
+piano. You cannot fail to notice how sharply this conception is
+contradicted by the children’s dreams I have quoted. Now it
+would surely be most extraordinary if a child were able to achieve
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_107'>107</span>the performance of complete mental acts during sleep, and the
+grown-up person in the same situation contented himself with
+spasmodic reactions. Besides, we have every reason for attributing
+better and deeper sleep to a child.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>3. In these dreams there is no distortion and therefore they
+need no interpretation: the manifest and the latent content is
+here identical. From this we conclude that <em>distortion is not
+essential to the nature of the dream</em>. I expect that this statement
+will take a weight off your minds. Nevertheless, closer consideration
+forces us to admit that even in these dreams distortion
+is present, though in a very slight degree, that there is a certain
+difference between the manifest content and the latent dream-thought.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>4. The child’s dream is a reaction to an experience of the
+previous day, which has left behind a regret, a longing, or an
+unsatisfied wish. <em>In the dream we have the direct, undisguised
+fulfilment of this wish.</em> Now consider our discussion as to the
+part played by the external or internal somatic stimuli as disturbers
+of sleep and begetters of dreams. We learnt certain
+quite definite facts on this point, but this explanation only held
+good in a small number of dreams. In these children’s dreams
+there is nothing to indicate the influence of such somatic stimuli;
+we can make no mistake about it, for the dreams are perfectly
+comprehensible and each can easily be grasped as a whole. But
+we need not on that account give up our notion of the stimulus
+as causing the dream. We can only ask why we forget from
+the outset that there are <em>mental</em> as well as bodily sleep-disturbing
+stimuli; surely we know that it is these which are mainly responsible
+for disturbing the sleep of the grown-up person, in that
+they hinder him from bringing about in himself the mental
+condition essential for sleep, i.e. the withdrawal of interest from
+the outside world. He wishes not to have any interruption in
+his life; he would prefer to continue working at whatever
+occupies him, and that is the reason why he does not sleep.
+The mental stimulus which disturbs sleep is therefore for a child
+the unsatisfied wish, and his reaction to this is a dream.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>5. This takes us by a very short step to a conclusion about
+the function of dreams. If dreams are the reaction to a mental
+stimulus their value must lie in effecting a discharge of the
+excitation so that the stimulus is removed and sleep can continue.
+We do not yet know how this discharge through the dream is
+effected dynamically, but we notice already that dreams are
+not disturbers of sleep (the accusation commonly brought against
+them), but are guardians and deliverers of it from disturbing
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_108'>108</span>influences. True, we are apt to think we should have slept
+better if we had not dreamed, but there we are wrong: the
+truth is that without the help of the dream we should not have
+slept at all, and we owe it to the dream that we slept as well
+as we did. It could not help disturbing us a little, just as a
+policeman often cannot avoid making a noise when driving off
+disturbers of the peace who would wake us.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>6. That dreams are brought about by a wish and that the
+content of the dream expresses this wish is one main characteristic
+of dreams. The other equally constant feature is that the dream
+does not merely give expression to a thought, but represents
+this wish as fulfilled, in the form of an hallucinatory experience.
+“I should like to sail on the lake,” runs the wish which gives
+rise to the dream; the content of the dream itself is: “I am
+sailing on the lake.” So that even in these simple dreams
+belonging to childhood there is still a difference between the
+latent and the manifest dream, and still a distortion of the
+latent dream-thought, <em>in the translation of the thought into an
+experience</em>. In interpreting a dream, we must first of all undo
+this process of alteration. If this is to be regarded as one
+of the most universal characteristics of all dreams, we then
+know how to translate the dream-fragment I quoted before:
+“I see my brother digging” does not mean “my brother <em>is</em>
+retrenching,” but “I wish my brother would retrench, he <em>is to</em>
+retrench.” Of the two universal characteristics here mentioned
+the second is obviously more likely to be acknowledged without
+opposition than the first. It is only by extensive investigations
+that we can make sure that what produces the dream must
+always be a <em>wish</em> and cannot sometimes be a preoccupation, a
+purpose, or reproach; but the other characteristic remains
+unaffected, namely, that the dream does not merely reproduce
+this stimulus, but, by a kind of living it through, removes it,
+sets it aside, relieves it.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>7. In connection with these characteristics of dreams we
+may take up again our comparison between dreams and errors.
+In the latter we distinguished between a disturbing tendency
+and one which is disturbed, the error being a compromise between
+the two. Dreams fall into the same category; the disturbed
+tendency can only, of course, be the tendency to sleep, while
+the disturbing tendency resolves itself into the mental stimulus
+which we may call the wish (clamouring for gratification), since
+at present we know of no other mental stimulus disturbing sleep.
+Here again the dream is the result of a compromise; we sleep,
+and yet we experience the satisfaction of a wish; we gratify
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_109'>109</span>a wish and at the same time continue to sleep. Each achieves
+part-success and part-failure.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>8. You will remember that at one point we hoped to find a
+path to an understanding of the problems presented by dreams
+in the fact that certain very transparent phantasy-formations
+are called “day-dreams.” Now these day-dreams are literally
+wish-fulfilments, fulfilments of ambitious or erotic wishes, which
+we recognize as such; they are, however, carried out in thought,
+and, however vividly imagined, they never take the form of
+hallucinatory experiences. Here, therefore, the less certain of
+the two main characteristics of the dream is retained, whereas
+the other, to which the condition of sleep is essential and which
+cannot be realized in waking life, is entirely lacking. So in
+language we find a hint that a wish-fulfilment is a main characteristic
+of dreams. And further, if the experience we have in
+dreams is only another form of imaginative representation, a
+form which becomes possible under the peculiar conditions of
+the sleeping state—“a nocturnal day-dream,” as we might call
+it—we understand at once how it is that the process of dream-formation
+can abrogate the stimulus operating at night and
+can bring gratification; for day-dreaming also is a mode of
+activity closely linked up with gratification, which is in fact the
+only reason why people practise it.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Again, there are other linguistic expressions, besides this,
+which imply the same thing. We are familiar with the proverbs:
+“The pig dreams of acorns and the goose of maize.” “What
+do chickens dream of? Of millet.” The proverb, you see,
+goes even lower in the scale than we do, beyond the child to the
+animal, and asserts that the content of dreams is the satisfaction
+of a want. And there are many phrases which seem to point
+to the same thing: we say “as beautiful as a dream.” “I
+should never have dreamt of such a thing.” “I never imagined
+that in my wildest dreams.” Here colloquial speech is clearly
+partial in its judgement. Of course there are also anxiety-dreams,
+and dreams the content of which is painful or indifferent, but
+these have not given rise to any special phrases. We do indeed
+speak of “bad” dreams, but by a “dream” pure and simple
+common usage always understands some sort of exquisite wish-fulfilment.
+Nor is there any proverb which attempts to assert
+that pigs or geese dream of being slaughtered!</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It is, of course, inconceivable that this wish-fulfilling character
+of dreams should have escaped the notice of writers on the
+subject. On the contrary, they have very often remarked upon
+it; but it has not occurred to any of them to recognize this characteristic
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_110'>110</span>as universal, and to take it as the key to the explanation
+of dreams. We can easily imagine what may have deterred
+them, and later we will discuss the question.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now see how much information we have gained, and that
+with hardly any trouble, from our study of children’s dreams!
+We have learnt that the function of dreams is to protect sleep;
+that they arise out of two conflicting tendencies, of which the
+one, the desire for sleep, remains constant, whilst the other
+endeavours to satisfy some mental stimulus; that dreams are
+proved to be mental acts, rich in meaning; that they have two
+main characteristics, i.e., they are wish-fulfilments and hallucinatory
+experiences. And meanwhile we could almost have
+forgotten that we were studying psycho-analysis. Apart from
+the connection we have made between dreams and errors our
+work has not borne any specific stamp. Any psychologist
+knowing nothing of the assumptions of psycho-analysis could
+have given this explanation of children’s dreams. Why has
+no one done so?</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>If only all dreams were of the infantile type the problem
+would be solved and our task already achieved, and that without
+questioning the dreamer, referring to the unconscious or
+having recourse to the process of free association. Clearly it
+is in this direction that we must continue our work. We have
+already repeatedly found that characteristics alleged to be
+universally valid have afterwards proved to hold good only for
+a certain kind and a limited number of dreams. So the question
+we now have to decide is whether the common characteristics
+revealed by children’s dreams are any more stable than these,
+and whether they hold also for those dreams whose meaning is
+not obvious and in whose manifest content we can recognize
+no reference to a wish remaining from the day before. Our
+idea is that these other dreams have undergone a good deal of
+distortion and on that account we must refrain from immediate
+judgement. We suspect too that to unravel this distortion we
+shall need the help of psycho-analytic technique, which we
+could dispense with while learning, as we have just now done,
+the meaning of children’s dreams.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>There is yet one other class of dreams at least in which
+no distortion is present and which, like children’s dreams, we
+easily recognize to be wish-fulfilments. These are dreams which
+are occasioned all through life by imperative physical needs—hunger,
+thirst, sexual desire—and are wish-fulfilments in the
+sense of being reactions to internal somatic stimuli. Thus I
+have on record the dream of a little girl, one year and seven
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_111'>111</span>months old, which consisted of a kind of menu, together with
+her name (Anna F&#160;..., strawberries, bilberries, egg, pap), the
+dream being a reaction to a day of fasting, enforced on account
+of indigestion due to eating the fruit which appeared twice in
+the dream. At the same time her grandmother—their combined
+ages totalled seventy—was obliged, owing to a floating kidney,
+to go without food for a day and dreamt that night that she
+had been invited out and had had the most tempting delicacies
+set before her. Observations on prisoners who are left to go
+hungry, and on people who suffer privations whilst travelling
+or on expeditions, show that in these circumstances they regularly
+dream about the satisfaction of their wants. Thus Otto Nordenskjöld
+in his book on the Antarctic (1904) tells us of the band
+of men in whose company he spent the winter (Vol. I, p. 336):
+“Our dreams showed very clearly the direction our thoughts
+were taking. Never had we dreamt so frequently and so vividly
+as at that time. Even those of our comrades who usually dreamt
+but rarely had now long stories to tell in the mornings when we
+exchanged our latest experiences in this realm of phantasy.
+All the dreams were about that outside world now so far away,
+but often they included a reference to our condition at the
+time&#160;... eating and drinking were, incidentally, the pivot on
+which our dreams most often turned. One of us, who was
+particularly good at going out to large dinners in his sleep, was
+delighted when he could tell us in the morning that he had
+had a three-course dinner. Another dreamt of tobacco, whole
+mountains of tobacco; another of a ship which came full sail
+over the water, at last clear of ice. Yet another dream deserves
+mention: the postman came with the letters and gave a long
+explanation of why they were so late; he said he had made a
+mistake in delivering them, and had had great trouble in
+getting them back again. Of course, things even more impossible
+occupied our minds in sleep, but the lack of imagination in
+almost all the dreams which I dreamt myself or heard the others
+tell was quite striking. It would certainly be of great psychological
+interest if we had a record of all these dreams. You can
+imagine how we longed for sleep, when it offered each one of
+us all that he most eagerly desired.” Another quotation, this
+time from Du Prel: “Mungo Park, when nearly dying of thirst
+on a journey in Africa, dreamt continually of the well-watered
+hills and valleys of his home. So Trenck, tormented with hunger
+in the redoubt at Magdebourg, saw himself in his dreams surrounded
+by sumptuous meals; and George Back, who took part
+in Franklin’s first expedition, when on the point of dying of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_112'>112</span>hunger owing to their terrible privations, dreamt regularly of
+abundant food to eat.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Anyone who has made himself thirsty at night by eating
+highly-seasoned dishes at supper is likely to dream of drinking.
+Of course it is not possible to relieve acute hunger or thirst by
+dreaming; in that case we awake thirsty and are obliged to
+drink real water. The service of the dream is here of little
+practical account, but it is none the less clear that it was called
+up for the purpose of protecting sleep from the stimulus impelling
+us to wake up and act. Where the intensity of the desire is
+less, ‘satisfaction’-dreams do often answer the purpose.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In the same way, when the stimulus is that of sexual desire
+the dream provides satisfaction, but of a kind which shows
+peculiarities worthy of mention. Since it is a characteristic of
+the sexual impulse that it is a degree less dependent on its object
+than are hunger and thirst, the satisfaction in a pollution-dream
+can be real; and, in consequence of certain difficulties in the
+relation to the object (which will be discussed later), it particularly
+often happens that the real satisfaction is yet connected
+with a vague or distorted dream-content. This peculiarity of
+pollution-dreams makes them, as O. Rank has observed, suitable
+objects for the study of dream-distortion. Moreover, with adults,
+dreams of desire usually contain besides the satisfaction something
+else, springing from a purely mental source and requiring interpretation
+if it is to be understood.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>We do not maintain, by the way, that wish-fulfilment dreams
+of the infantile type occur in adults solely as reactions to the
+imperative desires I have mentioned. We are equally familiar
+with short clear dreams of this type, occasioned by certain
+dominating situations and unquestionably produced by mental
+stimuli. For example, there are ‘impatience’-dreams in which
+someone making preparations for a journey, for a theatrical
+performance in which he is specially interested, or for a lecture
+or a visit, has his expectations prematurely realized in a dream,
+and finds himself the night before the actual experience already
+at his journey’s end, at the theatre, or talking to the friend he
+is going to visit. Or again, there is the ‘comfort’-dream,
+rightly so-called, in which someone who wants to go on sleeping
+dreams that he has already got up, that he is washing, or is
+at school, while all the time he is really continuing his sleep,
+meaning that he would rather dream of getting up than do so
+in reality. In these dreams the desire for sleep, which we have
+recognized as regularly participating in dream-formation, expresses
+itself plainly and appears as their actual originator.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_113'>113</span>The need for sleep ranks itself quite rightly with the other great
+physical needs.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I would refer you at this point to the reproduction of a picture
+by Schwind in the Schack Gallery at Munich<a id='r30'></a><a href='#f30' class='c015'><sup>[30]</sup></a> and would ask
+you to notice how correctly the artist has realized the way in
+which a dream arises out of a dominating situation. The picture
+is called <cite>The Prisoner’s Dream</cite>, and the subject of the dream
+must undoubtedly be his escape. It is a happy thought that
+the prisoner is to escape by the window, for it is through the
+window that the ray of light has entered and roused him from
+sleep. The gnomes standing one above the other no doubt
+represent the successive positions he would have to assume in
+climbing up to the window; and, if I am not mistaken and do
+not attribute too much intentional design to the artist, the
+features of the gnome at the top, who is filing the grating through
+(the very thing the prisoner himself would like to do), resemble
+the man’s own.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I have said that in all dreams, other than those of children
+and such as conform to the infantile type, we encounter the
+obstacle of distortion. We cannot immediately say whether
+they too are wish-fulfilments, as we are inclined to suppose, nor
+can we guess from their manifest content in what mental stimulus
+they originate, or prove that they, like the others, endeavour
+to remove or relieve the stimulus. They must, in fact, be
+interpreted, i.e. translated; the process of distortion must be
+reversed, and the manifest content replaced by the latent thought,
+before we can make any definite pronouncement whether what
+we have found out about infantile dreams may claim to hold
+good for all dreams alike.</p>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_114'>114</span>
+ <h3 class='c002'><span class='c014'>NINTH LECTURE</span><br> THE DREAM-CENSORSHIP</h3>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c006'>Our study of children’s dreams has taught us how dreams originate,
+what their essential character is, and what their function.
+Dreams are the means of removing, by hallucinatory satisfaction,
+mental stimuli that disturb sleep. It is true that with the dreams
+of adults we have been able to explain one group only, those
+which we termed dreams of the infantile type. We do not
+yet know how it may be with the others, neither do we understand
+them. The result we have arrived at already is one, however, of
+which the significance is not to be under-estimated. Every time
+that we fully understand a dream it proves to be a wish-fulfilment;
+and this coincidence cannot be accidental or unimportant.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Dreams of another type are assumed by us to be distorted
+substitutes for an unknown content, which first of all has to be
+traced; we have various grounds for this assumption, amongst
+others the analogy to our conception of errors. Our next task
+is to investigate and understand this <em>dream-distortion</em>.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It is dream-distortion which makes dreams seem strange
+and incomprehensible. There are several things we want to
+know about it: first, whence it comes (its dynamics), secondly,
+what it does, and finally, how it does it. Further, we can say
+that distortion is the production of the <em>dream-work</em>. Let us
+describe the dream-work and trace out the forces in it.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now let me tell you a dream recorded by a lady well-known
+in psycho-analytical circles<a id='r31'></a><a href='#f31' class='c015'><sup>[31]</sup></a>, who said that the dreamer was an
+elderly woman, highly cultivated and held in great esteem.
+The dream was not analysed and our informant observed that
+for psycho-analysts it needed no interpreting. Nor did the
+dreamer herself interpret it, but she criticized it and condemned
+it in such a way as though she knew what it meant. “Imagine,”
+she said, “such abominable nonsense being dreamt by a woman of
+fifty, whose only thought day and night is concern for her child.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I will now tell you the dream, which is about “love service
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_115'>115</span>in war-time.”<a id='r32'></a><a href='#f32' class='c015'><sup>[32]</sup></a> ‘She went to the First Military Hospital and
+said to the sentinel at the gate that she must speak to the physician-in-chief
+(giving a name which she did not know), as she wished
+to offer herself for service in the hospital. In saying this, she
+emphasized the word service in such a way that the sergeant at
+once perceived that she was speaking of “love service.” As
+she was an old lady, he let her pass after some hesitation, but
+instead of finding the chief physician, she came to a large gloomy
+room, where a number of officers and army doctors were standing
+or sitting around a long table. She turned to a staff doctor
+and told him her proposal; he soon understood her meaning.
+The words she said in her dream were: “I and countless
+other women and girls of Vienna are ready for the soldiers,
+officers or men, to....” This ended in a murmur. She
+saw, however, by the half-embarrassed, half-malicious expressions
+of the officers that all of them grasped her meaning. The lady
+continued: “I know our decision sounds odd, but we are in
+bitter earnest. The soldier on the battlefield is not asked whether
+he wishes to die or not.” There followed a minute of painful
+silence; then the staff doctor put his arm round her waist and
+said: “Madam, supposing it really came to this, that&#160;...
+(murmur.)” She withdrew herself from his arm, thinking: “They
+are all alike,” and replied: “Good heavens, I am an old woman
+and perhaps it won’t happen to me. And one condition must
+be observed: age must be taken into account, so that an
+old woman and a young lad may not&#160;... (murmur); that
+would be horrible.” The staff doctor said: “I quite
+understand”; but some of the officers, amongst them one
+who as a young man had made love to her, laughed loudly,
+and the lady asked to be taken to the physician-in-chief, whom
+she knew, so that everything might be put straight. It then
+struck her, to her great consternation, that she did not know
+his name. The staff doctor, however, with the utmost respect
+and courtesy, showed her the way to the second floor, up a very
+narrow iron spiral staircase leading direct from the room where
+they were to the upper storeys. As she went up, she heard an
+officer say: “That is a tremendous decision, no matter whether
+she is young or old; all honour to her!” With the feeling that
+she was simply doing her duty, she went up an endless staircase.’</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This dream was repeated twice within a few weeks, with
+alterations here and there which, as the lady remarked, were
+quite unimportant and entirely meaningless.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_116'>116</span>The way in which this dream progresses corresponds to the
+course of a day-dream; there are only a few places where an
+interruption occurs, and many individual points in its content
+might have been cleared up by enquiry: this, however, as you
+know, was not undertaken. But the most striking and to us
+the most interesting thing about it is the occurrence of many
+gaps, not in the recollection, but in the content. In three places
+the latter is, as it were, blotted out; where these gaps occur
+the speeches are interrupted by a <em>murmur</em>. As we did not analyse
+the dream, we have, strictly speaking, no right to say anything
+about its meaning; but there are certain indications from which
+we may draw conclusions, e.g. the words “love service”; and,
+above all, the broken speeches immediately preceding the
+murmurs require completion of a kind which admits of only
+one construction. If we do so complete them a phantasy results,
+in which the content is that the dreamer is ready at the call
+of duty to offer herself to gratify the sexual needs of the troops,
+irrespective of rank. This is certainly shocking, a model of a
+shamelessly libidinous phantasy, but—the dream says nothing
+about this. Just where the context demands this confession,
+there is in the manifest dream an indistinct murmur: something
+has been lost or suppressed.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I hope you recognize how obvious is the inference that it is
+just the shocking nature of these passages which has led to their
+suppression. Now where will you find a parallel to what has
+taken place here? In these times you have not far to seek.
+Take up any political paper and you will find that here and there in
+the text something is omitted and in its place the blank white
+of the paper meets your eye: you know that this is the work
+of the press censor. Where these blank spaces occur, there
+originally stood something of which the authorities at the censorship
+disapproved and which has been deleted on that account.
+You probably think it a pity, for that must have been the most
+interesting part, the “cream” of the news.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>On other occasions the censorship has not dealt with the
+sentence in its completed form; for the writer, foreseeing which
+passages were likely to be objected to by the censor, has forestalled
+him by softening them down, making some slight modification
+or contenting himself with hints and allusions to what
+he really wants to write. In this case there are no blanks, but
+from the roundabout and obscure mode of expression you can
+detect the fact that, at the time of writing, the author had the
+censorship in mind.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now keeping to this parallel we say that those speeches in
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_117'>117</span>the dream which were omitted or disguised by a murmur have
+also been sacrificed to some form of censorship. We actually
+use the term <span class='fss'>DREAM-CENSORSHIP</span>, and ascribe part of the distortion
+to its agency. Wherever there are gaps in the manifest
+dream we know that the censorship is responsible; and indeed
+we should go further and recognize that wherever, amongst other
+more clearly-defined elements, one appears which is fainter, more
+indefinite or more dubious in recollection, it is evidence of the
+work of the censorship. It is, however, seldom that it takes
+a form so undisguised, so naïve, as we might say, as it does in
+the case of the dream about “love service;” far more often
+the censorship makes itself felt in the second way I mentioned:
+by effecting modifications, hints, and allusions in place of the
+true meaning.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>There is a third way in which the dream-censorship
+works, to which the ordinances of the Press censorship supply
+no parallel; but it happens that I can demonstrate to you
+this particular mode of activity on the part of the dream-censorship
+in the only dream hitherto analysed by us. You
+will remember the dream of the “three bad theatre tickets,
+costing one florin and a half.” In the latent thoughts underlying
+this dream, the element “too great a hurry, too early”
+was in the foreground; the meaning was: “It was folly to
+marry so <em>early</em>, it was foolish also to take the tickets so <em>early</em>,
+it was ridiculous of the sister-in-law to spend her money so <em>hurriedly</em>
+on a piece of jewellery.” Nothing of this central element of
+the dream-thoughts appeared in the manifest content, where
+everything was focussed on going to the theatre and taking
+tickets. By this displacement of the accent and regrouping
+of the dream-elements, the manifest content was made so unlike
+the latent thoughts that nobody would suspect the presence of
+the latter behind the former. This <em>displacement of accent</em> is one
+of the principal means employed in distortion, and it is this
+which gives the dream that character of strangeness which makes
+the dreamer himself reluctant to recognize it as the product
+of his own mind.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Omission, modification, regrouping of material—these then
+are the modes of the dream-censorship’s activity and the means
+employed in distortion. The censorship itself is the originator,
+or one of the originators, of distortion, the subject of our present
+enquiry. Modification and alteration in arrangement are commonly
+included under the term ‘<em>displacement</em>.’</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>After these remarks on the activities of the dream-censorship,
+let us turn our attention to its dynamics. I hope you are not
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_118'>118</span>taking the expression “censorship” in too anthropomorphic
+a sense, picturing to yourselves the censor as a stern little manikin
+or a spirit, who lives in a little chamber of the brain and
+there discharges the duties of his office; and neither must you
+localize it too exactly, so that you imagine a “brain-centre”
+whence there emanates a censorial influence, liable to cease with
+the injury or disappearance of that centre. For the present
+we may regard it merely as a useful term by which to express
+a dynamic relationship. This need not hinder us from asking
+what sort of tendencies exercise this influence and is it exercised
+upon; and further, we must not be surprised to discover that
+we have already come across the censorship, perhaps without
+recognizing it.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Indeed this has actually happened. Remember a surprising
+experience we had when we began to apply our method of free
+association: we discovered that our efforts to penetrate from
+the dream-element to the unconscious thought proper for which
+the former is a substitute encountered a certain <em>resistance</em>. The
+strength of this resistance, we said, varies, being sometimes
+enormous and at other times very slight. In the latter case
+we need only a few connecting-links for the work of interpretation;
+but where there is great resistance we are compelled to go through
+long chains of associations, which carry us far from the initial
+idea, and on the way we have to overcome all the difficulties
+of professedly critical objections to associations arising. That
+which we encountered as resistance in the work of interpretation
+we now meet again as the censorship in the dream-work:
+the resistance is simply the censorship objectified; it proves to
+us that the power of the censorship is not exhausted in effecting
+distortion, being thereby extinguished, but that the censorship
+remains as a permanent institution, the object of which is to
+maintain the distortion when once it has been achieved. Moreover,
+just as the strength of the resistance encountered during
+interpretation varies with each element, so too the degree of
+distortion effected by the censorship is different for each element
+of a whole dream. A comparison of the manifest and the latent
+dream shows that certain latent elements are completely eliminated,
+others more or less modified, and others again appear
+in the manifest dream-content unaltered or perhaps even
+intensified.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Our purpose, however, was to find out which are the tendencies
+exercising the censorship and upon which tendencies it is exercised.
+Now this question, which is fundamental for the understanding
+of dreams and perhaps of human life altogether, is easy to answer
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_119'>119</span>when we survey the series of dreams which we have succeeded
+in interpreting. The tendencies which exercise the censorship
+are those which are acknowledged by the waking judgement
+of the dreamer and with which he feels himself to be at one.
+You may be sure that when you repudiate any correctly-found
+interpretation of a dream of your own, you do so from the same
+motives as cause the censorship to be exercised and distortion
+effected, and make interpretation necessary. Consider the dream
+of our lady of fifty: her dream, although it had not been interpreted,
+struck her as shocking and she would have been even
+more outraged if Dr. von Hug-Hellmuth had told her something
+of its unmistakable meaning; it was just this attitude of condemnation
+which caused the offensive passages in the dream to be
+replaced by a murmur.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Those tendencies against which the dream-censorship is
+directed must next be described from the point of view of this
+inner critical standard. When we do this, we can only say that
+they are invariably of an objectionable nature, offensive from
+the ethical, æsthetic or social point of view, things about which
+we do not dare to think at all, or think of only with abhorrence.
+Above all are these censored wishes, which in dreams are expressed
+in a distorted fashion, manifestations of a boundless and ruthless
+egoism; for the dreamer’s own ego makes its appearance in
+every dream, and plays the principal part, even if it knows how
+to disguise itself completely as far as the manifest content is
+concerned. This <i><span lang="la">sacro egoismo</span></i> of dreams is certainly not
+unconnected with the attitude of mind essential to sleep: the
+withdrawal of interest from the whole outside world.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The ego which has discarded all ethical bonds feels itself at
+one with all the demands of the sexual impulse, those which
+have long been condemned by our æsthetic training and those
+which are contrary to all the restraints imposed by morality.
+The striving for pleasure—the libido, as we say,—chooses its
+objects unchecked by any inhibition, preferring indeed those
+which are forbidden: not merely the wife of another man, but,
+above all, the incestuous objects of choice which by common
+consent humanity holds sacred—the mother and the sister of
+men, the father and the brother of women. (Even the dream
+of our fifty-year-old lady is an incestuous one, the libido being
+unmistakably directed towards the son.) Desires which we
+believe alien to human nature show themselves powerful enough
+to give rise to dreams. Hate, too, rages unrestrainedly; wishes
+for revenge, and death-wishes, against those who in life are
+nearest and dearest—parents, brothers and sisters, husband or
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_120'>120</span>wife, the dreamer’s own children—are by no means uncommon.
+These censored wishes seem to rise up from a veritable hell; when
+we know their meaning, it seems to us in our waking moments
+as if no censorship of them could be severe enough. Dreams
+themselves, however, are not to blame for this evil content;
+you surely have not forgotten that their harmless, nay, useful,
+function is to protect sleep from disturbance. Depravity does
+not lie in the nature of dreams; in fact, you know that there
+are dreams which can be recognized as gratifying justifiable
+desires and urgent bodily needs. It is true that there is no distortion
+in these dreams, but then there is no need for it, they
+can perform their function without offending the ethical and
+æsthetic tendencies of the ego. Remember, too, that the degree
+of distortion is proportionate to two factors: on the one hand,
+the more shocking the wish that must be censored, the greater
+will be the distortion; but it is also great in proportion as the
+demands of the censorship are severe. Hence in a strictly brought
+up and prudish young girl, a rigid censorship will distort dream-excitations
+which we medical men would have recognized as
+permissible and harmless libidinous desires, and which the dreamer
+herself would judge in the same way ten years later.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Besides, we are still not nearly far enough advanced to allow
+ourselves to be outraged at the result of our work of interpretation.
+I think we still do not understand it properly; but first of all
+it is incumbent upon us to secure it against certain possible
+attacks. It is not at all difficult to detect weak points in it.
+Our interpretations were based on hypotheses which we adopted
+earlier: that there really is some meaning in dreams; that
+the idea of mental processes being unconscious for a time, which
+was first arrived at through hypnotic sleep, may be applied also
+to normal sleep; and that all associations are subject to determination.
+Now if, reasoning from these hypotheses, we had
+obtained plausible results in our dream-interpretation we should
+have been justified in concluding that these hypotheses were
+correct. But what if these discoveries are of the kind I have
+described? In that case, surely it seems natural to say: “These
+results are impossible, absurd, at the very least highly improbable,
+so there must have been something wrong about the
+hypotheses. Either the dream is after all not a mental phenomenon,
+or there is nothing which is unconscious in our normal
+condition, or there is a flaw somewhere in our technique. Is
+it not simpler and more satisfactory to assume this than to
+accept all the abominable conclusions which we profess to have
+deduced from our hypotheses?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_121'>121</span>Both! it is both simpler and more satisfactory, but not
+on that account necessarily more correct. Let us give ourselves
+time: the matter is not yet ripe for judgement. First of all,
+we can make the case against our interpretations even stronger.
+The fact that our results are so unpleasant and repellent would
+not perhaps weigh so very heavily with us; a stronger argument
+is the emphatic and well-grounded repudiation by dreamers of
+the wish-tendencies which we try to foist upon them after interpretating
+their dreams. “What?” says one, “You want to
+prove to me from my dream that I grudge the money I have spent
+on my sister’s dowry and my brother’s education? But it is out
+of the question; I spend my whole time working for my brothers
+and sisters and my only interest in life is to do my duty by them,
+as, being the eldest, I promised our dead mother I would.”
+Or a woman says: “I am supposed to wish that my husband
+were dead? Really that is outrageous nonsense! Not only
+is our married life very happy, though perhaps you won’t believe
+that, but if he died I should lose everything I possess in the
+world.” Or someone else will reply: “Do you mean to suggest
+that I entertain sexual desires towards my sister? The thing
+is ludicrous; she is nothing to me; we get on badly with one
+another, and for years I have not exchanged a word with her.”
+We still might not be much impressed if these dreamers neither
+admitted nor denied the tendencies attributed to them; we
+might say that these are just the things of which they are quite
+unconscious. But when they detect in their own minds the exact
+opposite of such a wish as is interpreted to them, and when they
+can prove to us by their whole conduct in life that the contrary
+desire predominates, surely we must be nonplussed. Is it not
+about time now for us to discard our whole work of dream-interpretation
+as something which has led to a <em>reductio ad absurdum</em>?</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>No, not even now. Even this stronger argument falls to
+pieces when subjected to a critical attack. Assuming that
+unconscious tendencies do exist in mental life, the fact that the
+opposite tendencies predominate in conscious life goes to prove
+nothing. Perhaps there is room in the mind for opposite tendencies,
+for contradictions, existing side by side; indeed, possibly
+the very predominance of the one tendency conditions the unconscious
+nature of the opposite. So the first objections raised
+only amount to the statement that the results of dream-interpretation
+are not simple and are very disagreeable. To the first
+charge we may reply that, however much enamoured of simplicity
+you may be, you cannot thereby solve one of the problems
+of dreams; you have to make up your mind at the outset to
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_122'>122</span>accept the fact of complicated relations. And, as regards the
+second point, you are manifestly wrong in taking the fact that
+something pleases or repels yourself as the motive for a scientific
+judgement. What does it matter if you do find the results of
+dream-interpretation unpleasant, or even mortifying and repulsive?
+<i><span lang="fr">Ça n’empêche pas d’exister</span></i>—as I, when a young doctor, heard
+my chief, Charcot, say in a similar case. We must be humble
+and put sympathies and antipathies honourably in the background
+if we would learn to know reality in this world. If a physicist
+could prove to you that organic life on the earth was bound to
+become extinct before long, would you venture to say to him
+also: “That cannot be so; I dislike the prospect too much.”
+I think you would say nothing, until another physicist came
+along and convicted the first of a mistake in his premises or his
+calculations. If you repudiate whatever is distasteful to you,
+you are repeating the mechanism of a dream structure rather
+than understanding and mastering it.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Perhaps, then, you will undertake to overlook the offensive
+nature of the censored dream-wishes and will fall back upon
+the argument that it is surely very improbable that we ought
+to concede so large a part in the human constitution to what is
+evil. But do your own experiences justify you in this statement?
+I will say nothing of how you may appear in your own eyes, but
+have you met with so much goodwill in your superiors and rivals,
+so much chivalry in your enemies and so little envy amongst
+your acquaintances, that you feel it incumbent on you to protest
+against the idea of the part played by egoistic baseness in human
+nature? Do you not know how uncontrolled and unreliable
+the average human being is in all that concerns sexual life?
+Or are you ignorant of the fact that all the excesses and aberrations
+of which we dream at night are crimes actually committed
+every day by men who are wide awake? What does psycho-analysis
+do in this connection but confirm the old saying of
+Plato that the good are those who content themselves with
+dreaming of what others, the wicked, actually do?</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>And now look away from individuals to the great war still
+devastating Europe: think of the colossal brutality, cruelty and
+mendacity which is now allowed to spread itself over the civilized
+world. Do you really believe that a handful of unprincipled
+place-hunters and corrupters of men would have succeeded in
+letting loose all this latent evil, if the millions of their followers
+were not also guilty? Will you venture, even in these circumstances,
+to break a lance for the exclusion of evil from the mental
+constitution of humanity?</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_123'>123</span>You will accuse me of taking a one-sided view of war, and
+tell me that it has also called out all that is finest and most noble
+in mankind, heroism, self-sacrifice, and public spirit. That is
+true; but do not now commit the injustice, from which psycho-analysis
+has so often suffered, of reproaching it that it denies one
+thing because it affirms another. It is no part of our intention
+to deny the nobility in human nature, nor have we ever done
+anything to disparage its value. On the contrary, I show you
+not only the evil wishes which are censored but also the censorship
+which suppresses them and makes them unrecognizable. We
+dwell upon the evil in human beings with the greater emphasis
+only because others deny it, thereby making the mental life of
+mankind not indeed better, but incomprehensible. If we give
+up the one-sided ethical valuation then, we are sure to find
+the truer formula for the relation of evil to good in human nature.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Here the matter rests. We need not give up the results of
+our work of dream-interpretation, even though we cannot fail
+to find them strange. Perhaps later we shall be able to come
+nearer to understanding them by another path. For the present
+let us hold fast to this: dream-distortion is due to the censorship
+exercised, by certain recognized tendencies of the ego, over desires
+of an offensive character which stir in us at night during sleep.
+Obviously, when we ask ourselves why it is just at night that
+they appear and what is the origin of these reprehensible wishes,
+we find that there is still much to investigate and many questions
+to answer.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It would, however, be wrong if we neglected to give due
+prominence at this point to another result of these investigations.
+The dream-wishes which would disturb our sleep are unknown
+to us; we first learn about them by dream-interpretation; they
+are therefore to be designated “unconscious at the moment”
+in the sense in which we have used the term. But we must
+recognize that they are also more than unconscious at the moment;
+for the dreamer denies them, as we have so frequently found,
+even after he has learnt of them through the interpretation of
+his dream. Here we have a repetition of the case which we first
+met with when interpreting the slip of the tongue “hiccough,”
+where the after-dinner speaker indignantly assured us that
+neither then nor at any time had he been conscious of any feeling
+of disrespect towards his chief. We ventured even then to
+doubt the value of this assertion and assumed instead that the
+speaker was permanently ignorant of the existence of this feeling
+within him. We meet with the same situation every time we
+interpret a dream in which there is a high degree of distortion,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_124'>124</span>and this lends an added significance to our conception. We are
+now prepared to assume that there are processes and tendencies
+in mental life, of which we know nothing; have known nothing;
+have, for a very long time, perhaps even never, known anything
+about at all. This gives the term <em>unconscious</em> a fresh meaning
+for us: the qualification “at the moment” or “temporary”
+is seen to be no essential attribute, the term may also mean
+<em>permanently unconscious</em>, not merely “latent at the moment.”
+You see that later on we shall have to discuss this point further.</p>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_125'>125</span>
+ <h3 class='c002'><span class='c014'>TENTH LECTURE</span><br> SYMBOLISM IN DREAMS</h3>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c006'>We have found out that the distortion in dreams which hinders
+our understanding of them is due to the activities of a censorship,
+directed against the unacceptable, unconscious wish-impulses.
+But of course we have not asserted that the censorship is the
+only factor responsible for the distortion, and as a matter of
+fact a further study of dreams leads to the discovery that there
+are yet other causes contributing to this effect; that is as much
+as to say, if the censorship were eliminated we should nevertheless
+be unable to understand dreams, nor would the manifest dream
+be identical with the latent dream-thoughts.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This other cause of the obscurity of dreams, this additional
+contribution to distortion, is revealed by our becoming aware
+of a gap in our technique. I have already admitted to you
+that there are occasions when persons being analysed really have
+no associations to single elements in their dreams. To be sure,
+this does not happen as often as they declare that it does; in
+very many instances the association may yet be elicited by
+perseverance; but still there remain a certain number of cases
+where association fails altogether or, if something is finally extorted,
+it is not what we need. If this happens during psycho-analytic
+treatment it has a certain significance which does not concern
+us here; but it also occurs in the course of interpretation of
+dreams in normal people, or when we are interpreting our own.
+When we are convinced in such circumstances that no amount
+of pressing is of any use, we finally discover that this unwelcome
+contingency regularly presents itself where special dream-elements
+are in question; and we begin to recognize the operation
+of some new principle, whereas at first we thought we had
+only come across an exceptional case in which our technique
+had failed.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In this way it comes about that we try to interpret these
+“silent” elements, and attempt to translate them by drawing
+upon our own resources. It cannot fail to strike us that we
+arrive at a satisfactory meaning in every instance in which we
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_126'>126</span>venture on this substitution, whereas the dream remains meaningless
+and disconnected as long as we do not resolve to use this
+method. The accumulation of many exactly similar instances
+then affords us the required certainty, our experiment having
+been tried at first with considerable diffidence.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I am presenting all this somewhat in outline, but that is
+surely allowable for purposes of instruction, nor is it falsified by
+so doing, but merely made simpler.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>We arrive in this way at constant translations for a series
+of dream-elements, just as in popular books on dreams we find
+such translations for everything that occurs in dreams. You
+will not have forgotten that when we employ the method of
+free association such constant substitutions for dream-elements
+never make their appearance.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now you will at once say that this mode of interpretation
+seems to you far more uncertain and open to criticism than
+even the former method of free association. But there is still
+something more to be said: when we have collected from actual
+experience a sufficient number of such constant translations,
+we eventually realize that we could actually have filled in these
+portions of the interpretation from our own knowledge, and that
+they really could have been understood without using the dreamer’s
+associations. How it is that we are bound to know their meaning
+is a matter which will be dealt with in the second half of our
+discussion.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>We call a constant relation of this kind between a dream-element and its translation a <em>symbolic</em> one, and the dream-element
+itself a <em>symbol</em> of the unconscious dream-thought. You will
+remember that some time ago, when we were examining the
+different relations which may exist between dream-elements
+and the thoughts proper underlying them, I distinguished three
+relations: substitution of the part for the whole, allusion, and
+imagery. I told you then that there was a fourth possible relation,
+but I did not tell you what it was. This fourth relation
+is the symbolic, which I am now introducing; there are connected
+with it certain very interesting points for discussion,
+to which we will turn attention before setting forth our special
+observations on this subject. Symbolism is perhaps the most
+remarkable part of our theory of dreams.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>First of all: since the relation between a symbol and the
+idea symbolized is an invariable one, the latter being as it were
+a translation of the former, symbolism does in some measure
+realize the ideal of both ancient and popular dream-interpretation,
+one from which we have moved very far in our technique. Symbols
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_127'>127</span>make it possible for us in certain circumstances to interpret a
+dream without questioning the dreamer, who indeed in any case
+can tell us nothing about the symbols. If the symbols commonly
+appearing in dreams are known, and also the personality of the
+dreamer, the conditions under which he lives, and the impressions
+in his mind after which his dream occurred, we are often in a
+position to interpret it straightaway; to translate it at sight, as
+it were. Such a feat flatters the vanity of the interpreter and
+impresses the dreamer; it is in pleasing contrast to the laborious
+method of questioning the latter. But do not let this lead
+you away: it is no part of our task to perform tricks nor is
+that method of interpretation which is based on a knowledge of
+symbolism one which can replace, or even compare with, that of
+free association. It is complementary to this latter, and the
+results it yields are only useful when applied in connection with
+the latter. As regards our knowledge of the dreamer’s mental
+situation, moreover, you must reflect that you have not only to
+interpret dreams of people whom you know well; that, as a rule,
+you know nothing of the events of the previous day which stimulated
+the dream; and that the associations of the person analysed
+are the very source from which we obtain our knowledge of what
+we call the mental situation.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Further, it is especially remarkable, particularly with reference
+to certain considerations upon which we shall touch later, that
+the most strenuous opposition has manifested itself again here,
+over this question of the existence of a symbolic relation between
+the dream and the unconscious. Even persons of judgement
+and standing, who in other respects have gone a long way with
+psycho-analysis, have renounced their adherence at this point.
+This behaviour is the more remarkable when we remember two
+things: first, that symbolism is not peculiar to dreams, nor
+exclusively characteristic of them; and, in the second place,
+that the use of symbolism in dreams was not one of the discoveries
+of psycho-analysis, although this science has certainly not been
+wanting in surprising discoveries. If we must ascribe priority
+in this field to anyone in modern times, the discoverer must be
+recognized in the philosopher K. A. Scherner (1861); psycho-analysis
+has confirmed his discovery, although modifying it in
+certain important respects.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now you will wish to hear something about the nature of
+dream-symbolism and will want some examples. I will gladly
+tell you what I know, but I confess that our knowledge is less
+full than we could wish.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The symbolic relation is essentially that of a comparison, but
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_128'>128</span>not any kind of comparison. We must suspect that this comparison
+is subject to particular conditions, although we cannot
+say what these conditions are. Not everything with which an
+object or an occurrence can be compared appears in dreams as
+symbolic of it, and, on the other hand, dreams do not employ
+symbolism for anything and everything, but only for particular
+elements of latent dream-thoughts; there are thus limitations
+in both directions. We must admit also that we cannot at
+present assign quite definite limits to our conception of a symbol;
+for it tends to merge into substitution, representation, etc., and
+even approaches closely to allusion. In one set of symbols
+the underlying comparison may be easily apparent, but there
+are others in which we have to look about for the common factor,
+the <i><span lang="la">tertium comparationis</span></i> contained in the supposed comparison.
+Further reflection may then reveal it to us, or on the other hand
+it may remain definitely hidden from us. Again, if the symbol
+is really a comparison, it is remarkable that this comparison
+is not exposed by the process of free association, and also that
+the dreamer knows nothing about it, but makes use of it unawares;
+nay, more, that he is actually unwilling to recognize it when
+it is brought to his notice. So you see that the symbolic relation
+is a comparison of a quite peculiar kind, the nature of which is
+as yet not fully clear to us. Perhaps some indication will be
+found later which will throw some light upon this unknown
+quantity.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The number of things which are represented symbolically
+in dreams is not great. The human body as a whole, parents,
+children, brothers and sisters, birth, death, nakedness—and
+one thing more. The only typical, that is to say, regularly
+occurring, representation of the human form as a whole is that
+of a <em>house</em>, as was recognized by Scherner, who even wanted to
+attribute to this symbol an overwhelming significance which is
+not really due to it. People have dreams of climbing down the
+front of a house, with feelings sometimes of pleasure and sometimes
+of dread. When the walls are quite smooth, the house means a
+man; when there are ledges and balconies which can be caught
+hold of, a woman. Parents appear in dreams as <em>emperor</em> and
+<em>empress</em>, <em>king</em> and <em>queen</em> or other exalted personages; in this
+respect the dream attitude is highly dutiful. Children and
+brothers and sisters are less tenderly treated, being symbolized
+by <em>little animals</em> or <em>vermin</em>. Birth is almost invariably represented
+by some reference to <em>water</em>: either we are falling into water or
+clambering out of it, saving someone from it or being saved by
+them, i.e. the relation between mother and child is symbolized.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_129'>129</span>For dying we have setting out upon a <em>journey</em> or <em>travelling</em> by
+train, while the state of death is indicated by various obscure
+and, as it were, timid allusions; <em>clothes</em> and <em>uniforms</em> stand
+for nakedness. You see that here the dividing line between the
+symbolic and the allusive kinds of representation tends to disappear.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In comparison with the poverty of this enumeration, it cannot
+fail to strike us that objects and matters belonging to another
+range of ideas are represented by a remarkably rich symbolism.
+I am speaking of what pertains to the sexual life—the genitals,
+sexual processes and intercourse. An overwhelming majority
+of symbols in dreams are sexual symbols. A curious disproportion
+arises thus, for the matters dealt with are few in number,
+whereas the symbols for them are extraordinarily numerous, so
+that each of these few things can be expressed by many symbols
+practically equivalent. When they are interpreted, therefore,
+the result of this peculiarity gives universal offence, for, in
+contrast to the multifarious forms of its representation in dreams,
+the interpretation of the symbols is very monotonous. This
+is displeasing to everyone who comes to know of it: but how
+can we help it?</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>As this is the first time in the course of these lectures that
+I have touched upon the sexual life, I owe you some explanation
+of the manner in which I propose to treat this subject. Psycho-Analysis
+sees no occasion for concealments or indirect allusions,
+and does not think it necessary to be ashamed of concerning
+itself with material so important; it is of opinion that it is right
+and proper to call everything by its true name, hoping in this
+way the more easily to avoid disturbing suggestions. The fact
+that I am speaking to a mixed audience can make no difference
+in this. No science can be treated as an oracular mystery, or
+in a manner adapted to school-girls; the women present, by
+appearing in this lecture-room, have tacitly expressed their
+desire to be regarded on the same footing as the men.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The male genital organ is symbolically represented in dreams
+in many different ways, with most of which the common
+idea underlying the comparison is easily apparent. In the first
+place, the sacred number <em>three</em> is symbolic of the whole male
+genitalia. Its more conspicuous and, to both sexes, more interesting
+part, the penis, is symbolized primarily by objects which
+resemble it in form, being long and upstanding, such as <em>sticks</em>,
+<em>umbrellas</em>, <em>poles</em>, <em>trees</em> and the like; also by objects which, like
+the thing symbolized, have the property of penetrating, and
+consequently of injuring, the body,—that is to say, pointed weapons
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_130'>130</span>of all sorts: <em>knives</em>, <em>daggers</em>, <em>lances</em>, <em>sabres</em>; fire-arms are similarly
+used: <em>guns</em>, <em>pistols</em> and <em>revolvers</em>, these last being a very appropriate
+symbol on account of their shape. In the anxiety-dreams
+of young girls, pursuit by a man armed with a knife or rifle plays
+a great part. This is perhaps the most frequently occurring
+dream-symbol: you can now easily translate it for yourselves.
+The substitution of the male organ by objects from which water
+flows is again easily comprehensible: <em>taps</em>, <em>watering-cans</em>, or
+<em>springs</em>; and by other objects which are capable of elongation,
+such as <em>pulley lamps</em>, <em>pencils which slide in and out of a
+sheath</em>, and so on. <em>Pencils</em>, <em>penholders</em>, <em>nail-files</em>, <em>hammers</em> and
+other <em>implements</em> are undoubtedly male sexual symbols, based
+on an idea of the male organ which is equally easily
+perceived.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The peculiar property of this member of being able to raise
+itself upright in defiance of the law of gravity, part of the phenomena
+of erection, leads to symbolic representation by means of
+<em>balloons</em>, <em>aeroplanes</em>, and, just recently, <em>Zeppelins</em>. But dreams
+have another, much more impressive, way of symbolizing erection;
+they make the organ of sex into the essential part of the whole
+person, so that the <em>dreamer himself flies</em>. Do not be upset by
+hearing that dreams of flying, which we all know and which are
+often so beautiful, must be interpreted as dreams of general
+sexual excitement, dreams of erection. One psycho-analytic
+investigator, P. Federn, has established the truth of this interpretation
+beyond doubt; but, besides this, Mourly Vold, a man
+highly praised for his sober judgement, who carried out the
+experiments with artificial postures of the arms and legs, and
+whose theories were really widely removed from those of psycho-analysis
+(indeed he may have known nothing about it), was
+led by his own investigations to the same conclusion. Nor must
+you think to object to this on the ground that women can also
+have dreams of flying; you should rather remind yourselves
+that the purpose of dreams is wish-fulfilment, and that the wish
+to be a man is frequently met with in women, whether they are
+conscious of it or not. Further, no one familiar with anatomy
+will be misled by supposing that it is impossible for a woman
+to realize this wish by sensations similar to those of a man,
+for the woman’s sexual organs include a small one which
+resembles the penis, and this little organ, the clitoris, does
+actually play during childhood and in the years before sexual
+intercourse the same part as the large male organ.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Male sexual symbols less easy to understand are certain
+<em>reptiles and fishes</em>: above all, the famous symbol of the <em>serpent</em>.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_131'>131</span>Why <em>hats and cloaks</em> are used in the same way is certainly difficult
+to divine, but their symbolic meaning is quite unquestionable.
+Finally, it may be asked whether the representation of the male
+organ by some other member, such as the <em>hand</em> or the <em>foot</em>, may
+be termed symbolic. I think the context in which this is wont to
+occur, and the female counterparts with which we meet, force
+this conclusion upon us.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The female genitalia are symbolically represented by all
+such objects as share with them the property of enclosing a
+space or are capable of acting as receptacles: such as <em>pits</em>,
+<em>hollows and caves</em>, and also <em>jars and bottles</em>, and <em>boxes</em> of all
+sorts and sizes, <em>chests</em>, <em>coffers</em>, <em>pockets</em>, and so forth. <em>Ships</em> too
+come into this category. Many symbols refer rather to the uterus
+than to the other genital organs: thus <em>cupboards</em>, <em>stoves</em> and,
+above all, <em>rooms</em>. Room symbolism here links up with that of
+houses, whilst <em>doors and gates</em> represent the genital opening.
+Moreover, material of different kinds is a symbol of woman,—<em>wood</em>,
+<em>paper</em>, and objects made of these, such as <em>tables</em> and
+<em>books</em>. From the animal world, <em>snails and mussels</em> at any rate
+must be cited as unmistakable female symbols; of the parts of
+the body, the <em>mouth</em> as a representation of the genital opening,
+and, amongst buildings, <em>churches and chapels</em> are symbols of a
+woman. You see that all these symbols are not equally easy
+to understand.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The breasts must be included amongst the organs of sex;
+these, as well as the larger hemispheres of the female body, are
+represented by <em>apples, peaches and fruit</em> in general. The pubic
+hair in both sexes is indicated in dreams by <em>woods and thickets</em>.
+The complicated topography of the female sexual organs accounts
+for their often being represented by a <em>landscape</em> with rocks,
+woods and water, whilst the imposing mechanism of the male
+sexual apparatus lends it to symbolization by all kinds of complicated
+and indescribable <em>machinery</em>.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Yet another noteworthy symbol of the female genital organ
+is a <em>jewel-case</em>, whilst “jewel” and “treasure” are used also
+in dreams to represent the beloved person,<a id='r33'></a><a href='#f33' class='c015'><sup>[33]</sup></a> and <em>sweetmeats</em>
+frequently stand for sexual pleasures. Gratification derived
+from a person’s own genitals is indicated by any kind of <em>play</em>,
+including playing the piano. The symbolic representation of
+onanism by <em>sliding or gliding</em> and also by <em>pulling off a branch</em>
+is very typical. A particularly remarkable dream-symbol is the
+<em>falling out</em> or <em>extraction of teeth</em>; the primary significance of
+this is certainly castration as a punishment for onanism. Special
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_132'>132</span>representations of sexual intercourse are less frequent in dreams
+than we should expect after all this, but we may mention in
+this connection rhythmical activities such as <em>dancing</em>, <em>riding</em>
+and <em>climbing</em>, and also <em>experiencing some violence</em>, e.g. being
+run over. To these may be added certain manual occupations,
+and of course being threatened with weapons.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>You must not imagine that these symbols are either employed
+or translated quite simply: on all sides we meet with what we
+do not expect. For instance, it seems hardly credible that there
+is often no sharp discrimination of the different sexes in these
+symbolic representations. Many symbols stand for sexual
+organs in general, whether male or female: for instance, a <em>little</em>
+child, or a <em>little</em> son or daughter. At another time a symbol
+which is generally a male one may be used to denote the female
+sexual organ, or vice versa. This is incomprehensible until
+we have acquired some knowledge of the development of conceptions
+about sexuality amongst human beings. In many
+cases this ambiguity of the symbols may be apparent rather than
+real; and moreover, the most striking amongst them, such as
+weapons, pockets and chests, are never used bisexually in this
+way.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I will now give a brief account, beginning with the symbols
+themselves instead of with the objects symbolized, to show you
+from what spheres the sexual symbols have for the most part been
+derived, and I will add a few remarks relating particularly to
+those in which the attribute in common with the thing symbolized
+is hard to detect. An instance of an obscure symbol of this
+kind is the <em>hat</em>, or perhaps head-coverings in general; this usually
+has a masculine significance, though occasionally a feminine
+one. In the same way a <em>cloak</em> betokens a man, though perhaps
+sometimes without special reference to the organs of sex. It
+is open to you to ask why this should be so. A <em>tie</em>, being an
+object which hangs down and is not worn by women, is clearly
+a male symbol, whilst <em>underlinen</em> and <em>linen</em> in general stands
+for the female. <em>Clothes and uniforms</em>, as we have heard, represent
+nakedness or the human form; <em>shoes and slippers</em> symbolize
+the female genital organs. <em>Tables and wood</em> we have mentioned
+as being puzzling, but nevertheless certain, female symbols;
+the <em>act of mounting</em> ladders, steep places or stairs is indubitably
+symbolic of sexual intercourse. On closer reflection we shall
+notice that the rhythmic character of this climbing is the point
+in common between the two, and perhaps also the accompanying
+increase in excitation—the shortening of the breath as the climber
+ascends.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_133'>133</span>We have already recognized that <em>landscapes</em> represent the
+female sexual organs; mountains and rocks are symbols of
+the male organ; <em>gardens</em>, a frequently occurring symbol of the
+female genitalia. <em>Fruit</em> stands for the breasts, not for a child.
+<em>Wild animals</em> denote human beings whose senses are excited,
+and, hence, evil impulses or passions. <em>Blossoms and flowers</em>
+represent the female sexual organs, more particularly, in virginity.
+In this connection you will recollect that the blossoms are really
+the sexual organs of plants.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>We already know how rooms are used symbolically. This
+representation may be extended, so that <em>windows and doors</em>
+(entrances and exits from rooms) come to mean the openings
+of the body; the fact of rooms being <em>open or closed</em> also accords
+with this symbolism: the <em>key</em>, which opens them, is certainly
+a male symbol.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This is some material for a study of dream-symbolism. It
+is not complete, and could be both extended and made deeper.
+However, I think it will seem to you more than enough; perhaps
+you may dislike it. You will ask: “Do I then really live in
+the midst of sexual symbols? Are all the objects round me,
+all the clothes I wear, all the things I handle, always sexual
+symbols and nothing else?” There really is good reason for
+surprised questions, and the first of these would be: How do
+we profess to arrive at the meaning of these dream-symbols,
+about which the dreamer himself can give us little or no information?</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>My answer is that we derive our knowledge from widely
+different sources: from fairy tales and myths, jokes and witticisms,
+from folk-lore, i.e. from what we know of the manners
+and customs, sayings and songs, of different peoples, and from
+poetic and colloquial usage of language. Everywhere in these
+various fields the same symbolism occurs, and in many of them
+we can understand it without being taught anything about
+it. If we consider these various sources individually, we
+shall find so many parallels to dream-symbolism that we
+are bound to be convinced of the correctness of our interpretations.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The human body is, we said, according to Scherner frequently
+symbolized in dreams by a house; by an extension of this symbolism,
+windows, doors and gates stand for the entrances to cavities
+in the body, and the façades may either be smooth or may have
+balconies and ledges to hold on to. The same symbolism is met
+with in colloquialisms; for instance, we speak of “a thatch of
+hair,” or a “tile hat,” or say of someone that he is not right
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_134'>134</span>“in the upper storey.”<a id='r34'></a><a href='#f34' class='c015'><sup>[34]</sup></a> In anatomy, too, we speak of the
+openings of the body as its “portals.”<a id='r35'></a><a href='#f35' class='c015'><sup>[35]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='c007'>We may at first find it surprising that parents appear in our
+dreams as kings and emperors and their consorts, but we have
+a parallel to this in fairy tales. Does it not begin to dawn upon
+us that the many fairy tales which begin with the words “Once
+upon a time there were a king and queen” simply mean: “Once
+upon a time there were a father and mother?” In family life
+the children are sometimes spoken of jestingly as princes, and
+the eldest son as the crown prince. The king himself is called
+the father of his people.<a id='r36'></a><a href='#f36' class='c015'><sup>[36]</sup></a> Again, in some parts, little children
+are often playfully spoken of as little animals, e.g. in Cornwall, as
+“little toad,” or in Germany as “little worm,” and, in sympathizing
+with a child, Germans say “poor little worm.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now let us return to the house symbolism. When in our
+dreams we make use of the projections of houses as supports,
+does that not suggest a well-known, popular German saying,
+with reference to a woman with a markedly developed bust:
+“She has something for one to hold on to” (<i><span lang="de">Die hat etwas zum
+Anhalten</span></i>), whilst another colloquialism in the same connection
+is: “She has plenty of wood in front of her house” (<i><span lang="de">Die hat
+viel Holz vor dem Hause</span></i>), as though our interpretation were to
+be borne out by this when we say that wood is a female maternal
+symbol.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>There is still something to be said on the subject of wood.
+It is not easy to see why wood should have come to represent a
+woman or mother, but here a comparison of different languages
+may be useful to us. The German word <i><span lang="de">Holz</span></i> (wood)
+is said to be derived from the same root as the Greek ὔλη,
+which means stuff, raw material. This would be an instance of
+a process which is by no means rare, in that a general name for
+material has come finally to be applied to a particular material
+only. Now, in the Atlantic Ocean, there is an island named
+Madeira, and this name was given to it by the Portuguese when
+they discovered it, because at that time it was covered with
+dense forests; for in Portuguese the word for wood is <i><span lang="pt">madeira</span></i>.
+But you cannot fail to notice that this <i><span lang="pt">madeira</span></i> is merely a
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_135'>135</span>modified form of the Latin <i><span lang="la">materia</span></i>, which again signifies
+material in general. Now <i><span lang="la">materia</span></i> is derived from <i><span lang="la">mater</span></i> =
+mother, and the material out of which anything is made may
+be conceived of as giving birth to it. So, in the symbolic use
+of wood to represent woman or mother, we have a survival of
+this old idea.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Birth is regularly expressed by some connection with water:
+we are plunging into or emerging from water, that is to say,
+we give birth or are being born. Now let us not forget that this
+symbol has a twofold reference to the actual facts of evolution.
+Not only are all land mammals, from which the human race itself
+has sprung, descended from creatures inhabiting the water—this
+is the more remote of the two considerations—but also every
+single mammal, every human being, has passed the first phase
+of existence in water—that is to say, as an embryo in the amniotic
+fluid of the mother’s womb—and thus, at birth, emerged from
+water. I do not maintain that the dreamer knows this; on
+the other hand, I contend that there is no need for him to
+know it. He probably knows something else from having been
+told it as a child, but even this, I will maintain, has contributed
+nothing to symbol-formation. The child is told in the nursery
+that the stork brings the babies, but then where does it get them?
+Out of a pond or a well—again, out of the water. One of my
+patients who had been told this as a child (a little count, as he
+was then) afterwards disappeared for a whole afternoon, and
+was at last found lying at the edge of the castle lake, with his
+little face bent over the clear water, eagerly gazing to see
+whether he could catch sight of the babies at the bottom of
+the water.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In the myths of the births of heroes, a comparative study
+of which has been made by O. Rank—the earliest is that of King
+Sargon of Akkad, about 2800 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>—exposure in water and rescue
+from it play a major part. Rank perceived that this symbolizes
+birth in a manner analogous to that employed in dreams. When
+anyone in his dream rescues somebody from the water, he makes
+that person into his mother, or at any rate <em>a</em> mother; and in
+mythology, whoever rescues a child from water confesses herself
+to be its real mother. There is a well-known joke in which an
+intelligent Jewish boy, when asked who was the mother of Moses,
+answers immediately: “The Princess.” He is told: “No,
+she only took him out of the water.” “That’s what <em>she</em> said,”
+he replies, showing that he had hit upon the right interpretation
+of the myth.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Going away on a journey stands in dreams for dying; similarly,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_136'>136</span>it is the custom in the nursery, when a child asks questions as
+to the whereabouts of someone who has died and whom he misses,
+to tell him that that person has “gone away.” Here again,
+I deprecate the idea that the dream-symbol has its origin in this
+evasive reply to the child. The poet uses the same symbol when
+he speaks of the other side as “the undiscovered country from
+whose bourne <em>no traveller</em> returns.” Again, in everyday speech
+it is quite usual to speak of the “last journey,” and everyone
+who is acquainted with ancient rites knows how seriously the
+idea of a journey into the land of the dead was taken, for instance,
+in ancient Egyptian belief. In many cases the “Book of the Dead”
+survives, which was given to the mummy, like a Baedeker, to
+take with him on the last journey. Since burial-grounds have
+been placed at a distance from the houses of the living, the last
+journey of the dead has indeed become a reality.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Nor does sexual symbolism belong only to dreams. You
+will all know the expression “a baggage” as applied contemptuously
+to a woman, but perhaps people do not know that they
+are using a genital symbol. In the New Testament we read:
+“The woman is the weaker <em>vessel</em>.” The sacred writings of
+the Jews, the style of which so closely approaches that of poetry,
+are full of expressions symbolic of sex, which have not always
+been correctly interpreted and the exegesis of which, e.g. in
+the Song of Solomon, has led to many misunderstandings.<a id='r37'></a><a href='#f37' class='c015'><sup>[37]</sup></a>
+In later Hebrew literature the woman is very frequently represented
+by a house, the door standing for the genital opening;
+thus a man complains, when he finds a woman no longer a virgin,
+that “he has found the door open.” The symbol “table”
+for a woman also occurs in this literature; the woman says of
+her husband “I spread the table for him, but he overturned
+it.” Lame children are said to owe their infirmity to the fact
+that the man “overturned the table.” I quote here from a
+treatise by L. Levy in Brünn: <cite>Sexual Symbolism in the Bible and
+the Talmud</cite>.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>That ships in dreams signify women is a belief in which we
+are supported by the etymologists, who assert that “ship” (<i><span lang="de">Schiff</span></i>)
+was originally the name of an earthen vessel and is the same
+word as <i><span lang="de">Schaff</span></i> (<i><span lang="de">schaffen</span></i> = to make or produce). That an
+oven stands for a woman or the mother’s womb is an interpretation
+confirmed by the Greek story of Periander of Corinth and
+his wife Melissa. According to the version of Herodotus, the
+tyrant adjured the shade of his wife, whom he had loved passionately
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_137'>137</span>but had murdered out of jealousy, to tell him something
+about herself, whereupon the dead woman identified herself
+by reminding him that he, Periander, “had put his bread into
+a cold oven,” thus expressing in a disguised form a circumstance
+of which everyone else was ignorant. In the <cite>Anthropophyteia</cite>,
+edited by F. S. Kraus, a work which is an indispensable text-book
+on everything concerning the sexual life of different peoples,
+we read that in a certain part of Germany people say of a woman
+who is delivered of a child that “her oven has fallen to pieces.”
+The kindling of fire and everything connected with this is permeated
+through and through with sexual symbolism, the flame
+always standing for the male organ, and the fireplace or the
+hearth for the womb of the woman.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>If you have chanced to wonder at the frequency with
+which landscapes are used in dreams to symbolize the
+female sexual organs, you may learn from mythologists how
+large a part has been played in the ideas and cults of ancient
+times by “Mother Earth” and how the whole conception of
+agriculture was determined by this symbolism. The fact that
+in dreams a room represents a woman you may be inclined to
+trace to the German colloquialism by which <i><span lang="de">Frauenzimmer</span></i>
+(<em>lit.</em> “woman’s room”) is used for <i><span lang="de">Frau</span></i>, that is to say, the
+human person is represented by the place assigned for her occupation.
+Similarly we speak of the Porte, meaning thereby the
+Sultan and his government, and the name of the ancient Egyptian
+ruler, Pharaoh, merely means “great court.” (In the ancient
+Orient the courts between the double gates of the city were places
+of assembly, like the market-place in classical times.) But I
+think this derivation is too superficial, and it strikes me as more
+probable that the room came to symbolize woman on account
+of its property of enclosing within it the human being. We
+have already met with the house in this sense; from mythology
+and poetry we may take towns, citadels, castles and fortresses
+to be further symbols for women. It would be easy to decide
+the point by reference to the dreams of people who neither speak
+nor understand German. Of late years I have mainly treated
+foreign patients, and I think I recollect that in their dreams
+rooms stand in the same way for women, even though there is
+no word analogous to our <i><span lang="de">Frauenzimmer</span></i> in their language.
+There are other indications that symbolism may transcend the
+boundaries of language, a fact already maintained by the old
+dream-investigator, Schubert, in 1862. Nevertheless, none of
+my patients were wholly ignorant of German, so that I must
+leave this question to be decided by those analysts who can
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_138'>138</span>collect instances in other countries from persons who speak only
+one language.<a id='r38'></a><a href='#f38' class='c015'><sup>[38]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Amongst the symbols for the male sexual organ, there is
+scarcely one which does not appear in jests, or in vulgar or poetic
+phrases, especially in the old classical poets. Here, however,
+we meet not only with such symbols as occur in dreams but also
+with new ones, e.g. the <em>implements</em> employed in various kinds
+of work, first and foremost, the <em>plough</em>. Moreover, when we come
+to male symbols, we trench on very extensive and much-contested
+ground, which, in order not to waste time, we will avoid.
+I should just like to devote a few remarks to the one symbol which
+stands, as it were, by itself; I refer to the number <em>three</em>. Whether
+this number does not in all probability owe its sacred character
+to its symbolic significance is a question which we must leave
+undecided, but it seems certain that many tripartite natural
+objects, e.g. the clover-leaf, are used in coats-of-arms and as
+emblems on account of their symbolism. The so-called “French”
+lily with its three parts and, again, the “trisceles,” that curious
+coat-of-arms of two such widely separated islands as Sicily and
+the Isle of Man (a figure consisting of three bent legs projecting
+from a central point), are supposed to be merely disguised forms
+of the male sexual organ, images of which were believed in ancient
+times to be the most powerful means of warding off evil influences
+(<em>apotropaea</em>); connected with this is the fact that the lucky
+“charms” of our own time may all be easily recognized as genital
+or sexual symbols. Let us consider a collection of such charms
+in the form of tiny silver pendants: a four-leaved clover, a pig,
+a mushroom, a horseshoe, a ladder and a chimney-sweep. The
+four-leaved clover has taken the place of that with three leaves,
+which was really more appropriate for the purposes of symbolism;
+the pig is an ancient symbol of fruitfulness; the mushroom
+undoubtedly symbolizes the penis, there are mushrooms which
+derive their name from their unmistakable resemblance to that
+organ (<em>Phallus impudicus</em>); the horseshoe reproduces the contour
+of the female genital opening; while the chimney-sweep with
+his ladder belongs to this company because his occupation is
+one which is vulgarly compared with sexual intercourse. (Cf.
+<cite>Anthropophyteia</cite>.) We have learnt to recognize his ladder in
+dreams as a sexual symbol: expressions in language show what
+a completely sexual significance the word <i><span lang="de">steigen</span></i>, to mount,
+has, as in the phrases: <i><span lang="de">Den Frauen nachsteigen</span></i> (to run after
+women) and <i><span lang="de">ein alter Steiger</span></i> (an old roué). So, in French,
+where the word for “step” is <i><span lang="fr">la marche</span></i>, we find the quite
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_139'>139</span>analogous expression for an old rake: <i><span lang="fr">un vieux marcheur</span></i>.
+Probably the fact that with many of the larger animals
+sexual intercourse necessitates a mounting or “climbing
+upon” the female has something to do with this association
+of ideas.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Pulling off a branch to symbolize onanism is not only in
+agreement with vulgar descriptions of that act, but also has
+far-reaching parallels in mythology. But especially remarkable
+is the representation of onanism, or rather of castration as the
+punishment for onanism, by the falling out or extraction of
+teeth; for we find in folk-lore a counterpart to this which could
+only be known to very few dreamers. I think that there can
+be no doubt that circumcision, a practice common to so many
+peoples, is an equivalent and replacement of castration. And
+recently we have learnt that certain aboriginal tribes in Australia
+practise circumcision as a rite to mark the attaining of puberty
+(at the celebration of the boy’s coming of age), whilst other tribes
+living quite near have substituted for this practice that of knocking
+out a tooth.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I will end my account with these examples. They are only
+examples; we know more about this subject and you can imagine
+how much richer and more interesting a collection of this sort
+might be made, not by dilettanti like ourselves, but by real
+experts in mythology, anthropology, philology and folk-lore.
+We are forced to certain conclusions, which cannot be exhaustive,
+but nevertheless will give us plenty to think about.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In the first place, we are confronted with the fact that the
+dreamer has at his command a symbolic mode of expression of
+which he knows nothing, and does not even recognize, in his
+waking life. This is as amazing as if you made the discovery
+that your housemaid understood Sanscrit, though you know
+that she was born in a Bohemian village and had never learnt
+that language. It is not easy to bring this fact into line with
+our views on psychology. We can only say that the dreamer’s
+knowledge of symbolism is unconscious and belongs to his unconscious
+mental life, but even this assumption does not help
+us much. Up till now we have only had to assume the existence
+of unconscious tendencies which are temporarily or permanently
+unknown to us; but now the question is a bigger one and we
+have actually to believe in unconscious knowledge, thought-relations,
+and comparisons between different objects, in virtue
+of which one idea can constantly be substituted for another.
+These comparisons are not instituted afresh every time, but
+are ready to hand, perfect for all time; this we infer from their
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_140'>140</span>unanimity in different persons, even probably in spite of linguistic
+differences.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Whence is our knowledge of this symbolism derived? The
+usages of speech cover only a small part of it, whilst the manifold
+parallels in other fields are for the most part unknown to the
+dreamer; we ourselves had to collate them laboriously in the
+first instance.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In the second place, these symbolic relations are not peculiar
+to the dreamer or to the dream-work by which they are
+expressed; for we have discovered that the same symbolism
+is employed in myths and fairy tales, in popular sayings and
+songs, in colloquial speech and poetic phantasy. The province
+of symbolism is extraordinarily wide: dream-symbolism is only
+a small part of it; it would not even be expedient to attack the
+whole problem from the side of dreams. Many of the symbols
+commonly occurring elsewhere either do not appear in dreams
+at all or appear very seldom; on the other hand, many of the
+dream-symbols are not met with in every other department, but,
+as you have seen, only here and there. We get the impression
+that here we have to do with an ancient but obsolete mode of
+expression, of which different fragments have survived in different
+fields, one here only, another there only, a third in various spheres
+perhaps in slightly different forms. At this point I am reminded
+of the phantasy of a very interesting insane patient, who had
+imagined a “primordial language” (<i><span lang="de">Grundsprache</span></i>) of which
+all these symbols were survivals.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In the third place, it must strike you that the symbolism occurring
+in the other fields I have named is by no means confined
+to sexual themes, whereas in dreams the symbols are almost
+exclusively used to represent sexual objects and relations. This
+again is hard to account for. Are we to suppose that symbols
+originally of sexual significance were later employed differently
+and that perhaps the decline from symbolic to other modes of
+representation is connected with this? It is obviously impossible
+to answer these questions by dealing only with dream-symbolism;
+all we can do is to hold fast to the supposition that there is a
+specially close relation between true symbols and sexuality.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>An important clue in this connection has recently been given
+to us in the view expressed by a philologist (H. Sperber, of Upsala,
+who works independently of psycho-analysis), that sexual needs
+have had the largest share in the origin and development of
+language. He says that the first sounds uttered were a means
+of communication, and of summoning the sexual partner, and
+that in the later development the elements of speech were used
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_141'>141</span>as an accompaniment to the different kinds of work carried on
+by primitive man. This work was performed by associated
+efforts, to the sound of rhythmically repeated utterances, the
+effect of which was to transfer a sexual interest to the work.
+Primitive man thus made his work agreeable, so to speak, by
+treating it as the equivalent of and substitute for sexual activities.
+The word uttered during the communal work had therefore two
+meanings, the one referring to the sexual act, the other to the
+labour which had come to be equivalent to it. In time the
+word was dissociated from its sexual significance and its application
+confined to the work. Generations later the same thing
+happened to a new word with a sexual signification, which was
+then applied to a new form of work. In this way a number of
+root-words arose which were all of sexual origin but had all
+lost their sexual meaning. If the statement here outlined be
+correct, a possibility at least of understanding dream-symbolism
+opens out before us. We should comprehend why it is that in
+dreams, which retain something of these primitive conditions,
+there is such an extraordinarily large number of sexual symbols;
+and why weapons and tools in general stand for the male, and
+materials and things worked on for the female. The symbolic
+relation would then be the survival of the old identity in words;
+things which once had the same name as the genitalia could
+now appear in dreams as symbolizing them.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Further, our parallels to dream-symbolism may assist you
+to appreciate what it is in psycho-analysis which makes it a
+subject of general interest, in a way that was not possible to
+either psychology or psychiatry; psycho-analytic work is so
+closely intertwined with so many other branches of science, the
+investigation of which gives promise of the most valuable conclusions:
+with mythology, philology, folk-lore, folk psychology and
+the study of religion. You will not be surprised to hear that a
+publication has sprung from psycho-analytic soil, of which the
+exclusive object is to foster these relations. I refer to <cite>Imago</cite>,
+first published in 1912 and edited by Hanns Sachs and Otto
+Rank. In its relation to all these other subjects, psycho-analysis
+has in the first instance given rather than received. True,
+analysis reaps the advantage of receiving confirmation of its
+own results, seemingly so strange, again in other fields; but on the
+whole it is psycho-analysis which supplies the technical methods
+and the points of view, the application of which is to prove
+fruitful in these other provinces. The mental life of the
+human individual yields, under psycho-analytic investigation,
+explanations which solve many a riddle in the life of the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_142'>142</span>masses of mankind or at any rate can show these problems in
+their true light.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I have still given you no idea of the circumstances in which
+we may arrive at the deepest insight into that hypothetical
+“primordial language,” or of the province in which it is for the
+most part retained. As long as you do not know this you cannot
+appreciate the true significance of the whole subject. I refer to
+the province of neurosis; the material is found in the symptoms
+and other modes of expression of nervous patients, for the
+explanation and treatment of which psycho-analysis was
+indeed devised.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>My fourth point of view takes us back to the place from which
+we started and leads into the track we have already marked out.
+We said that even if there were no dream-censorship we should
+still find it difficult to interpret dreams, for we should then be
+confronted with the task of translating the symbolic language
+of dreams into the language of waking life. <span class='sc'>Symbolism</span>, then,
+is a second and independent factor in dream-distortion, existing
+side by side with the censorship. But the conclusion is obvious
+that it suits the censorship to make use of symbolism, in that
+both serve the same purpose: that of making the dream strange
+and incomprehensible.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Whether a further study of the dream will not introduce us
+to yet another contributing factor in the distortion, we shall
+soon see. But I must not leave the subject of dream-symbolism
+without once more touching on the puzzling fact that it has
+succeeded in rousing such strenuous opposition amongst educated
+persons, although the prevalence of symbolism in myth, religion,
+art and language is beyond all doubt. Is it not probable that,
+here again, the reason is to be found in its relation to sexuality?</p>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_143'>143</span>
+ <h3 class='c002'><span class='c014'>ELEVENTH LECTURE</span><br> THE DREAM-WORK</h3>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c006'>When you have successfully grasped the dream-censorship and
+symbolic representation, you will not, it is true, have mastered
+dream-distortion in its entirety, but you will nevertheless be
+in a position to understand most dreams. To do so, you will
+make use of the two complementary methods: you will call
+up the dreamer’s associations till you have penetrated from the
+substitute to the thought proper for which it stands, and you
+will supply the meaning of the symbols from your own knowledge
+of the subject. We will speak later of certain doubtful points
+which may arise in the process.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>We can now return to a task which we attempted earlier
+with inadequate equipment, when we were studying the relations
+between dream-elements and the thoughts proper underlying
+them. We then determined the existence of four such main
+relations: substitution of the part for the whole, hints or allusions,
+symbolic connection, and plastic word-representation (images).
+We will now try to deal with this subject on a larger scale,
+by a comparison of the <em>manifest</em> dream-content as a whole with
+the <em>latent</em> dream as laid bare by our interpretation.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I hope you will never again confuse these two things. If
+you succeed in distinguishing between them, you will have
+advanced further towards an understanding of dreams than in
+all probability most of the readers of my <cite>Interpretation of Dreams</cite>
+have done. Let me again remind you that <em>the process by which
+the latent dream is transformed into the manifest dream is called</em>
+<span class='fss'>THE DREAM-WORK</span>; while the reverse process, which seeks to
+progress from the manifest to the latent thoughts, is our work
+of interpretation; the work of interpretation therefore aims
+at demolishing the dream-work. In dreams of the infantile
+type in which the obvious wish-fulfilments are easily recognized,
+the process of dream-work has nevertheless been operative to
+some extent, for the wish has been transformed into a reality
+and, usually, the thoughts also into visual images. Here no
+interpretation is necessary; we only have to retrace both these
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_144'>144</span>transformations. The further operations of the dream-work, as
+seen in the other types of dreams, we call <em>dream-distortion</em>, and here
+the original ideas have to be restored by our interpretative work.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Having had the opportunity of comparing many dream-interpretations,
+I am in a position to give you a comprehensive
+account of the manner in which the dream-work deals with
+the material of the latent dream-thoughts. But please do not
+expect to understand too much: it is a piece of description which
+should be listened to quietly and attentively.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The first achievement of the dream-work is <span class='fss'>CONDENSATION</span>;
+by this term we mean to convey the fact that the content of the
+manifest dream is less rich than that of the latent thoughts,
+is, as it were, a kind of abbreviated translation of the latter.
+Now and again condensation may be lacking, but it is present as
+a rule and is often carried to a very high degree. It never works
+in the opposite manner, i.e. it never happens that the manifest
+dream is wider in range or richer in content than is the latent
+dream. Condensation is accomplished in the following ways:
+(1) certain latent elements are altogether omitted; (2) of many
+complexes in the latent dream only a fragment passes over into
+the manifest content; (3) latent elements sharing some common
+characteristic are in the manifest dream put together, blended
+into a single whole.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>If you prefer to do so, you can reserve the term ‘condensation’
+for this last process, the effects of which are particularly easy to
+demonstrate. Taking your own dreams, you will be able without
+any trouble to recall instances of the condensation of different
+persons into a single figure. Such a composite figure resembles
+A. in appearance, but is dressed like B., pursues some occupation
+which recalls C., and yet all the time you know that it is really
+D. The composite picture serves, of course, to lay special emphasis
+upon some characteristic common to the four people.
+And it is possible also for a composite picture to be formed with
+objects or places, as with persons, provided only that the single
+objects or places have some common attribute upon which the
+latent dream lays stress. It is as though a new and fugitive
+concept were formed, of which the common attribute is the
+kernel. From the superimposing of the separate parts which
+undergo condensation there usually results a blurred and
+indistinct picture, as if several photographs had been taken
+on the same plate.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The formation of such composite figures must be of great
+importance in the dream-work, for we can prove that the
+common properties necessary to their formation are purposely
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_145'>145</span>manufactured where at first sight they would seem to be lacking,
+as, for example, by the choice of some particular verbal expression
+for a thought. We have already met with instances of condensation
+and composite-formation of this sort; they played an
+important part in originating many slips of the tongue. You
+will remember the case of the young man who wished to
+“insort” a lady (<i><span lang="de">beleidigen</span></i> = insult, <i><span lang="de">begleiten</span></i> = escort, composite
+word <i><span lang="de">begleitdigen</span></i>). Besides, there are jokes in which the
+technique is traceable to condensation of this sort. Apart from
+this, however, we may venture to assert that this process is something
+quite unusual and strange. It is true that in many a creation
+of phantasy we meet with counterparts to the formation of the
+composite persons of our dreams, component parts which do
+not belong to one another in reality being readily united into a
+single whole by phantasy, as, for instance, in the centaurs and
+fabulous animals of ancient mythology or of Boecklin’s pictures.
+“Creative” phantasy can, in fact, invent nothing new, but
+can only regroup elements from different sources. But the
+peculiar thing about the way in which the dream-work proceeds
+is this: its material consists of thoughts, some of which
+may be objectionable and disagreeable, but which nevertheless
+are correctly formed and expressed. The dream-work transmutes
+these thoughts into another form, and it is curious and
+incomprehensible that in this process of translation—of rendering
+them, as it were, into another script or language—the means
+of blending and combining are employed. The translator’s
+endeavour in other cases must surely be to respect the distinctions
+observed in the text, and especially to differentiate between
+things which are similar but not the same; the dream-work,
+on the contrary, strives to condense two different thoughts by
+selecting, after the manner of wit, an ambiguous word which
+can suggest both thoughts. We must not expect to understand
+this characteristic straight away, but it may assume great
+significance for our conception of the dream-work.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Although condensation renders the dream obscure, yet it
+does not give the impression of being an effect of the dream-censorship.
+Rather we should be inclined to trace it to mechanical
+or economic factors; nevertheless the censorship’s interests are
+served by it.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>What condensation can achieve is sometimes quite extraordinary:
+by this device it is at times possible for two completely
+different latent trains of thought to be united in a single manifest
+dream, so that we arrive at an apparently adequate interpretation
+of a dream and yet overlook a second possible meaning.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_146'>146</span>Moreover, one of the effects of condensation upon the relationship
+between the manifest and the latent dream is that the
+connection between the elements of the one and of the other
+nowhere remains a simple one; for by a kind of interlacing a
+manifest element represents simultaneously several latent ones
+and, conversely, a latent thought may enter into several manifest
+elements. Again, when we come to interpret dreams, we see
+that the associations to a single manifest element do not commonly
+make their appearance in orderly succession; we often have to
+wait until we have the interpretation of the whole dream.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The dream-work, then, follows a very unusual mode of
+transcription for the dream-thoughts; not a translation, word
+for word, or sign for sign; nor yet a process of selection according
+to some definite rule, for instance, as though the consonants
+only of the words were reproduced and the vowels omitted;
+nor again what one might call a process of representation, one
+element being always picked out to represent several others.
+It works by a different and much more complicated method.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The second achievement of the dream-work is <span class='fss'>DISPLACEMENT</span>.
+Fortunately here we are not breaking perfectly fresh
+ground; indeed, we know that it is entirely the work of the
+dream-censorship. Displacement takes two forms: first, a latent
+element may be <em>replaced</em>, not by a part of itself, but by something
+more remote, something of the nature of an allusion; and, secondly,
+the <em>accent</em> may be transferred from an important element to
+another which is unimportant, so that the centre of the dream
+is shifted as it were, giving the dream a foreign appearance.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Substitution by allusion is familiar to us in our waking thoughts
+also, but with a difference; for it is essential in the latter that the
+allusion should be easily comprehensible, and that the content
+of the substitute should be associated to that of the thought
+proper. Allusion is also frequently employed in wit, where
+the condition of association in content is dispensed with and
+replaced by unfamiliar external associations, such as similarity
+of sound, ambiguity of meaning, etc. The condition of comprehensibility,
+however, is observed: the joke would lose all
+its point if we could not recognize without any effort what is the
+actual thing to which the allusion is made. But in dreams
+allusion by displacement is unrestricted by either limitation. It
+is connected most superficially and most remotely with the
+element for which it stands, and for that reason is not readily
+comprehensible; and, when the connection is traced, the interpretation
+gives the impression of an unsuccessful joke or of
+a “forced,” far-fetched and “dragged in” explanation. The
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_147'>147</span>object of the dream-censorship is only attained when it has
+succeeded in making it impossible to trace the thought proper
+back from the allusion.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Displacement of accent is not a legitimate device if our object
+be the expression of thought; though we do sometimes admit
+it in waking life in order to produce a comic effect. I can to
+some extent convey to you the impression of confusion which
+then results, by reminding you of an anecdote, according to which
+there was in a certain village a smith who had committed a
+capital offence. The court decided that the smith was guilty; but,
+since he was the only one of his trade in the village and therefore
+indispensable, whereas there were three tailors living there,
+one of these three was hanged in his place!</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The third achievement of the dream-work is the most
+interesting from the psychological point of view. It consists
+in the transformation of thoughts into <em>visual images</em>. Let us
+be quite clear that not everything in the dream-thoughts is thus
+transformed; much keeps its original form and appears also in
+the manifest dream as thought or knowledge, on the part of the
+dreamer; again, translation of them into visual images is not the
+only possible transformation of thoughts. But it is nevertheless
+the essential feature in the formation of dreams, and, as we
+know, this part of the dream-work is, if we except one other
+case, the least subject to variation; for single dream-elements,
+moreover, <em>plastic word-representation</em> is a process already
+familiar to us.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Obviously this achievement is by no means an easy one.
+In order to get some idea of its difficulty, imagine that you had
+undertaken to replace a political leading article in a newspaper
+by a series of illustrations; you would have to abandon alphabetic
+characters in favour of hieroglyphics. The people and concrete
+objects mentioned in the article could be easily represented,
+perhaps even more satisfactorily, in pictorial form; but you
+would expect to meet with difficulties when you came to the
+portrayal of all the abstract words and all those parts of speech
+which indicate relations between the various thoughts, e.g.
+particles, conjunctions, and so forth. With the abstract words
+you would employ all manner of devices: for instance, you would
+try to render the text of the article into other words, more unfamiliar
+perhaps, but made up of parts more concrete and therefore
+more capable of such representation. This will remind you
+of the fact that most abstract words were originally concrete,
+their original significance having faded; and therefore you will
+fall back on the original concrete meaning of these words wherever
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_148'>148</span>possible. So you will be glad that you can represent the
+“possessing” of an object as a literal, physical “sitting upon”
+it (possess = <em>potis</em> + <em>sedeo</em>). This is just how the dream-work
+proceeds. In such circumstances you can hardly
+demand great accuracy of representation, neither will you quarrel
+with the dream-work for replacing an element which is
+difficult to reduce to pictorial form, such as the idea of breaking
+marriage vows, by some other kind of breaking, e.g. that of an
+arm or leg.<a id='r39'></a><a href='#f39' class='c015'><sup>[39]</sup></a> In this way you will to some extent succeed in
+overcoming the awkwardness of rendering alphabetic characters
+into hieroglyphs.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>When you come to represent those parts of speech which
+indicate thought-relations, e.g. “because,” “therefore,” “but,”
+and so on, you have no such means as those described to assist
+you; so that these parts of the text must be lost, so far as your
+translation into pictorial form is concerned. Similarly, the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_149'>149</span>content of the dream-thoughts is resolved by the dream-work
+into its ‘raw material,’ consisting of objects and activities. You
+may be satisfied if there is any possibility of indicating somehow,
+by a more minute elaboration of the images, certain relations
+which cannot be represented in themselves. In a precisely
+similar manner the dream-work succeeds in expressing much
+of the content of the latent thoughts by means of peculiarities
+in the <em>form</em> of the manifest dream, by its distinctness or
+obscurity, its division into various parts, etc. The number of
+parts into which a dream is divided corresponds as a rule with
+the number of its main themes, the successive trains of thought
+in the latent dream; a short preliminary dream often stands
+in an introductory or causal relation to the subsequent detailed
+main dream; whilst a subordinate dream-thought is represented
+by the interpolation into the manifest dream of a change of scene,
+and so on. The form of dreams, then, is by no means unimportant
+in itself, and itself demands interpretation. Several dreams
+in the same night often have the same meaning, and indicate an
+endeavour to control more and more completely a stimulus of
+increasing urgency. In a single dream, a specially difficult
+element may be represented by “doubling” it, i.e. by more than
+one symbol.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>If we continue the comparison of dream-thoughts with the
+manifest dreams representing them, we discover in all directions
+things we should never have expected, e.g. that even nonsense
+and absurdity in dreams have their meaning; in fact, at this
+point the contrast between the medical and the psycho-analytic
+view of dreams becomes more marked than ever before. According
+to the medical view, the dream is absurd because while
+dreaming our mental activity has renounced its functions;
+according to our view, on the other hand, the dream becomes
+absurd when it has to represent a criticism implicit in the latent
+thoughts—the opinion: “It is absurd.” The dream I told
+you, about the visit to the theatre (“three tickets for one florin
+and a half”) is a good example of this: the opinion thus expressed
+was as follows: “It was <em>absurd</em> to marry so early.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Similarly, we find out when we interpret dreams what is
+the real meaning of the doubts and uncertainties, so frequently
+mentioned by dreamers, whether a certain element did actually
+appear in the dream, whether it was really this and not rather
+something else. As a rule, there is nothing in the latent thoughts
+corresponding with these doubts and uncertainties; they originate
+wholly through the operation of the censorship and are comparable
+to a not entirely successful attempt at erasure.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_150'>150</span>One of our most surprising discoveries is the manner in which
+<em>opposites</em> in the latent dream are dealt with by the dream-work.
+We know already that points of agreement in the latent
+material are replaced by condensation in the manifest dream.
+Now contraries are treated in just the same way as similarities,
+with a marked preference for expression by means of the <em>same</em>
+manifest element. An element in the manifest dream which
+admits of an opposite may stand simply for itself, or for its
+opposite, or for both together; only the sense can decide which
+translation is to be chosen. It accords with this that there is
+no representation of a “No” in dreams, or at least none which
+is not ambiguous.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>A welcome analogy to this strange behaviour of the dream-work
+is furnished in the development of language. Many
+philologists have maintained that in the oldest languages opposites
+such as: strong—weak, light—dark, large—small, were expressed
+by the same root word (<em>antithetical sense of primal words</em>).
+Thus, in old Egyptian “<em>ken</em>” stood originally for both “strong”
+and “weak.” In speaking, misunderstanding was guarded
+against in the use of such ambivalent words by the intonation
+and accompanying gestures; in writing, by the addition of a
+so-called “determinative,” that is to say, of a picture which was
+not meant to be expressed orally. Thus, “<em>ken</em>” = “strong”
+was written in such a way that after the letters there was a
+picture of a little man standing upright; when “<em>ken</em>” meant
+“weak,” there was added the picture of a man in a slack, crouching
+attitude. Only at a later period did the two opposite meanings
+of the same primal word come to be designated in two different
+ways by slight modifications of the original. Thus, from “<em>ken</em>”
+meaning “strong—weak” were derived two words: “<em>ken</em>” =
+“strong” and “<em>kan</em>” = “weak.” Nor is it only the oldest
+languages, in the last stages of their development, which have
+retained many survivals of these early words capable of meaning
+either of two opposites, but the same is true of much younger
+languages, even those which are to-day still living. I will quote
+some illustrations of this taken from the work of C. Abel (1884):</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In Latin, such ambivalent words are:</p>
+
+<p class='c017'><i><span lang="la">altus</span></i> = high or deep. <i><span lang="la">sacer</span></i> = sacred or accursed.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>As examples of modifications of the original root, I quote:</p>
+
+<p class='c017'><i><span lang="la">clamare</span></i> = to shout. <i><span lang="la">clam</span></i> = quietly, silently, secretly.
+<i><span lang="la">siccus</span></i> = dry. <i><span lang="la">succus</span></i> = juice.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>and, in German, <i><span lang="de">Stimme</span></i> = voice. <i><span lang="de">stumm</span></i> = dumb.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_151'>151</span>A comparison of kindred languages yields a large number of
+examples:</p>
+
+<p class='c017'>English: lock = to shut. German: <i><span lang="de">Loch</span></i> = hole. <i><span lang="de">Lücke</span></i> = gap.
+English: cleave.<a id='r40'></a><a href='#f40' class='c015'><sup>[40]</sup></a> German: <i><span lang="de">kleben</span></i> = to stick, adhere.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The English word “without,” originally carrying with it both
+a positive and a negative connotation, is to-day used in the
+negative sense only, but it is clear that “with” has the signification,
+not merely of “adding to,” but of “depriving of,”
+from the compounds “withdraw,” “withhold” (cf. the German
+<i><span lang="de">wieder</span></i>).</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Yet another peculiarity of the dream-work has its counterpart
+in the development of language. In ancient Egyptian, as
+well as in other later languages, the sequence of sounds was
+transposed so as to result in different words for the same fundamental
+idea. Examples of this kind of parallels between English
+and German words may be quoted:</p>
+
+<p class='c017'><i><span lang="de">Topf</span></i> (pot)—pot. Boat—tub. Hurry—<i><span lang="de">Ruhe</span></i> (rest).
+<i><span lang="de">Balken</span></i> (beam)—<i><span lang="de">Kloben</span></i> (club). wait—<i><span lang="de">täuwen</span></i> (to wait).</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Parallels between Latin and German:—</p>
+
+<p class='c017'><i><span lang="la">capere</span></i>—<i><span lang="de">packen</span></i> (to seize). <i><span lang="la">ren</span></i>—<i><span lang="de">Niere</span></i> (kidney).</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Such transpositions as have taken place here in the case of
+single words are made by the dream-work in a variety of
+ways. The inversion of the meaning, i.e. substitution by the
+opposite, is a device with which we are already familiar; but,
+besides this, we find in dreams inversion of situations or of the
+relations existing between two persons, as though the scene were
+laid in a “topsy-turvy” world. In dreams often enough the
+hare shoots the hunter. Again, inversion is met with in the
+sequence of events, so that in dreams cause follows effect, which
+reminds us of what sometimes happens in a third-rate theatrical
+performance, when first the hero falls and then the shot which
+kills him is fired from the wings. Or there are dreams in which
+the whole arrangement of the elements is inverted, so that in
+interpreting them the last must be taken first, and the first last,
+in order to make sense at all. You remember that we also
+found this in our study of dream-symbolism, in which the act
+of plunging or falling into water has the same meaning as that
+of emerging from water, namely, giving birth or being born,
+and going up steps or a ladder means the same as coming
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_152'>152</span>down them. We cannot fail to recognize the advantage reaped
+for dream-distortion by this freedom from restrictions in representing
+the dream-thoughts.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>These features of the dream-work may be termed <em>archaic</em>.
+They cling to the primitive modes of expression of languages or
+scripts, and yield the same difficulties, which we shall touch
+upon later in the course of some critical observations on this
+topic.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now let us consider some other aspects of the subject. Clearly
+what has to be accomplished by the dream-work is the transformation
+of the latent thoughts, as expressed in words, into
+perceptual forms, most commonly into visual images. Now
+our thoughts originated in such perceptual forms; their earliest
+material and the first stages in their development consisted of
+sense-impressions, or, more accurately, of memory-pictures of
+these. It was later that words were attached to these pictures
+and then connected so as to form thoughts. So that the
+dream-work subjects our thoughts to a <em>regressive</em> process and
+retraces the steps in their development; in the course of this
+<span class='fss'>REGRESSION</span> all new acquisitions won during this development of
+memory-pictures into thoughts must necessarily fall away.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This then is what we mean by the dream-work. Beside
+what we have learnt of its processes our interest in the manifest
+dream is bound to recede far into the background; I will, however,
+devote still a few more remarks to the manifest dream, for, after
+all, that is the only part of the dream with which we have any
+direct acquaintance.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It is natural that the manifest dream should lose some of its
+importance in our eyes. It must strike us as a matter of indifference
+whether it is carefully composed or split up into a succession
+of disconnected pictures. Even when the outward form of
+the dream is apparently full of meaning, we know that this
+appearance has been arrived at by the process of dream-distortion,
+and can have as little organic connection with the inner content
+of the dream as exists between the <em>façade</em> of an Italian church
+and its general structure and ground-plan. At times, however,
+this <em>façade</em> of the dream has a meaning too, reproducing an
+important part of the latent thoughts with little or no distortion.
+But we cannot know this until we have interpreted the dream
+and thus arrived at an opinion with regard to the degree of distortion
+present. A similar doubt obtains where two elements
+seem to be closely connected; such connection may contain a
+valuable hint that the corresponding elements in the latent dream
+are similarly related, but at other times we can convince ourselves
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_153'>153</span>that what is connected in thought has become widely separated
+in the dream.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In general we must refrain from attempting to explain one
+part of the manifest dream by another part, as though the dream
+were a coherent conception and a pragmatic representation.
+It is in most cases comparable rather to a piece of Breccia stone,
+composed of fragments of different kinds of stone cemented
+together in such a way that the markings upon it are not those
+of the original pieces contained in it. There is, as a matter of
+fact, one mechanism in the dream-work, known as <span class='fss'>SECONDARY
+ELABORATION</span>, the object of which is to combine the immediate
+results of the work into a single and fairly coherent whole;
+during this process the material is often so arranged as to
+give rise to total misunderstanding, and for this purpose any
+necessary interpolations are made.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>On the other hand, we should not overrate the dream-work
+or attribute to it more than is its due. Its activity is limited
+to the achievements here enumerated; condensation, displacement,
+plastic representation and secondary elaboration of the
+whole dream; these are all that it can effect. Such manifestations
+of judgement, criticism, surprise, or deductive reasoning, as are
+met with in dreams are not brought about by the dream-work
+and are only very rarely the expression of subsequent reflection
+about the dream; but are for the most part fragments of the
+latent thoughts introduced into the manifest dream with more
+or less modification and in a form suited to the context. Again,
+the dream-work cannot create conversation in dreams; save
+in a few exceptional cases, it is imitated from, and made up
+of, things heard or even said by the dreamer himself on the
+previous day, which have entered into the latent thoughts as
+the material or incitement of his dream. Neither do mathematical
+calculations come into the province of the dream-work;
+anything of the sort appearing in the manifest dream is generally
+a mere combination of numbers, a pseudo-calculation, quite
+absurd as such, and again only a copy of some calculation
+comprised in the latent thoughts. In these circumstances it
+is not surprising that the interest which was felt in the dream-work
+soon becomes directed instead towards the latent thoughts
+which disclose themselves in a more or less distorted form through
+the manifest dream. We are not justified, however, in a theoretical
+consideration of the subject, in letting our interest stray so
+far that we altogether substitute the latent thoughts for the
+dream as a whole, and make some pronouncement on the latter
+which is only true of the former. It is strange that the findings
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_154'>154</span>of psycho-analysis could be so misused as to result in confusion
+between the two. The term “dream” can only be applied to
+the <em>results of the dream-work</em>, i.e. to the <em>form</em> into which the
+latent thoughts have been rendered by the dream-work.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This work is a process of a quite peculiar type; nothing
+like it has hitherto been known in mental life. This kind
+of condensation, displacement, and regressive translation of
+thoughts into images, is a novelty, the recognition of which in
+itself richly rewards our efforts in the field of psycho-analysis.
+You will again perceive, from the parallels to dream-work,
+the connections revealed between psycho-analytic and other
+research, especially in the fields of the development of speech
+and thought. You will only realize the further significance
+of the insight so acquired when you learn that the mechanism of
+the dream-work is a kind of model for the formation of neurotic
+symptoms.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I know too that it is not possible for us yet to grasp the full
+extent of the fresh gain accruing to psychology from these labours.
+We will only hint at the new proofs thereby afforded of the
+existence of unconscious mental activities—for this indeed is
+the nature of the latent dream-thoughts—and at the promise
+dream-interpretation gives of an approach, wider than we ever
+guessed at, to the knowledge of the unconscious life of the mind.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now, however, I think the time has come to give you individual
+examples of various short dreams, which will illustrate the points
+for which I have already prepared you.</p>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_155'>155</span>
+ <h3 class='c002'><span class='c014'>TWELFTH LECTURE</span><br> EXAMPLES OF DREAMS AND ANALYSIS OF THEM</h3>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c006'>You must not be disappointed if I present you once more with
+fragments of dream-interpretations, instead of inviting you to
+participate in the interpretation of one fine long dream. You
+will say that after so much preparation you surely have a right
+to expect that; and you will express your conviction that, after
+successful interpretations of so many thousands of dreams, it
+should long ago have been possible to collect a number of striking
+examples by which the truth of all our assertions about the
+dream-work and dream-thoughts could be demonstrated. Yes,
+but there are too many difficulties in the way of fulfilling this
+wish of yours.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In the first place, I must confess that there is nobody who
+makes the interpretation of dreams his main business. In
+what circumstances, then, do we come to interpret them? At
+times we may occupy ourselves, for no particular purpose, with
+the dreams of a friend, or we may work out our own dreams
+over a period of time in order to train ourselves for
+psycho-analytic work; but chiefly we have to do with the
+dreams of nervous patients who are undergoing psycho-analytic
+treatment. These last dreams provide splendid material and are
+in no respect inferior to those of healthy persons, but the technique
+of the treatment obliges us to subordinate dream-interpretation
+to therapeutic purposes and to desist from the attempt to interpret
+a large number of the dreams as soon as we have extracted from
+them something of use for the treatment. Again, many dreams
+which occur during the treatment elude full interpretation altogether;
+since they have their origin in the whole mass of material
+in the mind which is as yet unknown to us, it is not possible
+to understand them until the completion of the cure. To relate
+such dreams would necessarily involve revealing all the secrets
+of a neurosis; this will not do for us, since we have taken up
+the problem of dreams in preparation for the study of the neuroses.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now I expect you would willingly dispense with this material
+and would prefer to listen to the explanation of dreams of healthy
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_156'>156</span>persons or perhaps of your own. But the content of these dreams
+makes that impossible. One cannot expose oneself, nor anyone
+whose confidence has been placed in one, so ruthlessly as a
+thorough interpretation of a dream would necessitate; for, as
+you already know, they touch upon all that is most intimate
+in the personality. Apart from the difficulty arising out of the
+nature of the material, there is another difficulty as regards
+relating the dreams. You are aware that the dream seems
+foreign and strange to the dreamer himself; how much more
+so to an outsider to whom his personality is unknown. The
+literature of psycho-analysis shows no lack of good and detailed
+dream-analyses; I myself have published some which formed
+part of the history of certain pathological cases. Perhaps the
+best example of a dream-interpretation is that published by
+O. Rank, consisting of the analysis of two mutually-related
+dreams of a young girl. These cover about two pages of print,
+while the analysis of them runs into 76 pages. It would need
+almost a whole term’s lectures in order to take you through
+a work of this magnitude. If we selected some fairly long and
+considerably distorted dream we should have to enter into so
+many explanations, to adduce so much material in the shape
+of associations and recollections, and to go down so many sidetracks,
+that a single lecture would be quite unsatisfying and
+would give no clear idea of it as a whole. So I must ask you
+to be content if I pursue a less difficult course, and relate some
+fragments from dreams of neurotic patients, in which this or
+that isolated feature may be recognized. Symbols are the easiest
+features to demonstrate and, after them, certain peculiarities
+of the regressive character of dream-representation. I will
+tell you why I regard each of the following dreams as worth
+relating.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>1. A dream consisted only of two short pictures: <em>The
+dreamer’s uncle was smoking a cigarette, although it was Saturday.—A
+woman was fondling and caressing the dreamer as though he
+were her child.</em></p>
+
+<p class='c007'>With reference to the first picture, the dreamer (a Jew)
+remarked that his uncle was a very pious man who never had
+done, and never would do, anything so sinful as smoking on the
+Sabbath. The only association to the woman in the second
+picture was that of the dreamer’s mother. These two pictures
+or thoughts must obviously be related to one another; but
+in what way? Since he expressly denied that his uncle would
+in reality perform the action of the dream, the insertion of the
+conditional “if” will at once suggest itself. “If my uncle,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_157'>157</span>that deeply religious man, were to smoke a cigarette on the
+Sabbath, then I myself might be allowed to let my mother
+fondle me.” Clearly, that is as much as to say that being fondled
+by the mother was something as strictly forbidden as smoking
+on the Sabbath is to the pious Jew. You will remember my
+telling you that in the dream-work all relations among the
+dream-thoughts disappear; the thoughts are broken up into
+their raw material, and our task in interpreting is to re-insert
+these connections which have been omitted.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>2. My writings on the subject of dreams have placed me to
+some extent in the position of public consultant on the question,
+and for many years now I have received letters from the most
+diverse quarters communicating dreams to me or asking for
+my opinion. Naturally I am grateful to all those who have
+given me sufficient material with their dreams to make an interpretation
+possible, or have themselves volunteered one. The
+following dream of a medical student in Munich dating from
+1910, belongs to this category; and I quote it because it may
+prove to you how hard it is, generally speaking, to understand
+a dream until the dreamer has given us what information he
+can about it. For I have a suspicion that in the bottom of your
+hearts you think that the translating of the symbols is the ideal
+method of interpretation and that you would like to discard that
+of free association; I want, therefore, to clear your minds of
+so pernicious an error.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>July 18th, 1910. Towards morning I had the following
+dream: <em>I was bicycling down a street in Tübingen, when a brown
+dachshund came rushing after me and caught hold of one of my heels.
+I rode a little further and then dismounted, sat down on a step and
+began to beat the creature off, for it had set its teeth fast in my heel.</em>
+(The dog’s biting me and the whole scene roused no unpleasant
+sensations.) <em>Two elderly ladies were sitting opposite, watching me
+with grinning faces. Then I woke up and, as has frequently happened
+before, with the transition to waking consciousness the whole
+dream was clear to me.</em></p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In this instance symbolism cannot help us much, but the
+dreamer goes on to tell us: “I recently fell in love with a girl,
+just from seeing her in the street; but I had no means of introduction
+to her. I should have liked best to make her acquaintance
+through her dachshund, for I am a great animal-lover
+myself and was attracted by seeing that she was one too.” He
+adds that several times he had separated fighting dogs very
+skilfully, often to the amazement of the onlookers. Now we
+learn that the girl who had taken his fancy was always seen
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_158'>158</span>walking with this particular dog. She, however, has been
+eliminated from the manifest dream; only the dog associated
+with her has remained. Possibly the elderly ladies who grinned
+at him represented her, but the rest of what he tells us does not
+clear up this point. The fact that he was riding a bicycle in
+the dream was a direct repetition of the situation as he remembered
+it, for he had not met the girl with the dog except when he was
+bicycling.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>3. When a man has lost someone dear to him, for a considerable
+period afterwards he produces a special type of dream, in
+which the most remarkable compromises are effected between
+his knowledge that that person is dead and his desire to call
+him back to life. Sometimes the deceased is dreamt of as being
+dead, and yet still alive because he does not know that he is
+dead, as if he would only really die if he did know it; at other
+times he is half dead and half alive, and each of these conditions
+has its distinguishing marks. We must not call these dreams
+merely nonsensical, for to come to life again is no more inadmissible
+in dreams than in fairy tales, in which it is quite a common
+fate. As far as I have been able to analyse such dreams,
+it appeared that they were capable of a reasonable explanation,
+but that the pious wish to recall the departed is apt to manifest
+itself in the strangest ways. I will submit a dream of this sort
+to you, which certainly sounds strange and absurd enough, and
+the analysis of which will demonstrate many points already
+indicated in our theoretical discussions. The dreamer was a
+man who had lost his father some years previously:—</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><em>My father was dead but had been exhumed and looked ill. He
+went on living, and I did all I could to prevent his noticing it.</em> Then
+the dream goes on to other matters, apparently very remote.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>That the father was dead we know to be a fact; but the
+exhumation had not taken place in reality: indeed, the question
+of real fact has nothing to do with anything that follows. But
+the dreamer went on to say that after he returned from his
+father’s funeral one of his teeth began to ache. He wanted to
+treat it according to the Jewish precept: “If thy tooth offend
+thee, pluck it out,” and accordingly went to the dentist. The
+latter, however, said that that was not the way to treat a tooth;
+one must have patience with it. “I will put something in it,”
+he said, “to kill the nerve, and you must come back in three
+days’ time, when I will take it out again.” “This ‘taking
+out,’” said the dreamer suddenly, “is the exhuming.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now was he right? True, the parallel is not exact, for it was
+not the tooth which was taken out, but only a dead part of it.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_159'>159</span>As a result of experience, however, we can well credit the
+dream-work with inaccuracies of this sort. We must suppose
+that the dreamer had, by a process of condensation, combined
+the dead father with the tooth, which was dead and which he
+yet retained. No wonder then that an absurdity was the result
+in the manifest dream, for obviously not all that was said about
+the tooth could apply to the father. What then are we to regard
+as the <em>tertium comparationis</em> between the father and the tooth,—what
+common factor makes the comparison possible?</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Such a factor must have existed, for the dreamer went on to
+observe that he knew the saying that if one dreams of losing
+a tooth it means that one is about to lose a member of his family.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>We know that this popular interpretation is incorrect or at
+least correct only in a very distorted sense. We shall therefore
+be the more surprised actually to discover the subject thus
+touched upon behind the other elements of the dream-content.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Without being pressed further, the dreamer then began to
+talk of his father’s illness and death, and of the relations which
+had existed between father and son. The illness had been a
+long one, and the care and treatment of the invalid had cost
+the son a large sum of money. Yet it never seemed too much
+to him, nor did his patience ever fail or the wish occur to him that
+the end should come. He prided himself on his true Jewish
+filial piety and on his strict observance of the Jewish law. Does
+not a certain contradiction strike us here in the thoughts relating
+to the dream? He had identified the tooth with the father.
+He wanted to treat the former according to the Jewish law
+which commanded that a tooth which causes pain and annoyance
+should be plucked out. His father he also wanted to treat
+according to the precepts of the law, but here the command
+was that he must pay no heed to expense and annoyance, must
+take the whole burden upon himself, and not allow any hostile
+intention to arise against the cause of the trouble. Would not
+the agreement between the two situations be much more convincing
+if he had really gradually come to have the same feelings
+towards his sick father as he had towards his diseased tooth,
+that is to say, if he had wished for death to put a speedy end
+to his father’s superfluous, painful and costly existence?</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I have no doubt that this was, in reality, his attitude towards
+his father during the protracted illness and that his boastful
+assertions of filial piety were designed to divert his mind from
+any recollections of the sort. Under conditions such as these
+it is no uncommon thing for the death-wish against the father
+to be roused, and to mask itself with some ostensibly compassionate
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_160'>160</span>reflection, such as: “It would be a blessed release for him.”
+But I want you particularly to notice that here in the latent
+thoughts themselves a barrier has been broken down. The
+first part of the thoughts was, we may be sure, only temporarily
+unconscious, that is, during the actual process of the dream-work;
+the hostile feelings towards the father, on the other
+hand, had probably been permanently so, possibly dating from
+childhood and having at times, during the father’s illness, crept
+as it were timidly and in a disguised form into consciousness.
+We can maintain this with even greater certainty of other latent
+thoughts which have unmistakably contributed to the content
+of the dream. There are, it is true, no indications in it of hostile
+feelings towards the father; but when we enquire into the origin
+of such hostility in the life of the child we remember that fear
+of the father arises from the fact that in the earliest years of
+life it is he who opposes the sexual activity of the boy, as he
+is usually compelled to do again, after puberty, from motives of
+social expediency. This was the relation in which our dreamer
+stood to his father; his affection for him had been tinged with
+a good deal of respect and dread, the source of which was early
+sexual intimidation.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>We can now explain the further phrases in the dream from
+the onanism complex. “<em>He looked ill</em>” was an allusion to
+another remark of the dentist’s—that it did not look well for
+a tooth to be missing just there—but it also refers at the same
+time to the “looking ill” by which the young man, during
+the period of puberty, betrays, or fears lest he might betray,
+his excessive sexual activity. It was with a lightening of his
+own heart that in the manifest dream the dreamer transferred
+the look of illness from himself to his father, an inversion with
+which you are familiar as a device of the dream-work. “<em>He
+went on living</em>” accords both with the wish to recall the father
+to life and the promise of the dentist to save the tooth. The phrase
+“<em>I did everything I could to prevent his noticing</em>” is extremely
+subtly designed to lead us to complete it with the words “that
+he was dead.” The only completion of them that really makes
+sense, however, is again to be traced to the onanism complex,
+where it is a matter of course that the young man should do
+all he can to conceal his sexual life from his father. Finally,
+I would remind you that the so-called “toothache dreams”
+always refer to onanism, and the punishment for it that is feared.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>You see how this incomprehensible dream is built up by a
+piece of remarkable and misleading condensation, by omitting
+from it all the thoughts that belong to the core of the latent train
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_161'>161</span>of thought, and by the creation of ambiguous substitute-formations
+to represent those thoughts which were deepest and most
+remote in time.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>4. We have already tried repeatedly to get to the bottom
+of those prosaic and banal dreams which have nothing absurd
+or strange in them, but which suggest the question: Why
+should we dream about such trivialities at all? I will therefore
+quote a fresh example of this sort in the shape of three
+dreams connected with one another and dreamt by a young lady
+in the course of a single night.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>(<em>a</em>) <em>She was going through the hall in her house and struck her
+head on a low-hanging chandelier with such force as to draw blood.</em>
+This episode did not remind her of anything that had actually
+happened; her remarks led in quite another direction: “You
+know how terribly my hair is coming out. Well, yesterday
+my mother said to me: ‘My dear child, if it goes on like this,
+your head will soon be as bald as your buttocks.’” We see here
+that the head stands for the other end of the body. No further
+assistance is required to understand the symbolism of the chandelier:
+all objects capable of elongation are symbols of the
+male organ. The real subject of the dream then is a bleeding
+at the lower end of the body, caused by contact with the penis.
+This might still have other meanings; the dreamer’s further
+associations show that the dream has to do with the belief that
+menstruation results from sexual intercourse with a man, a
+notion about sexual matters which is by no means uncommon
+amongst immature girls.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>(<em>b</em>) <em>The dreamer saw in a vineyard a deep hole which she knew
+had been caused by the uprooting of a tree.</em> Her remark on this
+point was that “the tree was <em>missing</em>,” meaning that she did
+not see the tree in the dream; but the same phrase serves to
+express another thought, which leaves us in no doubt as to the
+symbolic interpretation. The dream refers to another infantile
+notion on the subject of sex, to the belief that girls originally
+had the same genital organ as boys and that the later conformation
+of this organ has been brought about by castration (uprooting
+the tree).</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>(<em>c</em>) <em>The dreamer was standing in front of her writing-table drawer
+which she knows so well that, if anyone touched it, she would immediately
+be aware of it.</em> The writing-table drawer, like all drawers,
+chests and boxes, is a symbol of the female genital. She knew
+that when sexual intercourse (or, as she thought, any contact at
+all) has taken place the genital shows certain indications of
+the fact, and she had long had a fear of being convicted of this.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_162'>162</span>I think that in all three dreams the main emphasis lies on the
+idea of <em>knowing</em>. She had in mind the time of childish investigations
+into sexual matters, of the results of which she had been
+very proud at the time.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>5. Here is another example of symbolism. But this time I
+must preface it with a short account of the mental situation
+in which the dream occurred. A man and a woman who were
+in love had spent a night together; he described her nature as
+maternal, she was one of those women whose desire to have a
+child comes out irresistibly during caresses. The conditions
+of their meeting, however, made it necessary to take precautions
+to prevent the semen from entering the womb. On waking the
+next morning, the woman related the following dream:—</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><em>An officer with a red cap was pursuing her in the street. She
+fled from him and ran up the staircase, with him after her. Breathless,
+she reached her rooms and slammed and locked the door behind her.
+The man remained outside and, peeping through the keyhole in the
+door, she saw him sitting on a bench outside, weeping.</em></p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In the pursuit by the officer with the red cap and the breathless
+climbing of the stairs you will recognize the representation of the
+sexual act. That the dreamer shuts her pursuer out may serve
+as an example of the device of inversion so frequently employed
+in dreams, for in reality it was the man who withdrew before
+the completion of the sexual act. In the same way, she has
+projected her own feeling of grief on to her partner, for it is he,
+who weeps in the dream, his tears at the same time alluding to
+the seminal fluid.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>You will certainly have heard it said at some time or other
+that psycho-analysis maintains that all dreams have a sexual
+meaning. You are now in a position yourselves to form an
+opinion as to the falseness of this reproach. You have learnt
+of wish-fulfilment dreams, dealing with the gratification of the
+most obvious needs—hunger, thirst, and the longing for liberty—comfort-dreams
+and impatience-dreams, as well as those which
+are frankly avaricious and egoistical. You may, however, certainly
+bear it in mind that, according to the results of psycho-analysis,
+dreams in which a marked degree of distortion is present
+<em>mainly</em> (but here again not exclusively) give expression to sexual
+desires.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>6. I have a special motive in giving many instances of the
+use of symbols in dreams. In our first lecture I complained of
+the difficulty of demonstrating my statements in such a way as
+to carry conviction with regard to the findings of psycho-analysis,
+and since then you have doubtless agreed with me. Now the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_163'>163</span>separate propositions of psycho-analysis are nevertheless so
+intimately related that conviction on a single point easily leads
+to acceptance of the greater part of the whole theory. It might
+be said of psycho-analysis that if you give it your little finger
+it will soon have your whole hand. If you accept the explanation
+of errors as satisfactory, you cannot logically stop short of belief
+in all the rest. Now dream-symbolism provides another, equally
+good, approach to such acceptance. I will recount to you a
+dream, which has already been published, of a woman of the
+poorer classes, whose husband was a watchman and of whom
+we may be sure that she had never heard of dream-symbolism
+and psycho-analysis. You can then judge for yourselves whether
+the interpretation arrived at with the help of sexual symbols
+can justly be called arbitrary or forced.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“<em>... Then someone broke into the house and in terror she
+cried for a watchman. But the watchman, accompanied by two
+tramps, had gone into a church, which had several steps leading up to
+it. Behind the church there was a mountain and, up above, a
+thick wood. The watchman wore a helmet, gorget and cloak, and
+had a full brown beard. The two tramps, who had gone along
+peaceably with him, had aprons twisted round their hips like sacks.
+A path led from the church to the mountain and was overgrown
+on both sides with grass and bushes which grew denser and denser,
+and at the top of the mountain there was a regular wood.</em>”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>You will recognize without any trouble the symbols here
+employed: the male organ is represented by the trinity of <em>three</em>
+persons appearing, whilst the female sexual organs are symbolized
+by a landscape with a chapel, a mountain and a wood, and once
+more you have the act of going up steps as symbolic of the sexual
+act. The part of the body called in the dream “a mountain”
+is similarly termed in anatomy the mons veneris.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>7. I will tell you another dream which is to be explained in
+the light of symbolism, a dream, moreover, which is noteworthy
+and convincing from the fact that the dreamer himself translated
+all the symbols, though he brought no previous theoretical
+knowledge to the interpretation. This is a very unusual circumstance
+and we have no accurate idea of the conditions which
+give rise to it.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><em>He was walking with his father in a place which must have been
+the Prater,<a id='r41'></a><a href='#f41' class='c015'><sup>[41]</sup></a> for they saw the Rotunda with a little building in front
+of it, to which was made fast a captive balloon which looked rather
+slack. His father asked him what it was all for; the son wondered
+at his asking, but explained it nevertheless. Then they came to
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_164'>164</span>a court-yard, where a large sheet of metal lay spread out. His
+father wanted to break off a big piece, but looked round first in case
+anyone should notice him. He said to his son that all the same he
+need only tell the overseer and then he could take it straightaway.
+Some steps led down from this court to a shaft, the sides of which
+were upholstered with some soft stuff, something like a leather armchair.
+At the bottom of this shift was a rather long platform and,
+beyond it, another shaft.</em></p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The following is the dreamer’s own interpretation:—“The
+Rotunda stands for my genitals and the captive balloon in front
+of it for the penis, which I have had to complain of for being
+limp.” A more detailed translation would then run thus: the
+rotunda stands for the buttocks (regularly included by children
+amongst the genitals), the smaller structure in front is the scrotum.
+In the dream, his father asks him what all this is, i.e. what are
+the purpose and function of the genitals. To invert this situation
+so that the son asks the questions is an obvious idea, and, since
+these questions were never asked in reality, we must construe
+the dream-thoughts as a wish or take them in a conditional sense:
+“If I had asked my father to explain....” The sequel
+to this thought we shall find presently.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The court-yard where the sheet-metal lay is not in the first
+place to be explained symbolically, but is a reference to the
+father’s place of business. From motives of discretion I have
+substituted “sheet-metal” for the actual material dealt with
+by him, but otherwise I have made no alteration in the words
+of the dream. The dreamer had entered his father’s business
+and had been much scandalized by the extremely questionable
+practices upon which the high profits largely depended. Hence
+the sequel to the dream-thought mentioned above would run:
+“(If I had asked him), he would have deceived me as he deceives
+his customers.” The dreamer himself gives a second explanation
+for the pulling off the piece of metal which serves to represent
+commercial dishonesty: it means, he says, the practice of masturbation.
+Not only is this an explanation with which we have
+long been familiar, but it is well in accordance with this interpretation
+that the secret practice of masturbation should be
+expressed by the opposite idea (“<em>We may do it openly</em>”). So
+the fact that this practice is imputed to the father, as was the
+questioning in the first scene of the dream, is exactly what we
+should expect. The dreamer immediately interpreted the shaft,
+on account of the soft upholstering of the walls, as the vagina,
+and I, on my own account, offer the remark that going-down as
+well as going-up stands for sexual intercourse.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_165'>165</span>The details of the long platform at the bottom of the first
+shaft, and beyond that the second shaft, were explained by the
+dreamer himself from his own history. He had practised intercourse
+for some time and then given it up on account of inhibitions,
+but hoped to be able to resume it by the help of the
+treatment.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>8. I quote the two following dreams, dreamt by a foreigner
+with marked polygamous tendencies, because they may serve
+to illustrate the statement that the dreamer’s own person is
+present in every dream, even when it is disguised in the manifest
+content. The trunks in the dreams are female symbols.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>(<em>a</em>) <em>The dreamer was going on a journey and his luggage was
+being taken to the station on a carriage. There were a number of
+trunks piled one on the top of the other, and amongst them two large
+black boxes like those of a commercial traveller. He said consolingly
+to someone: “You see those are only going as far as the station.”</em></p>
+
+<p class='c007'>He does, as a matter of fact, travel with a great deal of
+luggage, and he also brings many stories about women to the
+treatment. The two black trunks stand for two dark women
+who at the moment are playing the principal part in his life. One
+of them wanted to follow him to Vienna, but on my advice he
+had telegraphed to put her off.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>(<em>b</em>) A scene at a customs house:—<em>A fellow-traveller opened
+his trunk and said nonchalantly, smoking a cigarette: “There
+is nothing to declare in that.” The customs official seemed to believe
+him, but felt in the trunk again and found a strictly prohibited article.
+The traveller then said in a resigned way: “Well, it can’t be helped.”</em>
+The dreamer himself is the traveller and I am the official. He
+is generally very straightforward with me, but had made up
+his mind to conceal from me a relation which he had recently
+formed with a lady, for he assumed quite correctly that I knew
+her. He displaces on to a stranger the embarrassing situation
+of being detected, so that he himself does not seem to come
+into the dream at all.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>9. Here we have an example of a symbol which I have not
+yet mentioned:—</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><em>The dreamer met his sister with two friends who were themselves
+sisters. He shook hands with these two, but not with his sister.</em></p>
+
+<p class='c007'>There was no real episode connected with this in his mind.
+Instead, his thoughts went back to a time when his observations
+led him to wonder why a girl’s breasts are so late in developing.
+The two sisters, therefore, stand for the breasts; he would have
+liked to grasp them with his hand, if only it had not been his
+sister.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_166'>166</span>10. Here is an example of death symbolism in dreams:—<em>The
+dreamer was crossing a very high, steep, iron bridge, with
+two people whose names he knew, but forgot on waking. Suddenly
+both of them had vanished and he saw a ghostly man in a cap and an
+overall. He asked him whether he were the telegraph messenger....
+“No.” Or the coachman?... “No.” He then went on</em>,
+and in the dream, had a feeling of great dread; on waking, he
+followed it up with the phantasy that the iron bridge suddenly
+broke and that he fell into the abyss.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>When stress is laid upon the fact that people in a dream are
+unknown to the dreamer, or that he has forgotten their names,
+they are, as a rule, persons with whom he is intimately connected.
+The dreamer was one of a family of three children; if he had ever
+wished for the death of the other two, it would be only just that
+he should be visited with the fear of death. With reference to the
+telegraph messenger, he remarked that they always bring bad news.
+From his uniform, the man in the dream might have been a
+lamp-lighter, who also puts out the lights, as the spirit of death
+extinguishes the torch of life. With the coachman he associated
+Uhland’s poem of the voyage of King Karl, and recalled a dangerous
+sail on a lake with two companions, when he played the part
+of the king in the poem. The iron bridge suggested to him
+a recent accident, also the stupid saying: “Life is a suspension
+bridge.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>11. The following may be regarded as another example of a
+death-dream:—</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><em>An unknown gentleman was leaving a black-edged visiting card
+on the dreamer.</em></p>
+
+<p class='c007'>12. I give another dream which will interest you from several
+points of view; it is to be traced partly, however, to a neurotic
+condition in the dreamer:—</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><em>He was in a train which stopped in the open country. He thought
+there was going to be an accident and that he must make his escape,
+so he went through all the compartments, killing everyone he met,—driver,
+guard, and so on.</em></p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This dream recalls a story told him by a friend. On a certain
+Italian line, an insane man was being conveyed in a small compartment,
+but by some mistake a passenger was allowed to get
+in with him. The madman murdered the other traveller. Thus
+the dreamer identified himself with this insane man, his reason
+being that he was at times tormented by an obsession that
+he must make away with “everyone who shared his knowledge.”
+Then he himself found a better motivation for the
+dream. The day before, he had seen at the theatre a girl he
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_167'>167</span>had meant to marry but had given up because she gave him
+cause for jealousy. Knowing the intensity which jealousy
+could assume in him, he would really have been mad to want
+to marry her. That is to say, he thought her so unreliable that
+his jealousy would have led him to murder everyone who got
+in his way. The going through a number of rooms, or, as here,
+compartments, we have already learnt to know as a symbol of
+marriage (the expression of monogamy according to the rule
+of opposites).</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>With reference to the train’s stopping in the open country
+and the fear of an accident, he told the following story:—</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Once when such a sudden halt occurred on the line outside
+a station, a young lady who was in the carriage said that perhaps
+there was going to be a collision, and that the best thing to do
+was to raise the legs high. This phrase “raise the legs” had
+associations with many walks and excursions into the country,
+which he had shared with the girl mentioned above in the happy
+early days of their love. Here was a new argument for the
+contention that he would be mad to marry her now; nevertheless,
+my knowledge of the situation led me to regard it as certain
+that there existed in him all the same the desire to fall a victim
+to this form of madness.</p>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_168'>168</span>
+ <h3 class='c002'><span class='c014'>THIRTEENTH LECTURE</span><br> ARCHAIC AND INFANTILE FEATURES IN DREAMS</h3>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c006'>Let us start afresh from our conclusion that, under the influence
+of the censorship, the dream-work translates the latent
+dream-thoughts into another form. These thoughts are of the
+same nature as the familiar, conscious thoughts of waking life;
+the new form in which they are expressed is, owing to many
+peculiar characteristics, incomprehensible to us. We have said
+that it goes back to phases in our intellectual development which
+we have long outgrown—to hieroglyphic writing, to symbolic-connections,
+possibly to conditions which existed before the
+language of thought was evolved. On this account we called
+the form of expression employed by the dream-work <em>archaic</em>
+or <em>regressive</em>.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>From this you may draw the inference that a more profound
+study of the dream-work must lead to valuable conclusions
+about the initial stages of our intellectual development, of which
+at present little is known. I hope it will be so, but so far this
+task has not been attempted. The era to which the dream-work
+takes us back is “primitive” in a twofold sense: in the
+first place, it means the early days of the <em>individual</em>—his childhood—and,
+secondly, in so far as each individual repeats in some
+abbreviated fashion during childhood the whole course of the
+development of the human race, the reference is <em>phylogenetic</em>.
+I believe it not impossible that we may be able to discriminate
+between that part of the latent mental processes which belongs
+to the early days of the individual and that which has its roots
+in the infancy of the race. It seems to me, for instance, that
+symbolism, a mode of expression which has never been individually
+acquired, may claim to be regarded as a racial heritage.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This, however, is not the only archaic feature in dreams.
+You are all familiar from actual experience with the peculiar
+<em>amnesia of childhood</em> to which we are subject. I mean that the
+first years of life, up to the age of five, six, or eight, have not
+left the same traces in memory as our later experiences. True,
+we come across individuals who can boast of continuous recollection
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_169'>169</span>from early infancy to the present time, but it is incomparably
+more common for the opposite, a blank in memory,
+to be found. In my opinion, this has not aroused sufficient
+surprise. At two years old the child can speak well and soon
+shows his capacity for adapting himself to complicated mental
+situations, and, moreover, says things which he himself has
+forgotten when they are repeated to him years later. And yet
+memory is more efficient in early years, being less overburdened
+than it is later. Again, there is no reason to regard the function
+of memory as an especially high or difficult form of mental
+activity; on the contrary, excellent memory may be found in
+people who are yet on a very low plane intellectually.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But I must draw your attention to a second peculiarity,
+based upon the first—namely, that from the oblivion in which
+the first years of childhood are shrouded certain clearly retained
+recollections emerge, mostly in the form of plastic images, for
+the retention of which there seems no adequate ground. Memory
+deals with the mass of impressions received in later life by a
+process of selection, retaining what is important and omitting
+what is not; but with the recollections retained from childhood
+this is not so. They do not necessarily reflect important experiences
+in childhood, not even such as must have seemed important
+from the child’s standpoint, but are often so banal and meaningless
+in themselves that we can only ask ourselves in amazement
+why just this particular detail has escaped oblivion. I have
+tried, with the help of analysis, to attack the problem of childhood
+amnesia and of the fragments of recollection which break
+through it, and have come to the conclusion that, whatever may
+appear to the contrary, the child no less than the adult only
+retains in memory what is important; but that what is important
+is represented (by the processes of condensation and, more
+especially, of displacement, already familiar to you) in the
+memory by something apparently trivial. For this reason I
+have called these childhood recollections <em>screen-memories</em>; a
+thorough analysis can evolve from them all that has been forgotten.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It is a regular task in psycho-analytic treatment to fill in
+the blank in infantile memories, and, in so far as the treatment
+is successful to any extent at all (very frequently, therefore)
+we are enabled to bring to light the content of those early years
+long buried in oblivion. These impressions have never really
+been forgotten, but were only inaccessible and latent, having become
+part of the unconscious. But sometimes it happens that
+they emerge spontaneously from the unconscious, and it is in
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_170'>170</span>connection with dreams that this happens. It is clear that the
+dream-life knows the way back to these latent, infantile experiences.
+Many good illustrations of this are to be found in psycho-analytical
+literature, and I myself have been able to furnish a contribution
+of the sort. I once dreamt in a particular connection of someone
+who had evidently done me a service and whom I saw plainly.
+He was a one-eyed man, short, fat and high-shouldered; from
+the context I gathered that he was a doctor. Fortunately I
+was able to ask my mother, who was still living, what was the
+personal appearance of the doctor who attended us at the place
+where I was born and which I left at the age of three; she told
+me that he had only one eye and was short, fat and high-shouldered;
+I learnt also of the accident which was the occasion of this
+doctor’s being called in and which I had forgotten. This command
+of the forgotten material of the earliest years of childhood
+is thus a further ‘archaic’ feature of dreams.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This knowledge has a bearing on another of the problems
+which up to the present have proved insoluble. You will remember
+the astonishment caused by our discovery that dreams have
+their origin in actively evil or in excessive sexual desires, which
+have made both the dream-censorship and dream-distortion
+necessary. Supposing now that we have interpreted a dream of
+this sort, and the circumstances are specially favourable in
+that the dreamer does not quarrel with the interpretation itself,
+he does nevertheless invariably ask how any such wish could
+come into his mind, since it seems quite foreign to him and he
+is conscious of desiring the exact opposite. We need have no
+hesitation in pointing out to him the origin of the wish he repudiates:
+these evil impulses may be traced to the past, often
+indeed to a past which is not so very far away. It may be demonstrated
+that he once knew and was conscious of them, even if
+this is no longer so. A woman who had a dream meaning that
+she wished to see her only daughter (then seventeen years old)
+lying dead found, with our help, that at one time she actually
+had cherished this death-wish. The child was the offspring
+of an unhappy marriage, which ended in the speedy separation
+of husband and wife. Once when the child was as yet unborn
+the mother, in an access of rage after a violent scene with her
+husband, beat her body with her clenched fists in order to kill
+the baby in her womb. How many mothers who to-day love
+their children tenderly, perhaps with excessive tenderness, yet
+conceived them unwillingly and wished that the life within
+them might not develop further; and have indeed turned this
+wish into various actions, fortunately of a harmless kind. The
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_171'>171</span>later death-wish against beloved persons, which appears so
+puzzling, thus dates from the early days of the relationship to
+them.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>A father, whose dream when interpreted shows that he wished
+for the death of his eldest and favourite child, is in the same way
+obliged to recall that there was a time when this wish was not
+unknown to him. The man, whose marriage had proved a
+disappointment, often thought when the child was still an infant
+that if the little creature who meant nothing to him were to die
+he would again be free and would make better use of his freedom.
+A large number of similar impulses of hate are to be traced to
+a similar source; they are recollections of something belonging
+to the past, something which was once in consciousness and
+played its part in mental life. From this you will be inclined
+to draw the conclusion that such dreams and such wishes would
+not occur in cases where there have been no changes of this
+sort in the relations between two persons, that is to say, where
+the relation has been of the same character from the beginning.
+I am prepared to grant you this conclusion, only I must warn
+you that you have to consider, not the literal meaning of the
+dream, but what it signifies on interpretation. It may be that
+the manifest dream of the death of some beloved person was
+only using this as a terrible mask, whilst really meaning something
+totally different, or it is possible that the beloved person
+is an illusory substitute for someone else.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This situation will, however, raise in you another and
+much more serious question. You will say: “Even though
+this death-wish did at one time actually exist and this is confirmed
+by recollection, that is still no true explanation; for the desire
+has long since been overcome and surely at the present time can
+exist in the unconscious merely as a recollection, of no affective
+value, and not as a powerful exciting agent. For this later assumption
+we have no evidence. Why is the wish recollected
+at all in dreams?” This is a question which you are really
+justified in asking; the attempt to answer it would take us far
+afield and would oblige us to define our position with regard to
+one of the most important points in the theory of dreams. But
+I must keep within the limits of our discussion and must forbear
+to follow up this question; so you must be reconciled to leaving
+it for the present. Let us content ourselves with the actual
+evidence that this wish, long since subdued, can be proved to
+have given rise to the dream, and let us continue our enquiry
+whether other evil wishes also can be traced in the same way
+to the past.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_172'>172</span>Let us keep to the death-wishes, which we shall certainly
+find mostly derived from the unbounded egoism of the dreamer.
+Wishes of this sort are very often found to be the underlying
+agents of dreams. Whenever anyone gets in our way in life—and
+how often must this happen when our relations to one another
+are so complicated!—a dream is immediately prepared to make
+away with that person, even if it be father, mother, brother or sister,
+husband or wife. It appeared to us amazing that such wickedness
+should be innate in humanity, and certainly we were not inclined
+to admit without further evidence that this result of our interpretation
+of dreams was correct. But, when once we had seen
+that the origin of wishes of this sort must be looked for in the
+past, we had little difficulty in finding the period in the past of the
+individual in which there is nothing strange in such egoism
+and such wishes, even when directed against the nearest and
+dearest. A child in his earliest years (which later are veiled
+in oblivion) is just the person who frequently displays such egoism
+in boldest relief; invariably, unmistakable tendencies of this
+kind, or, more accurately, surviving traces of them, are plainly
+visible in him. For a child loves himself first and only later learns
+to love others and to sacrifice something of his own ego to them.
+Even the people whom he seems to love from the outset are loved
+in the first instance because he needs them and cannot do without
+them—again therefore, from motives of egoism. Only later
+does the impulse of love detach itself from egoism: it is a literal
+fact that the child learns how to love through his own egoism.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In this connection it will be instructive to compare a child’s
+attitude towards his brothers and sisters with his attitude towards
+his parents. The little child does not necessarily love his brothers
+and sisters, and often he is quite frank about it. It is unquestionable
+that in them he sees and hates his rivals, and it is well
+known how commonly this attitude persists without interruption
+for many years, till the child reaches maturity and even later.
+Of course it often gives place to a more tender feeling, or perhaps
+we should say it is overlaid by this, but the hostile attitude
+seems very generally to be the earlier. We can most easily
+observe it in children of two and a half to four years old when
+a new baby arrives, which generally meets with a very unfriendly
+reception; remarks such as “I don’t like it. The stork is to
+take it away again” are very common. Subsequently every
+opportunity is seized to disparage the new-comer; attempts
+are even made to injure it and actual attacks upon it are by
+no means unheard-of. If the difference in age is less, by the
+time the child’s mental activity is more fully developed the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_173'>173</span>rival is already in existence and he adapts himself to the situation;
+if on the other hand there is a greater difference between
+their ages, the new baby may rouse certain kindly feelings from
+the first, as an object of interest, a sort of living doll; and when
+there is as much as eight years or more between them, especially
+if the elder child is a girl, protective, motherly impulses may at
+once come into play. But, speaking honestly, when we find a
+wish for the death of a brother or a sister latent in a dream we
+need seldom be puzzled, for we find its origin in early childhood
+without much trouble, or indeed, quite often in the later years
+when they still lived together.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>There is probably no nursery without violent conflicts between
+the inhabitants, actuated by rivalry for the love of the parents,
+competition for possessions shared by them all, even for the
+actual space in the room they occupy. Such hostility is directed
+against older as well as younger brothers and sisters. I think
+it was Bernard Shaw who said: “If there is anyone whom a
+young English lady hates more than her mother it is her elder
+sister.” Now there is something in this dictum which jars upon
+us; it is hard enough to bring ourselves to understand hatred
+and rivalry between brothers and sisters, but how can feelings
+of hate force themselves into the relation between mother and
+daughter, parents and children?</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This relationship is no doubt a more favourable one, also from
+the children’s point of view; and this too is what our expectations
+require: we find it far more offensive for love to be lacking
+between parents and children than between brothers and sisters.
+We have, so to speak, sanctified the former love while allowing the
+latter to remain profane. Yet everyday observation may show
+us how frequently the sentiments entertained towards each other
+by parents and grown-up children fall short of the ideal set up
+by society, and how much hostility lies smouldering, ready to
+burst into flame if it were not stifled by considerations of filial
+or parental duty and by other, tender impulses. The motives
+for this hostility are well known, and we recognize a tendency
+for those of the same sex to become alienated, daughter from
+mother and father from son. The daughter sees in her mother
+the authority which imposes limits to her will, whose task it is
+to bring her to that renunciation of sexual freedom which society
+demands; in certain cases, too, the mother is still a rival, who
+objects to being set aside. The same thing is repeated still
+more blatantly between father and son. To the son the father
+is the embodiment of the social compulsion to which he so unwillingly
+submits, the person who stands in the way of his following
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_174'>174</span>his own will, of his early sexual pleasures and, when
+there is family property, of his enjoyment of it. When a throne
+is involved this impatience for the death of the father may approach
+tragic intensity. The relation between father and daughter
+or mother and son would seem less liable to disaster; the latter
+relation furnishes the purest examples of unchanging tenderness,
+undisturbed by any egoistic considerations.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Why, you ask, do I speak of things so banal and so well-known
+to everybody? Because there exists an unmistakable
+tendency in people’s minds to deny the significance of these things
+in real life and to pretend that the social ideal is much more
+frequently realized than it actually is. But it is better that
+psychology should tell the truth than that it should be left to
+cynics to do so. This general denial is only applied to real
+life, it is true; for fiction and drama are free to make use of
+the motives laid bare when these ideals are rudely disturbed.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>There is nothing to wonder at therefore if the dreams of a
+great number of people bring to light the wish for the removal
+of their parents, especially of the parent whose sex is the same
+as the dreamer’s. We may assume that the wish exists in waking
+life as well, sometimes even in consciousness if it can disguise
+itself behind another motive, as the dreamer in our third example
+disguised his real thought by pity for his father’s useless suffering.
+It is but rarely that hostility reigns alone,—far more often
+it yields to more tender feelings which finally suppress it, when
+it has to wait in abeyance till a dream shows it, as it were, in
+isolation. That which the dream shows in a form magnified
+by this very isolation resumes its true proportions when our
+interpretation has assigned to it its proper place in relation to
+the rest of the dreamer’s life. (H. Sachs.) But we also find
+this death-wish where there is no basis for it in real life and
+where the adult would never have to confess to entertaining it
+in his waking life. The reason for this is that the deepest and
+most common motive for estrangement, especially between
+parent and child of the same sex, came into play in the earliest
+years of childhood.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I refer to that rivalry of affections in which sexual elements
+are plainly emphasized. The son, when quite a little child,
+already begins to develop a peculiar tenderness towards his
+mother, whom he looks upon as his own property, regarding his
+father in the light of a rival who disputes this sole possession of
+his; similarly the little daughter sees in her mother someone
+who disturbs her tender relation to her father and occupies a
+place which she feels she herself could very well fill. Observation
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_175'>175</span>shows us how far back these sentiments date, sentiments which
+we describe by the term <em>Oedipus complex</em>, because in the Oedipus
+myth the two extreme forms of the wishes arising from the
+situation of the son—the wish to kill the father and to marry
+the mother—are realized in an only slightly modified form. I
+do not assert that the Oedipus complex exhausts all the possible
+relations which may exist between parents and children; these
+relations may well be a great deal more complicated. Again,
+this complex may be more or less strongly developed, or it may
+even become inverted, but it is a regular and very important
+factor in the mental life of the child; we are more in danger of
+underestimating than of overestimating its influence and that
+of the developments which may follow from it. Moreover, the
+parents themselves frequently stimulate the children to react
+with an Oedipus complex, for parents are often guided in their
+preferences by the difference in sex of their children, so that
+the father favours the daughter and the mother the son; or
+else, where conjugal love has grown cold, the child may be taken
+as a substitute for the love-object which has ceased to attract.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It cannot be said that the world has shown great gratitude
+to psycho-analytic research for the discovery of the Oedipus
+complex; on the contrary, the idea has excited the most violent
+opposition in grown-up people; and those who omitted to join
+in denying the existence of sentiments so universally reprehended
+and tabooed have later made up for this by proffering interpretations
+so wide of the mark as to rob the complex of its value.
+My own unchanged conviction is that there is nothing in it to
+deny or to gloss over. We ought to reconcile ourselves to facts
+in which the Greek myth itself saw the hand of inexorable destiny.
+Again, it is interesting to find that the Oedipus complex, repudiated
+in actual life and relegated to fiction, has there come to
+its own. O. Rank in a careful study of this theme has shown
+how this very complex has supplied dramatic poetry with an
+abundance of motives in countless variations, modifications and
+disguises, in short, subject to just the distortion familiar to us
+in the work of the dream-censorship. So we may look for the
+Oedipus complex even in those dreamers who have been fortunate
+enough to escape conflicts with their parents in later life; and
+closely connected with this we shall find what is termed the
+<em>castration complex</em>, the reaction to that intimidation in the field
+of sex or to that restraint of early infantile sexual activity which
+is ascribed to the father.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>What we have already ascertained has guided us to the study
+of the child’s mental life, and we may now hope to find in a similar
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_176'>176</span>way an explanation of the source of the other kind of prohibited
+wishes in dreams, i.e. the excessive sexual desires. We are
+impelled therefore to study the development of the sexual life
+of the child, and here from various sources we learn the following
+facts. In the first place, it is an untenable fallacy to suppose
+that the child has no sexual life and to assume that sexuality
+first makes its appearance at puberty, when the genital organs
+come to maturity. On the contrary he has from the very beginning
+a sexual life rich in content, though it differs in many points
+from that which later is regarded as normal. What in adult
+life are termed “perversions” depart from the normal in the
+following respects: (1) in a disregard for the barriers of species
+(the gulf between man and beast), (2) in the insensibility to barriers
+imposed by disgust, (3) in the transgression of the incest-barrier
+(the prohibition against seeking sexual gratification with close
+blood-relations), (4) in homosexuality and, (5) in the transferring
+of the part played by the genital organs to other organs and different
+areas of the body. All these barriers are not in existence from
+the outset, but are only gradually built up in the course of development
+and education. The little child is free from them: he
+does not perceive any immense gulf between man and beast,
+the arrogance with which man separates himself from the other
+animals only dawns in him at a later period. He shows at the
+beginning of life no disgust for excrement, but only learns this
+feeling slowly under the influence of education; he attaches
+no particular importance to the difference between the sexes,
+in fact he thinks that both have the same formation of the genital
+organs; he directs his earliest sexual desires and his curiosity
+to those nearest to him or to those who for other reasons are
+specially beloved—his parents, brothers and sisters or nurses;
+and finally we see in him a characteristic which manifests itself
+again later at the height of some love-relationship—namely, he
+does not look for gratification in the sexual organs only, but
+discovers that many other parts of the body possess the same
+sort of sensibility and can yield analogous pleasurable sensations,
+playing thereby the part of genital organs. The child
+may be said then to be <em>polymorphously perverse</em>, and even if
+mere traces of all these impulses are found in him, this is due
+on the one hand to their lesser intensity as compared with that
+which they assume in later life and, on the other hand, to the
+fact that education immediately and energetically suppresses all
+sexual manifestations in the child. This suppression may be
+said to be embodied in a theory; for grown-up people endeavour
+to overlook some of these manifestations, and, by misinterpretation,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_177'>177</span>to rob others of their sexual nature, until in the end the
+whole thing can be altogether denied. It is often the same
+people who first inveigh against the sexual “naughtiness” of
+children in the nursery and then sit down to their writing-tables
+to defend the sexual purity of the same children. When they
+are left to themselves or when they are seduced children often
+display perverse sexual activity to a really remarkable extent.
+Of course grown-up people are right in not taking this too seriously
+and in regarding it, as they say, as “childish tricks” and “play,”
+for the child cannot be judged either by a moral or legal code
+as if he were mature and fully responsible; nevertheless these
+things do exist, and they have their significance both as evidence
+of innate constitutional tendencies and inasmuch as they cause
+and foster later developments: they give us an insight into the
+child’s sexual life and so into that of humanity as a whole. If
+then we find all these perverse wishes behind the distortions
+of our dreams, it only means that dreams in <em>this respect also</em>
+have regressed completely to the infantile condition.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Amongst these forbidden wishes special prominence must
+still be given to the incestuous desires, i.e. those directed towards
+sexual intercourse with parents or brothers and sisters. You
+know in what abhorrence human society holds, or at least professes
+to hold, such intercourse, and what emphasis is laid upon the
+prohibitions of it. The most preposterous attempts have been
+made to account for this horror of incest: some people have
+assumed that it is a provision of nature for the preservation of
+the species, manifesting itself in the mind by these prohibitions
+because in-breeding would result in racial degeneration; others
+have asserted that propinquity from early childhood has deflected
+sexual desire from the persons concerned. In both these cases,
+however, the avoidance of incest would have been automatically
+secured and we should be at a loss to understand the necessity
+for stern prohibitions, which would seem rather to point to a
+strong desire. Psycho-analytic investigations have shown beyond
+the possibility of doubt that <em>an incestuous love-choice</em> is in fact
+the first and the regular one, and that it is only later that any
+opposition is manifested towards it, the causes of which are
+not to be sought in the psychology of the individual.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Let us sum up the results which our excursion into child-psychology
+has brought to the understanding of dreams. We
+have learnt not only that the material of the forgotten childish
+experiences is accessible to the dream, but also that the child’s
+mental life, with all its peculiarities, its egoism, its incestuous
+object-choice, persists in it and therefore in the unconscious, and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_178'>178</span>that our dreams take us back every night to this infantile stage.
+This corroborates the belief that <em>the Unconscious is the infantile
+mental life</em>, and, with this, the objectionable impression that
+so much evil lurks in human nature grows somewhat less. For
+this terrible evil is simply what is original, primitive and infantile
+in mental life, what we find in operation in the child, but in part
+overlook in him because it is on so small a scale, and in part do
+not take greatly to heart because we do not demand a high
+ethical standard in a child. By regressing to this infantile stage
+our dreams appear to have brought the evil in us to light, but
+the appearance is deceptive, though we have let ourselves be
+dismayed by it; we are not so evil as the interpretation of our
+dreams would lead us to suppose.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>If the evil impulses of our dreams are merely infantile, a
+reversion to the beginnings of our ethical development, the
+dream simply making us children again in thought and feeling,
+it is surely not reasonable to be ashamed of these evil dreams.
+But the reasoning faculty is only part of our mental life; there
+is much in it besides which is not reasonable, and so it happens
+that, although it is unreasonable, we nevertheless are ashamed
+of such dreams. We subject them to the dream-censorship and
+are ashamed and indignant when one of these wishes by way of
+exception penetrates our consciousness in a form so undisguised
+that we cannot fail to recognize it; yes, we even at times feel
+just as much ashamed of a distorted dream as if we really understood
+it. Just think of the outraged comment of the respectable
+elderly lady upon her dream about “love service,” although
+it was not interpreted to her. So the problem is not yet solved,
+and it is still possible that if we pursue this question of the evil
+in dreams we may arrive at another conclusion and another
+estimate of human nature.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Our whole enquiry has led to two results which, however,
+merely indicate the beginning of new problems and new doubts.
+In the first place: the regression in dreams is one not only of
+form but of substance. Not only does it translate our thoughts
+into a primitive form of expression, but it also re-awakens the
+peculiarities of our primitive mental life—the old supremacy of
+the ego, the initial impulses of our sexual life, even restores to
+us our old intellectual possession if we may conceive of symbolism
+in this way. And secondly: all these old infantile characteristics,
+which were once dominant and solely dominant, must to-day
+be accounted to the unconscious and must alter and extend
+our views about it. “Unconscious” is no longer a term for
+what is temporarily latent: the unconscious is a special realm,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_179'>179</span>with its own desires and modes of expression and peculiar mental
+mechanisms not elsewhere operative. Yet the latent dream-thoughts
+disclosed by our interpretation do not belong to this
+realm; rather they correspond to the kind of thoughts we have
+in waking life also. And yet they are unconscious: how is the
+paradox to be resolved? We begin to realize that here we must
+discriminate. Something which has its origin in our conscious
+life and shares its characteristics—we call it the “residue” from
+the previous day—meets together with something from the realm
+of the unconscious in the formation of a dream, and it is with these
+two contributing elements that the dream-work is accomplished.
+The influence of the unconscious impinging upon this residue
+probably constitutes the condition for regression. This is the
+deepest insight into the nature of dreams possible to us until
+we have explored further fields in the mind; but soon it will
+be time to give another name to the unconscious character of
+the latent dream-thoughts, in order to distinguish it from that
+unconscious material which has its origin in the province of the
+infantile.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>We can of course also ask: What is it that forces our mental
+activity during sleep to such regression? Why cannot the mental
+stimuli that disturb sleep be dealt with without it? And if
+on account of the dream-censorship the mental activity has to
+disguise itself in the old, and now incomprehensible, form of
+expression, what is the object of re-animating the old impulses,
+desires and characteristics, now surmounted; what, in short,
+is the use of <em>regression in substance</em> as well as in <em>form</em>? The
+only satisfactory answer would be that this is the one possible
+way in which dreams can be formed, that, dynamically considered,
+the relief from the stimulus giving rise to the dream
+cannot otherwise be accomplished. But this is an answer for
+which, at present, we have no justification.</p>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_180'>180</span>
+ <h3 class='c002'><span class='c014'>FOURTEENTH LECTURE</span><br> WISH-FULFILMENT</h3>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c006'>Shall I remind you once more of the steps by which we have
+arrived at our present position? When in applying our technique
+we came upon the distortion in dreams, we made up our
+minds to avoid it for the moment and turned to the study of
+infantile dreams for some definite information about the nature
+of dreams in general. Next, equipped with the results of this
+investigation, we attacked the question of dream-distortion
+directly, and I hope that bit by bit we have also mastered that.
+Now, however, we are bound to admit that our findings in these
+two directions do not exactly tally, and it behoves us to combine
+and correlate our results.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Both enquiries have made it plain that the essential feature
+in the dream-work is the transformation of thoughts into
+hallucinatory experience. It is puzzling enough to see how
+this process is accomplished, but this is a problem for general
+psychology, and we have not to deal with it here. We have
+learnt from children’s dreams that the object of the dream-work
+is to remove, by means of the fulfilment of some wish, a mental
+stimulus which is disturbing sleep. We could make no similar
+pronouncement with regard to distorted dreams until we understood
+how to interpret them, but from the outset we expected
+to be able to bring our ideas about them into line with our views
+on infantile dreams. This expectation was for the first time
+fulfilled when we recognized that all dreams are really children’s
+dreams; that they make use of infantile material and are
+characterized by impulses and mechanisms which belong to the
+childish mind. When we feel we have mastered the distortion in
+dreams we must go on to find out whether the notion that dreams
+are <span class='fss'>WISH-FULFILMENTS</span> holds good of distorted dreams also.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>We have just subjected a series of dreams to interpretation,
+but without taking the question of wish-fulfilment into consideration
+at all. I feel certain that while we were talking
+about them the question repeatedly forced itself upon you:
+“What has become of the wish-fulfilment which is supposed
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_181'>181</span>to be the object of the dream-work?” Now this question is
+important, for it is the one which our lay critics are constantly
+asking. As you know, mankind has an instinctive antipathy to
+intellectual novelties; one of the ways in which this shows
+itself is that any such novelty is immediately reduced to its
+very smallest compass, and if possible embodied in some catch-word.
+“Wish-fulfilment” has become the catch-word for the
+new theory of dreams. Directly they hear that dreams are
+said to be wish-fulfilments, the laity asks: “Where does the
+wish-fulfilment come in?” and their asking the question amounts
+to a repudiation of the idea. They can immediately think of
+countless dreams of their own which were accompanied by
+feeling so unpleasant as sometimes to reach the point of agonizing
+dread; and so this statement of the psycho-analytical theory
+of dreams appears to them highly improbable. It is easy to
+reply that in distorted dreams the wish-fulfilment is not openly
+expressed, but has to be looked for, so that it cannot be shown
+until the dreams have been interpreted. We know too that
+the wishes underlying these distorted dreams are those which
+are prohibited and rejected by the censorship, and that it is
+just their existence which is the cause of distortion and the
+motive for the intervention of the censorship. But it is difficult
+to make the lay critic understand that we must not ask about
+the wish-fulfilment in a dream before it has been interpreted;
+he always forgets this. His reluctance to accept the theory
+of wish-fulfilment is really nothing but the effect of the dream-censorship,
+causing him to replace the real thought by a substitute,
+and following from his repudiation of these censored dream-wishes.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Of course we ourselves must feel the need to explain why
+so many dreams are painful in content; and in particular we
+shall want to know how we come to have ‘anxiety-dreams.’
+Here for the first time we are confronted with the problem of
+the affects in dreams; a problem which deserves special study,
+but one which we cannot concern ourselves with just now, unfortunately.
+If the dream is a wish-fulfilment, it should be
+impossible for any painful emotions to come into it: on this
+point the lay critics seem to be right. But the matter is complicated
+by three considerations which they have overlooked.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>First, it may happen that the dream-work is not
+wholly successful in creating a wish-fulfilment, so that part of
+the painful feeling in the latent thoughts is carried over into
+the manifest dream. Analysis would then have to show that
+these thoughts were a great deal more painful than the dream
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_182'>182</span>which is formed from them; this much can be proved in every
+instance. We admit then that the dream-work has failed
+in its purpose, just as a dream of drinking excited by the
+stimulus of thirst fails to quench that thirst. One is still thirsty
+after it and has to wake up and drink. Nevertheless, it is a
+proper dream: it has renounced nothing of its essential nature.
+We must say: “Ut desint vires, tamen est laudanda voluntas.”
+The clearly recognizable intention remains a praiseworthy one,
+at any rate. Such instances of failure in the work are by
+no means rare, and one reason is that it is so much more difficult
+for the dream-work to produce the required change in the
+nature of the affect than to modify the content; affects
+are often very intractable. So it happens that in the process
+of the dream-work the painful <em>content</em> of the dream-thoughts
+is transformed into a wish-fulfilment while the painful <em>affect</em>
+persists unchanged. When this occurs the affect is quite out
+of harmony with the content, which gives our critics the opportunity
+of remarking that the dream is so far from being a wish-fulfilment
+that even a harmless content may be accompanied
+in it by painful feelings. Our answer to this rather unintelligent
+comment will be that it is just in dreams of this sort that
+the wish-fulfilling tendency of the dream-work is most
+apparent, because it is there seen in isolation. The mistake in
+this criticism arises because people who are not familiar with
+the neuroses imagine a more intimate connection between content
+and affect than actually exists, and so cannot understand that
+there may be an alteration in the content while the accompanying
+affect remains unchanged.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>A second consideration, much more important and far-reaching
+but equally overlooked by the laity, is the following.
+A wish-fulfilment must certainly bring some pleasure; but we
+go on to ask: “To whom?” Of course to the person who has
+the wish. But we know that the attitude of the dreamer towards
+his wishes is a peculiar one: he rejects them, censors them,
+in short, he will have none of them. Their fulfilment then
+can afford him no pleasure, rather the opposite, and here experience
+shows that this “opposite,” which has still to be explained,
+takes the form of <em>anxiety</em>. The dreamer, where his
+wishes are concerned, is like two separate people closely linked
+together by some important thing in common. Instead of
+enlarging upon this I will remind you of a well-known fairy-tale
+in which you will see these relationships repeated. A good fairy
+promised a poor man and his wife to fulfil their first three wishes.
+They were delighted and made up their minds to choose the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_183'>183</span>wishes carefully. But the woman was tempted by the smell
+of some sausages being cooked in the next cottage and wished
+for two like them. Lo! and behold, there they were—and
+the first wish was fulfilled. With that, the man lost his temper
+and in his resentment wished that the sausages might hang
+on the tip of his wife’s nose. This also came to pass, and the
+sausages could not be removed from their position; so the
+second wish was fulfilled, but it was the man’s wish and its fulfilment
+was most unpleasant for the woman. You know the
+rest of the story: as they were after all man and wife, the third
+wish had to be that the sausages should come off the end of
+the woman’s nose. We might make use of this fairy-tale many
+times over in other contexts, but here it need only serve to
+illustrate the fact that it is possible for the fulfilment of one
+person’s wish to be very disagreeable to someone else, unless
+the two people are entirely at one.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It will not be difficult now to arrive at a still better understanding
+of anxiety-dreams. There is just one more observation
+to be made use of and then we may adopt an hypothesis which
+is supported by several considerations. The observation is
+that anxiety-dreams often have a content in which there is
+no distortion; it has, so to speak, escaped the censorship. This
+type of dream is frequently an undisguised wish-fulfilment, the
+wish being of course not one which the dreamer would accept
+but one which he has rejected; anxiety has developed in place
+of the working of the censorship. Whereas the infantile dream
+is an open fulfilment of a wish admitted by the dreamer, and
+the ordinary distorted dream is the disguised fulfilment of a
+repressed wish, the formula for the anxiety-dream is that it
+is the open fulfilment of a repressed wish. Anxiety is an indication
+that the repressed wish has proved too strong for the
+censorship and has accomplished or was about to accomplish
+its fulfilment in spite of it. We can understand that fulfilment
+of a repressed wish can only be, for us who are on the side of
+the censorship, an occasion for painful emotions and for setting
+up a defence. The anxiety then manifested in our dreams is,
+if you like to put it so, anxiety experienced because of the strength
+of wishes which at other times we manage to stifle. The study
+of dreams alone does not reveal to us why this defence takes
+the form of anxiety; obviously we must consider the latter in
+other connections.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The hypothesis which holds good for anxiety-dreams without
+any distortion may be adopted also for those which have undergone
+some degree of distortion, and for other kinds of unpleasant
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_184'>184</span>dreams in which the accompanying unpleasant feelings probably
+approximate to anxiety. Anxiety-dreams generally wake us;
+we usually break off our sleep before the repressed wish behind
+the dream overcomes the censorship and reaches complete fulfilment.
+In such a case the dream has failed to achieve its
+purpose, but its essential character is not thereby altered. We
+have compared the dream with a night-watchman, a guardian
+of sleep, whose purpose it is to protect sleep from interruption.
+Now night-watchmen also, just like dreams, have to rouse sleepers
+when they are not strong enough to ward off the cause of disturbance
+or danger alone. Nevertheless we do sometimes
+succeed in continuing to sleep even when our dreams begin to
+give us some uneasiness and to turn to anxiety. We say to
+ourselves in sleep: “It is only a dream after all,” and go on
+sleeping.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>You may ask <em>when</em> it happens that the dream-wish is able
+to overcome the censorship. This may depend either on the
+wish or on the censorship: it may be that for unknown reasons
+the strength of the wish at times becomes excessive; but our
+impression is that it is more often the attitude of the censorship
+which is responsible for this shifting in the balance of power.
+We have already heard that the censorship works with varying
+intensity in each individual instance, treating the different
+elements with different degrees of strictness; now we may add
+that it is very variable in its general behaviour and does not
+show itself always equally severe towards the same element.
+If then it chances that the censorship feels itself for once powerless
+against some dream-wish which threatens to overthrow it,
+it then, instead of making use of distortion, employs the last
+weapon left to it and destroys sleep by bringing about an access
+of anxiety.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>At this point it strikes us that we still have no idea why
+these evil, rejected wishes rise up just at night-time, so as to
+disturb us when we sleep. The answer can hardly be found
+except in another hypothesis which goes back to the nature
+of sleep itself. During the day the heavy pressure of a censorship
+is exercised upon these wishes and, as a rule, it is impossible
+for them to make themselves felt at all. But in the night it
+is probable that this censorship, like all the other interests of
+mental life, is suspended, or at least very much weakened, in
+favour of the single desire for sleep. So it is due to this partial
+abrogation of the censorship at night that the forbidden wishes
+can again become active. There are nervous people suffering
+from insomnia who confess that their sleeplessness was voluntary
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_185'>185</span>in the first instance; for they did not dare to go to sleep because
+they were afraid of their dreams—that is to say, they feared the
+consequences of the diminished vigilance of the censorship.
+You will have no difficulty in understanding that this curtailment
+of the censorship does not argue any flagrant carelessness: sleep
+impairs our motor functions; even if our evil intentions do begin
+to stir within us the utmost they can do is to produce a dream,
+which is for all practical purposes harmless; and it is this comforting
+circumstance which gives rise to the sleeper’s remark,
+made, it is true, in the night but yet not part of his dream-life:
+“It is only a dream.” So we let it have its way and continue
+to sleep.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Thirdly, if you call to mind our idea that the dreamer striving
+against his own wishes is like a combination of two persons,
+separate and yet somehow intimately united, you will be able
+to understand another possible way in which something that
+is highly unpleasant may be brought about through wish-fulfilment:
+I am speaking of punishment. Here again the fairy-tale
+of the three wishes may help to make things clear. The sausages
+on the plate were the direct fulfilment of the first person’s (the
+woman’s) wish; the sausages on the tip of her nose were the
+fulfilment of the second person’s (the husband’s) wish, but at
+the same time they were the punishment for the foolish wish of
+the wife. In the neuroses we shall meet with wishes corresponding
+in motivation to the third wish of the fairy-tale, the only one
+left. There are many such punishment tendencies in the mental
+life of man; they are very strong and we may well regard them
+as responsible for some of our painful dreams. Now you will
+probably think that with all this there is very little of the famous
+wish-fulfilment left; but on closer consideration you will admit
+that you are wrong. In comparison with the manifold possibilities
+(to be discussed later) of what dreams might be—according
+to some writers, what they actually are—the solution: wish-fulfilment,
+anxiety-fulfilment, punishment-fulfilment, is surely
+quite a narrow one. Add to this, that anxiety is the direct
+opposite of a wish and that opposites lie very near one another
+in association and, as we have learned, actually coincide in the
+unconscious. Moreover, punishment itself is the fulfilment of
+a wish, namely, the wish of the other, censoring person.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>On the whole then, I have made no concession to your objections
+to the wish-fulfilment theory; we are bound, however,
+to demonstrate its presence in any and every distorted dream,
+and we have certainly no desire to shirk this task. Let us go
+back to the dream we have already interpreted, about the three
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_186'>186</span>bad theatre tickets for one florin and a half, from which we
+have already learnt a good deal. I hope you still remember it:
+A lady, whose husband told her one day about the engagement
+of her friend Elise who was only three months younger than
+herself, dreamt on the following night that she and her husband
+were at the theatre and that one side of the stalls was almost
+empty. Her husband told her that Elise and her fiancé had
+wanted to go to the theatre too; but could not, because they
+could only get such bad seats, three tickets for a florin and a
+half. His wife said that they had not lost much by it. We
+discovered that the dream-thoughts had to do with her vexation
+at having been in such a hurry to marry and her dissatisfaction
+with her husband. We may well be curious how these gloomy
+thoughts can have been transformed into a wish-fulfilment, and
+what trace of it can be found in the manifest content. Now
+we know already that the element “too soon, too great a hurry,”
+was eliminated by the censorship; the empty stalls are an
+allusion to this element. The puzzling phrase <em>three for one
+and a half florins</em> is now more comprehensible to us than at first,
+through the knowledge of symbolism that we have acquired
+since then.<a id='r42'></a><a href='#f42' class='c015'><sup>[42]</sup></a> The number <em>three</em> really stands for a man and
+we can easily translate the manifest element to mean: “to buy
+a man (husband) with the dowry.” (“I could have bought
+one ten times better for my dowry.”) <em>Going to the theatre</em>
+obviously stands for marriage. <em>Getting the tickets too soon</em> is
+in fact a direct substitute for “marrying too soon.” Now this
+substitution is the work of the wish-fulfilment. The dreamer
+had not always felt so dissatisfied with her premature marriage
+as she was on the day when she heard of her friend’s engagement.
+She had been proud of her marriage at the time and
+considered herself more highly favoured than her friend. One
+hears that naïve girls, on becoming engaged, frequently express
+their delight at the idea that they will now soon be able to go
+to all plays and see everything hitherto forbidden them.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The indication of curiosity and a desire to “look on” evinced
+here comes, without doubt, originally from the sexual ‘<em>gazing-impulse</em>,’
+especially regarding the parents, and this became a
+strong motive impelling the girl to marry early; in this manner
+going to the theatre became an obvious allusive substitute for
+getting married. In her vexation at the present time on account
+of her premature marriage she therefore reverted to the time
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_187'>187</span>when this same marriage fulfilled a wish, by gratifying her
+<em>skoptophilia</em>; and so, guided by this old wish-impulse, she
+replaced the idea of marriage by that of going to the theatre.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>We may say that the example we have chosen to demonstrate
+a hidden wish-fulfilment is not the most convenient one, but
+in all other distorted dreams we should have to proceed in a
+manner analogous to that employed above. It is not possible
+for me to do this here and now, so I will merely express my
+conviction that such procedure will invariably meet with success.
+But I wish to dwell longer upon this point in our theory: experience
+has taught me that it is one of the most perilous of
+the whole theory of dreams, exposed to many contradictions
+and misunderstandings. Besides, you are perhaps still under
+the impression that I have already retracted part of my statement
+by saying that the dream may be either a wish-fulfilment,
+or its opposite, an anxiety or a punishment, brought to actuality;
+and you may think this a good opportunity to force me to
+make further reservations. Also I have been reproached with
+presenting facts that seem obvious to myself in a manner too
+condensed to carry conviction.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>When anyone has gone as far as this in dream-interpretation
+and has accepted all our conclusions up to this point, it often
+happens that he comes to a standstill at this question of wish-fulfilment
+and asks: “Admitting that every dream means
+something and that this meaning may be discovered by employing
+the technique of psycho-analysis, why must it always,
+in face of all the evidence to the contrary, be forced into the
+formula of wish-fulfilment? Why must our thoughts at night
+be any less many-sided than our thoughts by day; so that at
+one time a dream might be a fulfilment of some wish; at another
+time, as you say yourself, the opposite, the actualization of a
+dread; or, again, the expression of a resolution, a warning, a
+weighing of some problem with its pro’s and con’s, or a reproof,
+some prick of conscience, or an attempt to prepare oneself for
+something which has to be done—and so forth? Why this
+perpetual insistence upon a wish or, at the most, its opposite?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It might be supposed that a difference of opinion on this
+point is a matter of no great moment, if there is agreement on
+all others. Cannot we be satisfied with having discovered the
+meaning of dreams and the ways by which we can find out the
+meaning? We surely go back on the advance we have made
+if we try to limit this meaning too strictly. But this is not so.
+A misunderstanding on this head touches what is essential to
+our knowledge of dreams and imperils its value for the understanding
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_188'>188</span>of neuroses. Moreover, that readiness to “oblige the
+other party” which has its value in business life is not only
+out of place but actually harmful in scientific matters.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>My first answer to the question why dreams should not be
+many-sided in their meaning is the usual one in such a case:
+I do not know why they should not be so, and should have no
+objection if they were. As far as I am concerned, they can
+be so! But there is just one trifling obstacle in the way of this
+wider and more convenient conception of dreams—that as a
+matter of fact they are not so. My second answer would
+emphasize the point that to assume that dreams represent manifold
+modes of thought and intellectual operations is by no means
+a novel idea to myself: once, in the history of a pathological
+case, I recorded a dream which occurred three nights running
+and never again; and gave it as my explanation that this
+dream corresponded to a resolution, the repetition of which
+became unnecessary as soon as that resolution was carried out.
+Later on, I published a dream which represented a confession.
+How is it possible for me then to contradict myself and assert
+that dreams are always and only wish-fulfilments?</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I do it rather than permit a stupid misunderstanding which
+might cost us the fruit of all our labours on the subject of dreams;
+a misunderstanding that <em>confounds the dream with the latent
+dream-thoughts</em>, and makes statements with regard to the
+former which are applicable to the <em>latter and to the latter only</em>.
+For it is perfectly true that dreams can represent, and be themselves
+replaced by, all the modes of thought just enumerated:
+resolutions, warnings, reflections, preparations or attempts to
+solve some problem in regard to conduct, and so on. But when
+you look closely, you will recognize that all this is true only
+of the latent thoughts which have been transformed into the
+dream. You learn from interpretations of dreams that the
+unconscious thought-processes of mankind are occupied with
+such resolutions, preparations and reflections, out of which
+dreams are formed by means of the dream-work. If your
+interest at any given moment is not so much in the dream-work,
+but centres on the unconscious thought-processes in
+people, you will then eliminate the dream-formation and say of
+dreams themselves, what is for all practical purposes correct,
+that they represent a warning, a resolve, and so on. This is
+what is often done in psycho-analytic work: generally we
+endeavour simply to demolish the manifest form of dreams and
+to substitute for it the corresponding latent thoughts in which
+the dream originated.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_189'>189</span>Thus it is that we learn quite incidentally from our attempt
+to assess the latent dream-thoughts that all the highly complicated
+mental acts we have enumerated can be performed
+unconsciously—a conclusion surely as tremendous as it is bewildering.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But to go back a little: you are quite right in speaking of
+dreams as representing these various modes of thought, provided
+that you are quite clear in your own minds that you are using
+an abbreviated form of expression and do not imagine that
+the manifold variety of which you speak is in itself part of the
+essential nature of <em>dreams</em>. When you speak of “a dream”
+you must mean either the manifest dream, i.e. the product of
+the dream-work, or at most that work itself, i.e. the mental
+process which forms the latent dream-thoughts into the
+manifest dream. To use the word in any other sense is a
+confusion of ideas which is bound to be mischievous. If what
+you say is meant to apply to the latent thoughts behind the
+dream, then say so plainly, and do not add to the obscurity of
+the problem by your loose way of expressing yourselves. The
+latent dream-thoughts are the material which is transformed
+by the dream-work into the manifest dream. What makes
+you constantly confound the material with the process which
+deals with it? If you do that, in what way are you superior
+to those who know of the final product only, without being
+able to explain where it comes from or how it is constructed?</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The only thing essential to the dream itself is the dream-work
+which has operated upon the thought-material; and
+when we come to theory we have no right to disregard this,
+even if in certain practical situations it may be neglected.
+Further, analytic observation shows that the dream-work
+never consists merely in translating the latent thoughts into
+the archaic or regressive forms of expression described. On
+the contrary, something is invariably added which does not
+belong to the latent thoughts of the day-time, but which is
+the actual motive force in dream-formation; this indispensable
+component being the equally unconscious <em>wish</em>, to fulfil which
+the content of the dream is transformed. In so far, then, as
+you are considering only the thoughts represented in it, the
+dream may be any conceivable thing—a warning, a resolve, a
+preparation, and so on; but besides this, it itself is always the
+fulfilment of an unconscious wish, and, when you regard it as
+the result of the dream-work, it is this alone. A dream then is
+never simply the expression of a resolve or warning, and nothing
+more: in it the resolve, or whatever it may be, is translated
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_190'>190</span>into the archaic form with the assistance of an unconscious
+wish, and metamorphosed in such a way as to be a fulfilment of
+that wish. This single characteristic, that of fulfilling a wish,
+is the constant one: the other component varies; it may indeed
+itself be a wish; in which event the dream represents the fulfilment
+of a latent wish from our waking hours brought about
+by the aid of an unconscious wish.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now all this is quite clear to myself, but I do not know
+whether I have succeeded in making it equally clear to you;
+and it is difficult to prove it to you; for, on the one hand, proof
+requires the evidence afforded by a careful analysis of many
+dreams and, on the other hand, this, the crucial and most important
+point in our conception of dreams, cannot be presented
+convincingly without reference to considerations upon which
+we have not yet touched. Seeing how closely linked up all
+phenomena are, you can hardly imagine that we can penetrate
+very far into the nature of any one of them without troubling
+ourselves about others of a similar nature. Since as yet we
+know nothing about those phenomena which are so nearly akin
+to dreams—neurotic symptoms—we must once more content
+ourselves with what we actually have achieved. I will merely
+give you the explanation of one more example and adduce a
+new consideration.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Let us take once more that dream to which we have already
+reverted several times, the one about the three theatre tickets
+for one florin and a half. I can assure you that I had no ulterior
+motive in selecting it in the first instance for an illustration.
+You know what the latent thoughts were: the vexation, after
+hearing that her friend had only just become engaged, that she
+herself should have married so hastily; depreciation of her
+husband and the idea that she could have found a better one if
+only she had waited. We also know already that the wish which
+made a dream out of these thoughts was the desire to “look on,”
+to be able to go to the theatre—very probably an offshoot of
+an old curiosity to find out at last what really does happen after
+marriage. It is well known that in children this curiosity is
+regularly directed towards the sexual life of the parents; that
+is to say, it is an infantile impulse and, wherever it persists later
+in life, it has its roots in the infantile period. But the news
+received on the day previous to the dream gave no occasion
+for the awakening of this skoptophilia; it only roused vexation
+and regret. This wish-impulse (of skoptophilia) was
+not at first connected with the latent thoughts, and the results
+of the dream-interpretation could have been used by the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_191'>191</span>analysis without taking it into consideration at all. But again,
+the vexation was not in itself capable of producing a dream:
+no dream could be formed out of the thought: “It was folly
+to be in such a hurry to marry” until that thought had stirred
+up the early wish to see at last what happened after marriage.
+Then this wish formed the dream-content, substituting for
+marriage the going to the theatre; and the form was that of the
+fulfilment of the earlier wish: “Now I may go to the theatre and
+look at all that we have never been allowed to see; and you may
+not. I am married and you have got to wait.” In this way the
+actual situation was transformed into its opposite and an old
+triumph substituted for the recent discomfiture; and incidentally,
+satisfaction both of a ‘gazing’ impulse and of one of egoistic
+rivalry was brought about. It is this latter satisfaction which
+determines the manifest content of the dream; for in it she
+is actually sitting in the theatre, while her friend cannot get in.
+Those portions of the dream-content behind which the latent
+thoughts still conceal themselves are to be found in the form
+of inappropriate and incomprehensible modifications of the
+gratifying situation. The business of <em>interpretation</em> is to put
+aside those features in the whole which merely represent a wish-fulfilment
+and to reconstruct the painful latent dream-thoughts
+from these indications.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The consideration which I said I wished to call to your
+notice is intended to direct your attention to these latent dream-thoughts
+now brought into prominence. I must beg you not
+to forget that, first, the dreamer is unconscious of them; secondly
+that they are quite reasonable and coherent, so that we can
+understand them as comprehensible reactions to whatever
+stimulus has given rise to the dream; and, thirdly, that they
+may have the value of any mental impulse or intellectual operation.
+I will designate these thoughts more strictly now than
+hitherto as <em>the residue from the previous day</em>; the dreamer
+may acknowledge them or not. I then distinguish between
+this ‘residue’ and ‘latent dream-thoughts,’ so that, as we
+have been accustomed to do all along, I will call everything
+which we learn from the interpretation of the dream ‘the latent
+dream-thoughts,’ while ‘the residue from the previous day’
+is only a part of the latent dream-thoughts. Then our conception
+of what happens is this: something has been added to
+the residue from the previous day, something which also belongs
+to the unconscious, a strong but repressed wish-impulse, and it
+is this alone which makes the formation of a dream possible.
+The wish-impulse, acting upon the ‘residue,’ creates the other
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_192'>192</span>part of the latent dream-thoughts, that part which no longer
+need appear rational or comprehensible from the point of view
+of our waking life.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>To illustrate the relation between the residue and the
+unconscious wish I have elsewhere made use of a comparison
+which I cannot do better than repeat here. Every business
+undertaking requires a capitalist to defray the expenses and an
+entrepreneur who has the idea and understands how to carry
+it out. Now the part of the capitalist in dream-formation is
+always and only played by the unconscious wish; it supplies
+the necessary fund of mental energy for it: the entrepreneur is
+the residue from the previous day, determining the manner of
+the expenditure. It is, of course, quite possible for the capitalist
+himself to have the idea and the special knowledge needed,
+or for the entrepreneur himself to have capital. This simplifies
+the practical situation but makes the theory of it more difficult.
+In economics we discriminate between the man in his function
+of capitalist and the same man in his capacity as entrepreneur;
+and this distinction restores the fundamental situation upon
+which our comparison is based. The same variations are to
+be found in the formation of dreams: I leave you to follow
+them out for yourselves.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>We cannot go any further at this point; for I think it likely
+that a disturbing thought has long since occurred to you and
+it deserves a hearing. You may ask: “Is the so-called ‘residue’
+really unconscious in the sense in which the wish necessary
+for the formation of the dream is unconscious?” Your
+suspicion is justified: this is the salient point in the whole
+matter. They are not both unconscious in the same sense.
+The dream-wish belongs to a different type of UNCONSCIOUS,
+which, as we have seen, has its roots in the infantile period and
+is furnished with special mechanisms. It is very expedient to
+distinguish the two types of “unconscious” from one another
+by speaking of them in different terms. But, all the same, we
+will rather wait until we have familiarized ourselves with the
+phenomena of the neuroses. If our conception of the existence
+of any kind of unconscious be already regarded as fantastic,
+what will people say if we admit that to reach our solution we
+have had to assume two kinds?</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Let us break off at this point. Once more you have heard
+only an incomplete statement; but is it not a hopeful thought
+that this knowledge will be carried further, either by ourselves
+or by those who come after us? And have not we ourselves
+learnt enough that is new and startling?</p>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_193'>193</span>
+ <h3 class='c002'><span class='c014'>FIFTEENTH LECTURE</span><br> DOUBTFUL POINTS AND CRITICAL OBSERVATIONS</h3>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c006'>We will not leave the subject of dreams without dealing with
+the most common doubts and uncertainties arising in connection
+with the novel ideas and conceptions we have been discussing:
+those of you who have followed these lectures attentively will
+have collected some material of the kind.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>1. You may have received an impression that even with
+strict adherence to technique our work of dream-interpretation
+leaves so much room for uncertainty that reliable translation
+of manifest dreams into their latent dream-thoughts will be
+thereby frustrated. You will urge first that one never knows
+whether any particular element in a dream is to be understood
+literally or symbolically, since things employed as symbols do
+not thereby cease to be themselves. Where there is no objective
+evidence to decide the question the interpretation on that particular
+point will be left to be arbitrarily determined by the interpreter.
+Further, since in the dream-work opposites coincide, it is
+in every instance uncertain whether a specific dream-element is
+to be understood in a positive or a negative sense, as itself or
+as its opposite—another opportunity for the interpreter to
+exercise a choice. Thirdly, on account of the frequency with
+which inversion of every kind is employed in dreams, it is open
+to him to assume whenever he chooses that such an inversion
+has taken place. Finally you will point to having heard that
+one is seldom certain that the interpretation arrived at is the
+only possible one, and that there is danger of overlooking another
+perfectly admissible interpretation of the same dream. In
+these circumstances, you will conclude, the discretion of the
+interpreter has a latitude that seems incompatible with any
+objective certainty in the result. Or you may also assume
+that the fault does not lie in dreams themselves, but that something
+erroneous in our conceptions and premises produces the
+unsatisfactory character of our interpretations.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>All that you say is undeniable and yet I do not think it
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_194'>194</span>justifies either of your conclusions: that dream-interpretation
+as practised by us is at the mercy of the interpreter’s arbitrary
+decisions or that the inadequacy of the results calls in question
+the correctness of our procedure. If for the “arbitrary decision”
+of the interpreter you will substitute his skill, his experience
+and his understanding, then I am with you. This kind of
+personal factor is of course indispensable, especially when interpretation
+is difficult; it is just the same in other scientific work,
+however; it can’t be helped that one man will use any given
+technique less well, or apply it better, than another. The impression
+of arbitrariness made, for example, by the interpretation
+of symbols is corrected by the reflection that as a rule the connection
+of the dream-thoughts with one another, and of the
+dream with the life of the dreamer and the whole mental situation
+at the time of the dream, points directly to one of all the possible
+interpretations and renders all the rest useless. The conclusion
+that the imperfect character of the interpretations proceeds
+from fallacious hypotheses loses its force when consideration
+shows that, on the contrary, the ambiguity or indefiniteness of
+dreams is a quality which we should necessarily expect in them.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Let us call to mind our statement that the dream-work
+undertakes a translation of the dream-thoughts into a primitive
+mode of expression, analogous to hieroglyphics. Now all such
+primitive systems of expression are necessarily accompanied by
+ambiguity and indefiniteness; but we should not on that account
+be justified in doubting their practicability. You know that
+the coincidence of opposites in the dream-work is analogous
+to what is called the antithetical sense of primal words in
+the oldest languages. The philologist, R. Abel, to whom we
+owe this information, writing in 1884, begs us not on any account
+to imagine that there was any ambiguity in what one person
+said to another by means of ambivalent words of this sort.
+On the contrary, intonation, gestures and the whole context
+can have left no doubt whatever which of the two opposites
+the speaker had in mind to convey. In writing where gestures
+are absent the addition of little pictorial signs, not meant to
+receive separate oral expression, replaced them: e.g. a drawing
+of a little man, either crouching or standing upright, according
+as the ambiguous <em>ken</em> of the hieroglyphic meant “weak”
+or “strong.” So that misunderstanding was avoided in spite
+of the ambiguity of sounds and signs.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In ancient systems of expression, for instance, in the scripts
+of the oldest languages, indefiniteness of various kinds is found
+with a frequency which we should not tolerate in our writings
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_195'>195</span>to-day. Thus in many Semitic writings only the consonants
+of the words appear: the omitted vowels have to be supplied
+by the reader from his knowledge and from the context. Hieroglyphic
+writing follows a similar principle, although not exactly
+the same; and this is the reason why nothing is known of the
+pronunciation of ancient Egyptian. There are besides other
+kinds of indefiniteness in the sacred writings of the Egyptians:
+for example, it is left to the writer’s choice to inscribe the pictures
+from right to left or from left to right. To be able to read them,
+we have to remember that we must be guided by the direction
+of the faces of the figures, birds, and so forth. But it was also
+open to the writer to set the pictures in vertical columns and,
+in the case of inscriptions on smaller objects, he was led by
+considerations of what was pleasing to the eye, and of the space
+at his disposal, to introduce still further alterations in the
+arrangement of the signs. The most confusing feature in
+hieroglyphic script is that there is no spacing between the words.
+The pictures are all placed at equal intervals on the page, and
+it is generally impossible to know whether any given sign goes
+with the preceding one or forms the beginning of a new word.
+In Persian cuneiform writing, on the other hand, a slanting sign
+is used to separate the words.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The Chinese language, both spoken and written, is exceedingly
+ancient but is still used to-day by four hundred million people.
+Don’t suppose that I understand it at all; I only obtained some
+information about it because I hoped to find in it analogies to
+the kinds of indefiniteness occurring in dreams; nor was I
+disappointed in my expectation, for Chinese is so full of uncertainties
+as positively to terrify one. As is well known, it consists
+of a number of syllabic sounds which are pronounced singly or
+doubled in combination. One of the chief dialects has about
+four hundred of these sounds, and since the vocabulary of this
+dialect is estimated at somewhere about four thousand words
+it is evident that every sound has an average of ten different
+meanings—some fewer, but some all the more. For this reason
+there are a whole series of devices to escape ambiguity, for the
+context alone will not show which of the ten possible meanings
+of the syllable the speaker wishes to convey to the hearer.
+Amongst these devices is the combining of two sounds into a
+single word and the use of four different “tones” in which these
+syllables may be spoken. For purposes of our comparison a
+still more interesting fact is that this language is practically
+without grammar: it is impossible to say of any of the one-syllabled
+words whether it is a noun, a verb or an adjective;
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_196'>196</span>and, further, there are no inflections to show gender, number,
+case, tense or mood. The language consists, as we may say,
+of the raw material only; just as our thought-language is
+resolved into its raw material by the dream-work omitting to
+express the relations in it. Wherever there is any uncertainty
+in Chinese the decision is left to the intelligence of the listener,
+who is guided by the context. I made a note of a Chinese saying,
+which literally translated runs thus: “Little what see, much
+what wonderful.” This is simple enough to understand. It
+may mean: “The less a man has seen, the more he finds to
+wonder at,” or “There is much to wonder at for the man who
+has seen little.” Naturally there is no occasion to choose between
+these two translations which differ only in grammatical construction.
+We are assured that in spite of these uncertainties the
+Chinese language is a quite exceptionally good medium of expression;
+so it is clear that indefiniteness does not necessarily
+lead to ambiguity.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now we must certainly admit that the position of affairs
+is far less favourable in regard to the mode of expression in
+dreams than it is with these ancient tongues and scripts; for
+these latter were originally designed as a means of communication;
+that is, they were intended to be understood, no matter what
+ways or means they had to employ. But just this character
+is lacking to dreams: their object is not to tell anyone anything;
+they are not a means of communication; on the contrary, it is
+important to them not to be understood. So we ought not
+to be surprised or misled if the result is that a number of the
+ambiguities and uncertainties in dreams cannot be determined.
+The only certain piece of knowledge gained from our comparison
+is that this indefiniteness (which people would like to make use
+of as an argument against the accuracy of our dream-interpretations)
+is rather to be recognized as a regular characteristic
+of all primitive systems of expression.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Practice and experience alone can determine the extent to
+which dreams can in actual fact be understood. My own
+opinion is that this is possible to a very great extent; and a
+comparison of the results obtained by properly-trained analysts
+confirms my view. It is well known that the lay public, even
+in scientific circles, delights to make a parade of superior scepticism
+in the face of the difficulties and uncertainties which
+beset a scientific achievement; I think they are wrong in so doing.
+You may possibly not at all know that the same thing happened
+at the time when the Babylonian and Assyrian inscriptions were
+being deciphered. There was a point at which public opinion
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_197'>197</span>was active in declaring that the men deciphering the cuneiform
+writing were victims of a chimera and that the whole business
+of investigation was a fraud. But in the year 1857 the Royal
+Asiatic Society made a conclusive test. They challenged four
+of the most distinguished men engaged in this branch of research—Rawlinson,
+Hincks, Fox Talbot and Oppert—to send to the
+Society in sealed envelopes independent translations of a newly-discovered
+inscription, and, after comparing the four versions,
+they were able to announce that there was sufficient agreement
+between the four to justify belief in what had been achieved
+and confidence in further progress. The mockery of the learned
+laity then gradually came to an end, and certainty in the
+reading of cuneiform documents has advanced enormously
+since then.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>2. A second series of objections is closely connected with
+an impression which you also have probably not escaped;
+namely, that a number of the solutions achieved by our method
+of dream-interpretation seem strained, specious, “dragged in,”—in
+other words, forced, or even comical or joking. These
+criticisms are so frequent that I will take at random the last
+that has come to my ears. Now listen: a head-master in Switzerland—that
+free country—was recently asked to resign his
+post on account of his interest in psycho-analysis. He protested
+and a Berne paper published the decision of the school authorities
+on his case. I shall quote a few sentences from the article which
+refer to psycho-analysis: “Further, we are amazed at the
+far-fetched and factitious character of many of the examples
+given in the said book by Dr. Pfister of Zurich.... It is indeed
+a matter for surprise that the head-master of a Training College
+should accept so credulously all these assertions and such specious
+evidence.” These sentences purport to be the final opinion of
+“One who judges calmly.” I am much more inclined to think
+this “calm” factitious. Let us examine these remarks more
+closely in the expectation that a certain amount of reflection
+and knowledge of the subject will do no harm, even to a “calm
+judgement.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It is really quite refreshing to see how swiftly and unerringly
+anyone relying merely on his first impressions can arrive at
+an opinion on some critical question of psychology in its more
+abstruse aspects. The interpretations seem to him far-fetched
+and strained, and do not commend themselves to him; consequently,
+they are wrong and the whole business is rubbish.
+Such critics never give even a passing thought to the possibility
+that there may be good reasons why the interpretations are
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_198'>198</span>bound to convey this very impression—a thought which would
+lead to the further question what these good reasons are.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The circumstance which calls forth this criticism is essentially
+related to the effect of displacement, which you have learnt to
+know as the most powerful instrument in the service of the
+dream-censorship. With its aid the substitute-formations which
+we call allusions are created; but these allusions are of a
+kind not easy to recognize as such; nor is it easy to discover
+the thought proper by working back from them, for they are
+connected with it by the most extraordinary and unusual extrinsic
+associations. But the whole matter throughout concerns things
+which are meant to be hidden, intended to be concealed: that
+is exactly the object of the dream-censorship. We must not
+expect, though, to find something that has been hidden by
+looking in the very place where it ordinarily belongs. The
+frontier surveillance authorities nowadays are a good deal
+more cunning in this respect than the Swiss school authorities;
+for they are not content with examining portfolios and letter-cases
+when hunting for documents and plans; but consider
+the possibility that spies and smugglers may conceal anything
+compromising about their persons, in places where it is most
+difficult to detect and where such things certainly do not belong,
+for example, between the double soles of their boots. If the
+concealed articles are found there, it is certainly true that they
+have been “dragged” to light, but they are none the less a
+very good “find.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In admitting the possibility that the connection between a
+latent dream-element and its manifest substitute may appear
+most remote and extraordinary, sometimes even comical or
+joking, we are guided by our wide experience of instances in
+which we did not as a rule find the meaning ourselves. It is
+often impossible to arrive at such interpretations by our own
+efforts: no sane person could guess the bridge connecting the
+two. The dreamer either solves the riddle straightaway by a
+direct association (<em>he</em> can do it because it is in his mind that the
+substitute-formation originated); or else he provides so much
+material that there is no longer any need for special penetration
+in order to solve it—the solution thrusts itself upon us as inevitable.
+If the dreamer does not help us in either of these
+two ways the manifest element in question will remain for ever
+incomprehensible. Let me give you one more instance of this
+kind which happened recently. A patient of mine lost her
+father during the course of the treatment, after which she seized
+every opportunity to bring him back to life in her dreams. In
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_199'>199</span>one of these her father appeared in a certain connection otherwise
+not applicable and said: “<em>It is quarter past eleven, it is half
+past eleven, it is quarter to twelve</em>.” For the interpretation of
+this curious detail she could only provide the association that
+her father was pleased when his older children were punctual
+at the midday meal. This certainly fitted in with the dream-element,
+but it threw no light on its origin. The situation which
+had just been reached in the treatment gave good grounds for
+the suspicion that a carefully-suppressed critical antagonism
+to her much loved and honoured father had played a part in
+this dream. Following out her further associations, apparently
+quite remote from the dream, she told how she had heard a
+long discussion of psychological questions on the day before and
+a relative had said: “Primitive man (<i><span lang="de">Urmensch</span></i>) survives in all
+of us.” Now a light dawns on us. Here was again a splendid
+opportunity for her to imagine that her dead father survived,
+and so in the dream she made him a “clock-man” (<i><span lang="de">Uhrmensch</span></i>),
+telling the quarters up to the time of the midday meal.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The likeness to a pun in this cannot be ignored, and as a
+matter of fact it has often happened that a dreamer’s pun has
+been ascribed to the interpreter; there are yet other examples
+in which it is not at all easy to decide whether we are dealing
+with a joke or a dream. But you will remember that the same
+sort of doubt arose with some slips of the tongue. A man related
+as a dream that he and his uncle were sitting in the latter’s <em>auto</em>
+(automobile) and his uncle kissed him. The dreamer himself
+instantly volunteered the interpretation: it meant “<em>auto-erotism</em>”
+(a term used in our theory of the libido, signifying
+gratification obtained without any external love-object). Now
+was this man allowing himself a joke at our expense and pretending
+that a pun which occurred to him was part of a dream?
+I do not think so: he really did dream it. But where does this
+bewildering resemblance between dreams and jokes come from?
+At one time this question took me somewhat out of my way,
+for it necessitated my making a thorough investigation into
+the question of wit itself. This led to the conclusion that wit
+originates as follows: a preconscious train of thought is for a
+moment left to a process of unconscious elaboration, from which
+it emerges in the form of a witticism. While under the influence
+of the unconscious it is subject to the mechanisms there operative—to
+condensation and displacement; that is to say, to the same
+processes as we found at work in the dream-work; and the
+similarity sometimes found between dreams and wit is to be
+ascribed to this character common to both. But the unintentional
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_200'>200</span>“dream joke” does not amuse us as does an ordinary
+witticism; a deeper study of wit may show you why this is so.
+The “dream joke” strikes us as a poor form of wit; it does
+not make us laugh, it leaves us cold.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now in this we are following the path of the ancient method
+of dream-interpretation, which has given us, besides much that
+is useless, many a valuable example of interpretation upon which
+we ourselves could not improve. I will tell you a dream of
+historic importance which is related in slightly different versions
+by Plutarch and Artemidorus of Daldis, the dreamer being
+Alexander the Great. When he was laying siege to the city
+of Tyre, which was putting up an obstinate resistance (<span class='fss'>B.C.</span> 322),
+he dreamt one night that he saw a dancing satyr. The dream-interpreter
+Aristandros, who accompanied the army on its
+campaigns, interpreted this dream by dividing the word “satyros”
+into σὰ Τύρος (“Tyre is thine”), and prophesied from
+this the king’s victory over the city. This interpretation decided
+Alexander to continue the siege and eventually the city fell.
+The interpretation, factitious as it seems, was undoubtedly the
+right one.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>3. I can well imagine that you will be especially impressed
+on being told that even people who have long studied the
+interpretation of dreams in the course of their work as psycho-analysts
+have raised objections to our conception of dreams.
+It would indeed have been exceptional if so excellent an opportunity
+for new mistakes had been let slip; and so assertions
+have been made, due to confusion of ideas and based on unjustifiable
+generalizations, which are hardly less incorrect than the
+medical conception of dreams. One of these statements you
+know already: that dreams deal with attempts at adaptation
+to the situation at the moment and with the solution of future
+problems; in other words, that they pursue a “prospective
+tendency” or aim (A. Maeder). We have already demonstrated
+that this statement rests upon a confusion between dreams
+and the latent dream-thoughts and ignores the process of
+dream-work. If those who speak of this “prospective
+tendency” mean thereby to characterize the unconscious mental
+activity to which the latent thoughts belong, then, on the one
+hand, they tell us nothing new and, on the other hand, the
+description is not exhaustive; for unconscious mental activity
+occupies itself with many other things besides preparation for
+the future. There seems to be a much worse confusion behind
+the assurance that the “death clause” may be found underlying
+every dream; I am not quite clear what this formula is intended
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_201'>201</span>to mean, but I suspect that behind it the dream is confounded
+with the whole personality of the dreamer.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>An unjustifiable generalization, based on a few striking
+examples, is contained in the statement that every dream admits
+of two kinds of interpretation: one of the kind we have described,
+the so-called “psycho-analytic” interpretation, and the other
+the so-called “anagogic,” which disregards the instinctive
+tendencies and aims at a representation of the higher mental
+functions (H. Silberer); there are dreams of this kind, but you
+will seek in vain to extend this conception to include even a
+majority of dreams. After all you have heard, the statement
+that all dreams are to be interpreted bisexually, as a combination
+of two tendencies which may be called male and female (A.
+Adler), will seem to you quite incomprehensible. Here again,
+single dreams of this sort do of course occur and later on you
+may learn that their structure is similar to that of certain
+hysterical symptoms. I mention all these discoveries of new
+general characteristics of dreams in order to warn you against
+them, or at least to leave you in no doubt about my own opinion
+of them.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>4. At one time the objective value of research into dreams
+seemed to be discredited by the fact that patients treated analytically
+appeared to suit the content of their dreams to the
+favourite theories of their doctors, one class dreaming mainly
+of sexual impulses, and another of impulses for mastery, others
+again even of rebirth (W. Stekel). The force of this observation
+is weakened by the reflection that people dreamed dreams before
+there was any such thing as psycho-analytic treatment to influence
+their dreams and that the patients undergoing treatment
+nowadays also used to dream before they began it. The actual
+fact in this supposedly new observation is soon shown to be self-evident
+and of no consequence for the theory of dreams. The
+residue from the previous day which gives rise to dreams is a
+residue from the great interests of waking life. If the physician’s
+words and the stimuli which he gives have become of importance
+to the patient they then enter into whatever constitutes the
+residue and can act as mental stimuli for dream-formation,
+just like other interests of affective value roused on the preceding
+day which have not subsided; they operate in the same way
+as bodily stimuli which affect the sleeper during sleep. Like
+these other factors inciting dreams, the trains of thought roused
+by the physician can appear in the manifest dream-content
+or be revealed in the latent thoughts. We know indeed that
+dreams can be experimentally produced, or, to speak more
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_202'>202</span>accurately, a part of the dream-material can be thus introduced
+into the dream. In influencing his patients thus the analyst
+plays a part no different from that of an experimenter, like
+Mourly Void, who placed in certain positions the limbs of the
+person upon whom he experimented.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>We can often influence what a man shall dream <em>about</em>, but
+never <em>what</em> he will dream; for the mechanism of the dream-work
+and the unconscious dream-wish are inaccessible to
+external influence of any sort. We realized, when we were
+considering dreams arising out of bodily stimuli, that in the
+reaction to the bodily or mental stimuli brought to bear upon
+the dreamer the peculiarity and independence of dream-life is
+clearly seen. The criticism I have just discussed which tends
+to cast a doubt upon the objectivity of dream investigation is
+again an assertion based upon confounding, this time confounding
+dreams with—their material.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I wanted to tell you as much as this about the problems of
+dreams. You will guess that I have passed over a great deal
+and will have discovered for yourselves that my treatment of
+nearly every point has necessarily been incomplete; but this
+is due to the phenomena of dreams being so closely connected
+with those of the neuroses. Our plan was to study dreams as
+an introduction to the study of the neuroses and it was certainly
+a better one than beginning the other way about; but since
+dreams prepare us for comprehension of the neuroses, so also
+can a correctly-formed estimate of dreams be acquired only
+after some knowledge of neurotic manifestations has been
+gained.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I do not know how you may think about it, but I can assure
+you that I do not regret having taken up so much of your interest
+and of the time at our disposal in the consideration of problems
+connected with dreams. I know no other way by which one
+can so speedily arrive at conviction of the correctness of those
+statements by which psycho-analysis stands or falls. It requires
+strenuous work for many months, and even years, to demonstrate
+that the symptoms in a case of neurotic illness have a meaning,
+serve a purpose, and arise from the patient’s experiences in life.
+On the other hand, a few hours’ effort may be enough to show
+these things in some dream which at first seemed utterly confused
+and incomprehensible, and in this way to confirm all the premises
+upon which psycho-analysis rests—the existence of unconscious
+mental processes, the special mechanisms which they obey,
+and the instinctive propelling forces which are expressed by them.
+And when we remember how far-reaching is the analogy in the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_203'>203</span>structure of dreams to that of neurotic symptoms and, with that,
+reflect how rapid is the transformation of a dreamer into a wide-awake,
+reasonable human being, we acquire an assurance that
+the neuroses too depend only upon an alteration in the balance
+of the forces at work in mental life.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_205'>205</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'><span class='c014'><em>PART III</em></span><br> GENERAL THEORY OF THE NEUROSES</h2>
+</div>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_207'>207</span>
+ <h3 class='c002'><span class='c014'>SIXTEENTH LECTURE</span><br> PSYCHO-ANALYSIS AND PSYCHIATRY</h3>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c006'>It pleases me greatly to see you here again to continue our
+discussions after a year has passed. Last year the subject of
+my lectures was the application of psycho-analysis to errors
+and to dreams; I hope this year to lead you to some comprehension
+of neurotic phenomena which, as you will soon discover,
+have much in common with both our former subjects. I must
+tell you before I begin, however, that I cannot concede you the
+same attitude towards me now as I did last year. Then I endeavoured
+to make no step without being in agreement with
+your judgement; I debated a great deal with you, submitted
+to your objections, in fact, recognized you and your “healthy
+common-sense” as the deciding factor. That is no longer
+possible and for a very simple reason. Errors and dreams are
+phenomena which were familiar to you; one might say you had
+as much experience of them as I, or could easily have obtained
+it. The manifestations of neurosis, however, are an unknown
+region to you; those of you who are not yourselves medical
+men have no access there except through the accounts I give
+you; and of what use is the most excellent judgement where
+there is no knowledge of the subject under debate?</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>However, do not receive this announcement as though I were
+going to give these lectures <em>ex cathedra</em> or to demand unconditional
+acceptance from you. Any such misconception would
+do me a gross injustice. I do not aim at producing conviction,—my
+aim is to stimulate enquiry and to destroy prejudices.
+If owing to ignorance of the subject you are not in a position
+to adjudicate, then you should neither believe nor reject. You
+should only listen and allow what I tell you to make its own
+effect upon you. Convictions are not so easily acquired, or,
+when they are achieved without much trouble, they soon prove
+worthless and unstable. No one has a right to conviction on
+these matters who has not worked at this subject for many years,
+as I have, and has not himself experienced the same new and
+astonishing discoveries. Then why these sudden convictions
+in intellectual matters, lightning conversions, and instantaneous
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_208'>208</span>repudiations? Do you not see that the <i><span lang="fr">coup de foudre</span></i>, “love at
+first sight,” proceeds from a very different mental sphere, from
+the affective one? We do not require even our patients to bring
+with them any conviction in favour of psycho-analysis or any
+devotion to it. It would make us suspicious of them. Benevolent
+scepticism is the attitude in them which we like best. Therefore
+will you also try to let psycho-analytical conceptions develop
+quietly in your minds alongside the popular or the psychiatric
+view, until opportunities arise for them to influence each other
+and be united into a decisive opinion.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>On the other hand, you are not for a moment to suppose
+that the psycho-analytic point of view which I shall lay before
+you is a speculative system of ideas. On the contrary, it is
+the result of experience, being founded either on direct observations
+or on conclusions drawn from observation. Whether
+these have been drawn in an adequate or a justifiable manner
+future advances in science will show; after nearly two and a
+half decades and now that I am fairly well advanced in years
+I may say, without boasting, that it was particularly difficult,
+intense, and all-absorbing work that yielded these observations.
+I have often had the impression that our opponents were unwilling
+to consider this source of our statements, as if they looked upon
+them as ideas derived subjectively which anyone could dispute
+at his own sweet will. This attitude on the part of my opponents
+is not quite comprehensible to me. Perhaps it comes from the
+circumstance that physicians pay so little attention to neurotics
+and listen so carelessly to what they say that it has become
+impossible for them to perceive anything in the patients’ communications
+or to make detailed observations from them. I
+will take this opportunity of assuring you that in these lectures
+I shall make few controversial references, least of all to individuals.
+I have never been able to convince myself of the truth of the
+saying that “strife is the father of all things.” I think the
+source of it was the philosophy of the Greek sophists and that
+it errs, as does the latter, through the over estimation of dialectics.
+It seems to me, on the contrary, that scientific controversy,
+so-called, is on the whole quite unfruitful, apart from the fact
+that it is almost always conducted in a highly personal manner.
+Until a few years ago I could boast that I had only once been
+engaged in a regular scientific dispute, and that with one single
+investigator, Löwenfeld of Munich. The end of it was that
+we became friends and have remained so to this day. But I
+did not repeat the experiment for a very long time because I was
+not certain that the outcome would be the same.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_209'>209</span>Now you will surely judge that a refusal of this kind to discuss
+matters publicly points to a high degree of inaccessibility to
+criticism, to obstinacy, or, in the polite colloquialism of the
+scientific world, to “pig-headedness.”<a id='r43'></a><a href='#f43' class='c015'><sup>[43]</sup></a> My reply to you
+would be that, should you have arrived at a conviction by
+means of such hard work, you would also thereby derive a
+certain right to maintain it with some tenacity. Further, on
+my own behalf, I can say that in the course of my work I have
+modified my views on important points, changed them or replaced
+them by others, and have of course in each case published the
+fact. What has been the result of this frankness? Some people
+have ignored my corrections of myself altogether and still to-day
+criticize me in respect of views which no longer mean the same
+to me. Others positively reproach me for these changes and
+declare me to be unreliable on that account. No one who changes
+his views once or twice deserves to be believed, for it is only
+too likely that he will be mistaken again in his latest assertions;
+but anyone who sticks to anything he has once said, or refuses
+to give way upon it easily enough, is obstinate or pig-headed;
+is it not so? What is to be done in the face of these self-contradictory
+criticisms except to remain as one is and behave as
+seems best to one? This is what I decided to do; and I am
+not deterred from remodelling and improving my theories in
+accordance with later experience. I have so far found nothing
+to alter in my fundamental standpoint and I hope this will never
+be necessary.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>So now I have to lay before you the psycho-analytic theory
+of neurotic manifestations. For this purpose it will be simplest,
+on account of both the analogy and the contrast, to take an
+example which links up with the phenomena we have already
+considered. I will take a ‘symptomatic act’ which I see many
+people commit in my own consulting-room. The analyst has
+little to offer to the people who come to a physician’s consulting-room
+for half-an-hour to recount the lifelong misery of their
+fate. His deeper comprehension makes it difficult for him to
+give, as another might, the opinion that there is nothing wrong
+with them and that they had better take a light course of hydrotherapy.
+One of our colleagues once replied, with a shrug,
+when asked how he dealt with consultation patients, that he
+“fined them so many crowns for ‘wasting the time of the court.’”
+You will therefore not be surprised to hear that even the busiest
+psycho-analysts are not much sought after for consultations.
+I have had the ordinary door between the waiting-room and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_210'>210</span>my consulting-room supplemented by another door and covered
+with felt. The reason for this is obvious. Now it constantly
+happens when I admit people from the waiting-room that they
+omit to close these doors, leaving even both doors open behind
+them. When I see this happen, I at once, with some stiffness,
+request him or her to go back and make good the omission, no
+matter how fine a gentleman he may be nor how many hours
+she had spent on her toilet. My action gives the impression of
+being uncalled-for and pedantic; occasionally too I have found
+myself in the wrong, when the person turned out to be one of
+those who cannot themselves grasp a door-handle and are glad
+when those with them avoid it. But in the majority of cases
+I was right, for anyone who behaves in this way and leaves the
+door of a physician’s consulting-room open into the waiting-room
+belongs to the rabble and deserves to be received with
+coldness. Now don’t allow yourselves to be biassed before you
+have heard the rest. This omission on the part of a patient
+occurs only when he has been waiting alone in the outer room
+and thus leaves an empty room behind him, never when others,
+strangers to him, have also been waiting there. In the latter
+case he knows very well that it is to his own interest not to be
+overheard while he talks to the physician and he never neglects
+to close both doors carefully.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Occurring in this way, the patient’s omission is neither
+accidental nor meaningless, and not even unimportant, for it
+betrays the visitor’s attitude to the physician. He belongs to
+that large class who seek those in high places, and wish to be
+dazzled and intimidated. Perhaps he had made enquiries by
+telephone at what time he would be most likely to gain admittance
+and had been expecting to find a crowd of applicants in
+a queue, as if at the grocer’s in war-time. Then he is shown into
+an empty room which, moreover, is most modestly furnished,
+and he is dumbfounded. He must somehow make the physician
+atone for the superfluous respect he had been prepared to show
+him; and so he omits to close the doors between the waiting-
+and the consulting-rooms. He intends this to mean: “Pooh!
+there is no one here and I daresay there won’t be, however long
+I stay!” He would behave during the interview in an uncivil
+and supercilious manner, too, if his presumption were not curbed
+at the outset by a sharp reminder.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In the analysis of this little symptomatic act you find nothing
+that is not already known to you; namely, the conclusion that
+it is no accident but has in it motive, meaning, and intention;
+that it belongs to a mental context which can be specified;
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_211'>211</span>and that it provides a small indication of a more important
+mental process. But above all it implies that the process thus
+indicated is not known to the consciousness of the person who
+carries it out; for not one of the patients who left the two doors
+open would have admitted that he wished to show any depreciation
+of me by his neglect. Many of them could probably
+recall a sense of disappointment on entering the empty waiting-room,
+but the connection between this impression and the succeeding
+symptomatic act certainly remained outside their consciousness.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now let us place this little analysis of a symptomatic act
+by the side of an observation made on a patient. I will choose
+one which is fresh in my memory, and also because it can be
+described in comparatively few words. A certain amount of
+detail is indispensable for any such account.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>A young officer, home on short leave of absence, asked me
+to treat his mother-in-law, who was living in the happiest surroundings
+and yet was embittering her own and her family’s
+lives by a nonsensical idea. I found her a well-preserved lady,
+fifty-three years of age, of a friendly, simple disposition, who
+gave without hesitation the following account of herself. She is
+most happily married, and lives in the country with her husband
+who manages a large factory. She cannot say enough of her
+husband’s kindness and consideration; theirs had been a love-marriage
+thirty years ago, since when they had never had a
+cloud, a quarrel, or a moment’s jealousy. Her two children
+have both married well, but her husband’s sense of duty keeps
+him still at work. A year before, an incredible and, to her, incomprehensible
+thing happened. She received an anonymous
+letter telling her that her excellent husband was carrying on
+an intrigue with a young girl, and believed it on the spot—since
+then her happiness has been destroyed. The details were more
+or less as follows: she had a housemaid with whom she discussed
+confidential matters, perhaps rather too freely. This young
+woman cherished a positively venomous hatred for another
+girl who had succeeded better in life than herself, although of
+no better origin. Instead of going into service, the other young
+woman had had a commercial training, been taken into the factory
+and, owing to vacancies caused by the absence of staff on service
+in the field, had been promoted to a good position. She lived in
+the factory, knew all the gentlemen, and was even addressed
+as “Miss.” The other one who had been left behind in life
+was only too ready to accuse her former schoolmate of all
+possible evil. One day our patient and her housemaid were
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_212'>212</span>discussing an elderly gentleman who had visited the house and
+of whom it was said that he did not live with his wife but kept
+a mistress. Why, she did not know, but she suddenly said:
+“I cannot imagine anything more awful than to hear that my
+husband had a mistress.” The next day she received by post
+an anonymous letter in disguised handwriting which informed
+her of the very thing she had just imagined. She concluded—probably
+correctly—that the letter was the handiwork of her
+malicious housemaid, for the woman who was named as the
+mistress of her husband was the very girl who was the object
+of this housemaid’s hatred. Although she at once saw through
+the plot and had seen enough of such cowardly accusations in
+her own surroundings to place little credence in them, our patient
+was nevertheless prostrated by this letter. She became terribly
+excited and at once sent for her husband to overwhelm him with
+reproaches. The husband laughingly denied the accusation and
+did the best thing he could. He sent for the family physician
+(who also attended the factory), and he did his best to calm the
+unhappy lady. The next thing they did was also most reasonable.
+The housemaid was dismissed, but not the supposed
+mistress. From that time on the patient claims to have repeatedly
+brought herself to a calm view of the matter, so that
+she no longer believes the contents of the letter; but it has
+never gone very deep nor lasted very long. It was enough
+to hear the young woman’s name mentioned, or to meet her in
+the street, for a new attack of suspicion, agony, and reproaches
+to break out.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This is the clinical picture of this excellent woman’s case.
+It did not require much experience of psychiatry to perceive
+that, in contrast to other neurotics, she described her symptoms
+too mildly—as we say, dissimulated them—and that she had
+never really overcome her belief in the anonymous letter.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now what attitude does a psychiatrist take up to such a
+case? We know already what he would say to the symptomatic
+act of a patient who does not close the waiting-room doors.
+He explains it as an accident, without interest psychologically,
+and no concern of his. But he cannot continue to take up this
+attitude in regard to the case of the jealous lady. The symptomatic
+action appears to be unimportant; the symptom calls
+for notice as a grave matter. Subjectively it involves intense
+suffering, and objectively it threatens to break up a family;
+its claim to psychiatric interest is therefore indisputable. First
+the psychiatrist tries to characterize the symptom by some
+essential attribute. The idea with which this lady torments
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_213'>213</span>herself cannot be called nonsensical in itself; it does happen
+that elderly husbands contract relationships with young women.
+But there is something else about it that is nonsensical and
+incomprehensible. The patient has absolutely no grounds,
+except the anonymous letter, for supposing that her loving and
+faithful husband belongs to this category of men, otherwise
+not so uncommon. She knows that this communication carries
+no proof, she can explain its origin satisfactorily; she ought
+therefore to be able to say to herself that she has no grounds
+for her jealousy and she does even say so, but she suffers just
+as much as if she regarded her jealousy as well-founded. Ideas
+of this kind that are inaccessible to logic and the arguments of
+reality are unanimously described as <em>delusions</em>. The good lady
+suffers therefore, from a <em>delusion of jealousy</em>. That is evidently
+the essential characteristic of the case.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Having established this first point, our psychiatric interest
+increases. When a delusion cannot be dissipated by the facts
+of reality, it probably does not spring from reality. Where
+else then does it spring from? Delusions can have the most
+various contents; why is the content of it in this case jealousy?
+What kind of people have delusions, and particularly delusions
+of jealousy? Now we should like to listen to the psychiatrist,
+but he leaves us in the lurch here. He considers only one of
+our questions. He will examine the family history of this woman
+and will <em>perhaps</em> bring us the answer that the kind of people
+who suffer from delusions are those in whose families similar
+or different disorders have occurred repeatedly. In other words,
+this lady has developed a delusion because she had an hereditary
+predisposition to do so. That is certainly something; but is it
+all that we want to know? Is it the sole cause of her disease?
+Does it satisfy us to assume that it is unimportant, arbitrary,
+or inexplicable that one kind of delusion should have been
+developed instead of another? And are we to understand the
+proposition—that the hereditary predisposition is decisive—also
+in a negative sense; that is, that no matter what experiences
+and emotions life had brought her she was destined some time
+or other to produce a delusion? You will want to know why
+scientific psychiatry gives no further explanation. And I reply:
+“Only a rogue gives more than he has.” The psychiatrist
+knows of no path leading to any further explanation in such a
+case. He has to content himself with a diagnosis and, in spite
+of wide experience, with a very uncertain prognosis of its future
+course.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now can psycho-analysis do better than this? Yes, certainly
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_214'>214</span>I hope to show you that even in such an obscure case as this
+it is possible to discover something which makes closer comprehension
+possible. First, I shall ask you to notice this incomprehensible
+detail; that the anonymous letter on which her delusion
+is founded was positively provoked by the patient herself, by
+her saying to the scheming housemaid the day before that nothing
+could be more awful than to hear that her husband had an
+intrigue with a young woman. She first put the idea of sending
+the letter into the servant’s mind by this. So the delusion
+acquires a certain independence of the letter; it existed beforehand
+as a fear—or, as a wish?—in her mind. Besides this,
+the further small indications revealed in the bare two hours of
+analysis are noteworthy. The patient responded very coldly,
+it is true, to the request to tell me her further thoughts, ideas,
+and recollections, after she had finished her story. She declared
+that nothing came to her mind, she had told me everything;
+and after two hours the attempt had to be given up, because
+she announced that she felt quite well already and was certain
+that the morbid idea would not return. Her saying this was
+naturally due to resistance and to the fear of further analysis,
+In these two hours she had let fall some remarks, nevertheless,
+which made a certain interpretation not only possible but inevitable,
+and this interpretation threw a sharp light on the
+origin of the delusion of jealousy. There actually existed in
+her an infatuation for a young man, for the very son-in-law who
+had urged her to seek my assistance. Of this infatuation she
+herself knew nothing or only perhaps very little; in the circumstances
+of their relationship it was easily possible for it to disguise
+itself as harmless tenderness on her part. After what we
+have already learnt it is not difficult to see into the mind of this
+good woman and excellent mother. Such an infatuation, such
+a monstrous, impossible thing, could not come into her conscious
+mind; it persisted, nevertheless, and unconsciously exerted a
+heavy pressure. Something had to happen, some sort of relief
+had to be found; and the simplest alleviation lay in that mechanism
+of displacement which so regularly plays its part in the
+formation of delusional jealousy. If not merely she, old woman
+that she was, were in love with a young man, but if only her
+old husband too were in love with a young mistress, then her
+torturing conscience would be absolved from the infidelity.
+The phantasy of her husband’s infidelity was thus a cooling balm
+on her burning wound. Of her own love she never became
+conscious; but its reflection in the delusion, which brought
+such advantages, thus became compulsive, delusional and conscious.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_215'>215</span>All arguments against it could naturally avail nothing;
+for they were directed only against the reflection, and not against
+the original to which its strength was due and which lay buried
+out of reach in the Unconscious.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Let us now piece together the results of this short, obstructed
+psycho-analytic attempt to understand this case. It is assumed
+of course that the information acquired was correct, a point
+which I cannot submit to your judgement here. First of all,
+the delusion is no longer senseless and incomprehensible; it
+is sensible, logically motivated, and has its place in connection
+with an affective experience of the patient’s. Secondly, it has
+arisen as a necessary reaction to another mental process which
+has itself been revealed by other indications; and it owes its
+delusional character, its quality of resisting real and logical
+objections, to this relation with this other mental process. It
+is something desired in itself, a kind of consolation. Thirdly,
+the fact that the delusion is one of jealousy and no other is
+unmistakably determined by the experience underlying the
+disease. You will also recognize the two important analogies
+with the symptomatic act we analysed; namely, the discovery
+of the sense or intention behind the symptom and the relation
+of it to something in the given situation which is unconscious.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This does not, of course, answer all the questions arising out
+of this case. On the contrary, it bristles with further problems,
+some of which have not yet proved soluble at all, while others
+cannot be solved owing to the unfavourable circumstances met
+with in this case. For instance, why does this happily-married
+lady fall in love with her son-in-law, and why does relief come
+to her in the form of this kind of reflection, this projection of her
+own state of mind on to her husband, when other forms of relief
+were also possible? Do not think that it is idle and uncalled-for
+to propound these questions. We have already a good
+deal of material at hand to provide possible answers. The
+patient had come to that critical time of life which brings a
+sudden and unwelcome increase of sexual desire to a woman;
+that may have been sufficient in itself. Or there may have been
+an additional reason, in that the sexual capacity of her excellent
+and faithful husband may have been for some years insufficient
+for the still vigorous woman’s needs. Observation has taught
+us that it is just such men, whose fidelity is thus a matter of
+course, who treat their wives with particular tenderness and
+are unusually considerate of their nervous ailments. Neither is
+it unimportant, moreover, that the object of this abnormal
+infatuation should be her daughter’s young husband. A strong
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_216'>216</span>erotic attachment to the daughter, with its roots in the individual
+sexual constitution of the mother, often manages to maintain
+itself in such a transformation. I may perhaps remind you in
+this connection that the relation between mother-in-law and
+son-in-law has from time immemorial been regarded by mankind
+as a particularly sensitive one, which among primitive races
+has given rise to very powerful taboos and precautions.<a id='r44'></a><a href='#f44' class='c015'><sup>[44]</sup></a> On
+the positive as well as on the negative side it frequently exceeds
+the limits regarded as desirable in civilized society. Of these
+three possible factors, whether one of them has been at work
+in the case before us, or two of them, or whether all three together
+have taken part, I cannot tell you; though only because the
+analysis of the case could not be continued beyond the second
+hour.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I perceive now that I have been speaking entirely of things
+which you were not yet prepared to understand. I did so in
+order to carry out the comparison between psychiatry and
+psycho-analysis. But I may ask you one thing at this point:
+Have you observed anything in the nature of a contradiction
+between the two? Psychiatry does not employ the technical
+methods of psycho-analysis, neglects any consideration of the
+content of the delusion, and in pointing to heredity gives us
+but a general and remote ætiology instead of first disclosing the
+more specific and immediate one. But is any contradiction or
+opposition contained in this? Is not the one rather a supplement
+to the other? Is the hereditary factor inconsistent with
+the importance of experience and would they not both work
+together most effectively? You will admit that there is nothing
+essential in the work of psychiatry which could oppose psycho-analytic
+researches. It is therefore the psychiatrists who oppose
+it, and not psychiatry itself. Psycho-Analysis stands to psychiatry
+more or less as histology does to anatomy; in one, the
+outer forms of organs are studied, in the other, the construction
+of these out of the tissues and constituent elements. It is not
+easy to conceive of any contradiction between these two fields
+of study, in which the work of the one is continued in the other.
+You know that nowadays anatomy is the basis of the scientific
+study of medicine; but time was when dissecting human corpses
+in order to discover the internal structure of the body was as
+much a matter for severe prohibition as practising psycho-analysis
+in order to discover the internal workings of the human mind
+seems to-day to be a matter for condemnation. And, presumably
+at a not too distant date, we shall have perceived that there can
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_217'>217</span>be no psychiatry which is scientifically radical without a thorough
+knowledge of the deep-seated unconscious processes in mental
+life.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>There may be some of you who perhaps are friendly enough
+towards psycho-analysis, often attacked as it is, to wish that it
+would justify itself in another direction also, that is, therapeutically.
+You know that psychiatric therapy has hitherto been
+unable to influence delusions. Can psycho-analysis do so perhaps,
+by reason of its insight into the mechanism of these symptoms?
+No, I have to tell you that it cannot; for the present, at any rate,
+it is just as powerless as any other therapy to heal these sufferers.
+It is true that we can understand what has happened to the
+patient; but we have no means by which we can make him
+understand it himself. You have heard that I could not continue
+the analysis of this delusion beyond the first preliminaries.
+Would you then maintain that analysis of such cases is undesirable
+because it remains fruitless? I do not think so. It is our right,
+yes, and our duty, to pursue our researches without respect
+to the immediate gain effected. The day will come, where and
+when we know not, when every little piece of knowledge will
+be converted into power, and into therapeutic power. Even if
+psycho-analysis showed itself as unsuccessful with all other
+forms of nervous and mental diseases as with delusions, it would
+still remain justified as an irreplaceable instrument of scientific
+research. It is true that we should not be in a position to practise
+it; the human material on which we learn lives, and has its
+own will, and must have its own motives in order to participate
+in the work; and it would then refuse to do so. I will therefore
+close my lecture for to-day by telling you that there are large
+groups of nervous disturbances for which this conversion of our
+own advance in knowledge into therapeutic power has actually
+been carried out; and that with these diseases, otherwise so
+refractory, our measures yield, under certain conditions, results
+which give place to none in the domain of medical therapy.</p>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_218'>218</span>
+ <h3 class='c002'><span class='c014'>SEVENTEENTH LECTURE</span><br> THE MEANING OF SYMPTOMS</h3>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c006'>In the last lecture I explained to you that clinical psychiatry
+troubles itself little about the actual form of the individual
+symptom or the content of it; but that psycho-analysis has
+made this its starting-point, and has ascertained that the symptom
+itself has a meaning and is connected with experiences in the
+life of the patient. The meaning of neurotic symptoms was
+first discovered by J. Breuer in the study and successful cure
+of a case of hysteria (1880–82), which has since then become
+famous. It is true that P. Janet independently reached the
+same result; in fact, priority in publication must be granted
+to the French investigator, for Breuer did not publish his observations
+until more than a decade later (1893–95), during the period
+of our work together. Incidentally, it is of no great importance
+to us who made the discovery, for you know that every discovery
+is made more than once, and none is made all at once,
+nor is success meted out according to deserts. America is not
+called after Columbus. Before Breuer and Janet, the great
+psychiatrist Leuret expressed the opinion that even the delusions
+of the insane would prove to have some meaning, if only we
+knew how to translate them. I confess that for a long time
+I was willing to accord Janet very high recognition for his
+explanation of neurotic symptoms, because he regarded them
+as expressions of “<i><span lang="fr">idées inconscientes</span></i>” possessing the patient’s
+mind. Since then, however, Janet has taken up an attitude
+of undue reserve, as if he meant to imply that the Unconscious
+had been nothing more to him than a manner of speaking, a
+makeshift, <i><span lang="fr">une façon de parler</span></i>, and that he had nothing “real”
+in mind. Since then I have not understood Janet’s views, but
+I believe that he has gratuitously deprived himself of great
+credit.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Neurotic symptoms then, just like errors and dreams, have
+their meaning and, like these, are related to the life of the person
+in whom they appear. This is an important matter which I
+should like to demonstrate to you by some examples. I can
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_219'>219</span>merely assert, I cannot prove, that it is so in every case; anyone
+observing for himself will be convinced of it. For certain
+reasons though, I shall not take these examples from cases of
+hysteria, but from another very remarkable form of neurosis,
+closely allied in origin to the latter, about which I must say a
+few preliminary words. This, which we call <em>the obsessional neurosis</em>,
+is not so popular as the widely-known <em>hysteria</em>; it is, if I may
+so express myself, not so noisily ostentatious, behaves more as
+if it were a private affair of the patient’s, dispenses almost
+entirely with bodily manifestations and creates all its symptoms
+in the mental sphere. The obsessional neurosis and hysteria
+are the two forms of neurotic disease upon the study of which
+psycho-analysis was first built up, and in the treatment of which
+also our therapy celebrates its triumphs. In the obsessional
+neurosis, however, that mysterious leap from the mental to the
+physical is absent, and it has really become more intimately
+comprehensible and transparent to us through psycho-analytic
+research than hysteria; we have come to understand that it
+displays far more markedly certain extreme features of the
+neurotic constitution.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The obsessional neurosis<a id='r45'></a><a href='#f45' class='c015'><sup>[45]</sup></a> takes this form: the patient’s
+mind is occupied with thoughts that do not really interest him,
+he feels impulses which seem alien to him, and he is impelled to
+perform actions which not only afford him no pleasure but from
+which he is powerless to desist. The thoughts (obsessions) may
+be meaningless in themselves or only of no interest to the patient;
+they are often absolutely silly; in every case they are the starting-point
+of a strained concentration of thought which exhausts
+the patient and to which he yields most unwillingly. Against
+his will he has to worry and speculate as if it were a matter of
+life or death to him. The impulses which he perceives within
+him may seem to be of an equally childish and meaningless
+character; mostly, however, they consist of something terrifying,
+such as temptations to commit serious crimes, so that
+the patient not only repudiates them as alien, but flees from
+them in horror, and guards himself by prohibitions, precautions,
+and restrictions against the possibility of carrying them out.
+As a matter of fact he never, literally not even once, carries
+these impulses into effect; flight and precautions invariably
+win. What he does really commit are very harmless, certainly
+trivial acts—what are termed the obsessive actions—which are
+mostly repetitions and ceremonial elaborations of ordinary
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_220'>220</span>everyday performances, making these common necessary actions—going
+to bed, washing, dressing, going for walks, etc.—into
+highly laborious tasks of almost insuperable difficulty. The
+morbid ideas, impulses, and actions are not by any means combined
+in the same proportions in individual types and cases of
+the obsessional neurosis; on the contrary, the rule is that one
+or another of these manifestations dominates the picture and
+gives the disease its name; but what is common to all forms
+of it is unmistakable enough.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This is a mad disease, surely. I don’t think the wildest
+psychiatric phantasy could have invented anything like it, and
+if we did not see it every day with our own eyes we could hardly
+bring ourselves to believe in it. Now do not imagine that you
+can do anything for such a patient by advising him to distract
+himself, to pay no attention to these silly ideas, and to do something
+sensible instead of his nonsensical practices. This is
+what he would like himself; for he is perfectly aware of his
+condition, he shares your opinion about his obsessional symptoms,
+he even volunteers it quite readily. Only he simply cannot
+help himself; the actions performed in an obsessional condition
+are supported by a kind of energy which probably has no counterpart
+in normal mental life. Only one thing is open to him—he
+can displace and he can exchange; instead of one silly idea
+he can adopt another of a slightly milder character, from one
+precaution or prohibition he can proceed to another, instead
+of one ceremonial rite he can perform another. He can displace
+his sense of compulsion, but he cannot dispel it. This capacity
+for displacing all the symptoms, involving radical alteration of
+their original forms, is a main characteristic of the disease; it
+is, moreover, striking that in this condition the ‘<em>opposite-values</em>’
+(<em>polarities</em>) pervading mental life appear to be exceptionally
+sharply differentiated. In addition to compulsions
+of both positive and negative character, doubt appears in the
+intellectual sphere, gradually spreading until it gnaws even at
+what is usually held to be certain. All these things combine
+to bring about an ever-increasing indecisiveness, loss of energy,
+and curtailment of freedom; and that although the obsessional
+neurotic is originally always a person of a very energetic disposition,
+often highly opinionated, and as a rule intellectually
+gifted above the average. He has usually attained to an agreeably
+high standard of ethical development, is over-conscientious, and
+more than usually correct. You may imagine that it is a sufficiently
+arduous task to find one’s bearings in this maze of contradictory
+character-traits and morbid manifestations. At the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_221'>221</span>moment our aim is merely to interpret some symptoms of this
+disease.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Perhaps in view of our previous discussions you would like
+to know what present-day psychiatry has to offer concerning
+the obsessional neurosis; it is but a miserable contribution,
+however. Psychiatry has given names to the various compulsions;
+and has nothing more to say about them. It asserts
+instead that persons exhibiting these symptoms are “degenerate.”
+That is not much satisfaction to us; it is no more than an estimate
+of their value, a condemnation instead of an explanation.
+We are intended, I suppose, to conclude that deterioration from
+type would naturally produce all kinds of oddities in people.
+Now, we do believe that people who develop such symptoms
+must be somewhat different in type from other human beings;
+but we should like to know whether they are more “degenerate”
+than other nervous patients, than hysterical or insane people.
+The characterization is clearly again much too general. One
+may even doubt whether it is justified at all when one learns
+that such symptoms occur in men and women of exceptional
+ability who have left their mark on their generation. Thanks
+to their own discretion and the untruthfulness of biographers
+we usually learn very little of an intimate nature about our
+exemplary great men; but it does happen occasionally that one
+of them is a fanatic about truth like Émile Zola,<a id='r46'></a><a href='#f46' class='c015'><sup>[46]</sup></a> and then we
+hear of the many extraordinary obsessive habits from which
+he suffered throughout life.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Psychiatry has got out of this difficulty by dubbing these
+people “<i><span lang="de">dégénerés superieurs</span></i>.” Very well; but psycho-analysis
+has shown that these extraordinary obsessional symptoms can
+be removed permanently, like the symptoms of other diseases,
+and as in other people who are not degenerate. I myself have
+frequently succeeded in doing so.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I shall only give you two examples of analysis of obsessional
+symptoms; one is an old one, but I have never found a better;
+and one is a recent one. I shall limit myself to these two because
+an account of this kind must be very explicit and go into great
+detail.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>A lady of nearly thirty years of age suffered from very severe
+obsessional symptoms. I might perhaps have been able to
+help her if my work had not been destroyed by the caprice of
+fate—perhaps I shall tell you about it later. In the course of
+a day she would perform the following peculiar obsessive act,
+among others, several times over. She would run out of her
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_222'>222</span>room into the adjoining one, there take up a certain position at
+the table in the centre of the room, ring for her maid, give her
+a trivial order or send her away without, and then run back
+again. There was certainly nothing very dreadful about this,
+but it might well arouse curiosity. The explanation presented
+itself in the simplest and most unexceptionable manner, without
+any assistance on the part of the analyst. I cannot imagine
+how I could even have suspected the meaning of this obsession
+or could possibly have suggested an interpretation for it. Every
+time I had asked the patient, “Why do you do this? What is
+the meaning of it?” she had answered, “I don’t know.” But
+one day, after I had succeeded in overcoming a great hesitation
+on her part, involving a matter of principle, she suddenly did
+know, for she related the history of the obsessive act. More
+than ten years previously she had married a man very much
+older than herself, who had proved impotent on the wedding-night.
+Innumerable times on that night he had run out of his
+room into hers in order to make the attempt, but had failed
+every time. In the morning he had said angrily: “It’s enough
+to disgrace one in the eyes of the maid who does the beds,” and
+seizing a bottle of red ink which happened to be at hand he
+poured it on the sheet, but not exactly in the place where such
+a mark might have been. At first I did not understand what
+this recollection could have to do with the obsessive act in question;
+for I could see no similarity between the two situations,
+except in the running from one room into the other, and perhaps
+also in the appearance of the servant on the scene. The patient
+then led me to the table in the adjoining room, where I found
+a great mark on the table-cover. She explained further that
+she stood by the table in such a way that when the maid came
+in she could not miss seeing this mark. After this, there could
+no longer be any doubt about the connection between the current
+obsessive act and the scene of the wedding-night, though there
+was still a great deal to learn about it.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It was clear, first of all, that the patient identified herself
+with her husband; in imitating his running from one room into
+another she acted his part. To keep up the similarity we must
+assume that she has substituted the table and table-cover for
+the bed and sheet. This might seem too arbitrary; but then
+we have not studied dream-symbolism in vain. In dreams a
+table is very often found to represent a bed. “Bed and board”
+together mean marriage, so that the one easily stands for the
+other.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>All this would be proof enough that the obsessive act is full
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_223'>223</span>of meaning; it <em>seems</em> to be a representation, a repetition of
+that all-important scene. But we are not bound to stop at
+this semblance; if we investigate more closely the relation between
+the two situations we shall probably find out something more,
+the purpose of the obsessive act. The kernel of it evidently
+lies in the calling of the maid, to whom she displays the mark, in
+contrast to her husband’s words: “It’s enough to disgrace
+one before the servant.” In this way he, whose part she is
+playing, is <em>not</em> ashamed before the servant, the stain is where it
+ought to be. We see therefore that she has not simply repeated
+the scene, she has continued it and corrected it, transformed
+it into what it ought to have been. This implies something else,
+too, a correction of the circumstance which made that night
+so distressing, and which made the red ink necessary: namely,
+the husband’s impotence. The obsessive act thus says: “No,
+it is not true, he was not disgraced before the servant, he was
+not impotent.” As in a dream she represents this wish as fulfilled,
+in a current obsessive act, which serves the purpose of
+restoring her husband’s credit after that unfortunate incident.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Everything else which I could tell you about this lady fits
+in with this, or, more correctly stated, everything else that we
+know about her points to this interpretation of the obsessive act,
+in itself so incomprehensible. She had been separated from her
+husband for years and was trying to make up her mind to divorce
+him legally. But there would have been no prospect of being
+free from him in her mind; she forced herself to be true to him.
+She withdrew from the world and from everyone so that she
+might not be tempted, and in her phantasies she excused and
+idealized him. The deepest secret of her illness was that it
+enabled her to shield him from malicious gossip, to justify her
+separation from him, and to make a comfortable existence apart
+from her possible for him. The analysis of a harmless obsessive
+act thus leads straight to the inmost core of the patient’s disease,
+and at the same time betrays a great deal of the secret of the
+obsessional neurosis in general. I am quite willing that you
+should spend some time over this example, for it unites conditions
+which cannot reasonably be expected in all cases. The
+interpretation of the symptom was discovered by the patient
+herself in a flash, without guidance or interference from the
+analyst, and it had arisen in connection with an event which
+did not belong, as it commonly does, to a forgotten period in
+childhood, but which had occurred in the patient’s adult life
+and was clear in her memory. All those objections which critics
+habitually raise against our interpretations of symptoms are
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_224'>224</span>quite out of place here. To be sure, we cannot always be so
+fortunate.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>And one thing more! Has it not struck you that this innocent
+obsessive act leads directly to this lady’s most private
+affairs? A woman can hardly have anything more intimate to
+relate than the story of her wedding-night; and is it by chance
+and without special significance that we are led straight to the
+innermost secrets of her sexual life? It might certainly be
+due to the choice I made of this example. Let us not decide
+this point too quickly; but let us turn to the second example,
+which is of a totally different nature, and belongs to a very
+common type, that of rituals preparatory to sleep.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>A well-grown clever girl of 19, the only child of her parents,
+superior to them in education and intellectual activity, was
+a wild, high-spirited child, but of late years had become very
+nervous without any apparent cause. She was very irritable,
+particularly with her mother, was discontented and depressed,
+inclined to indecision and doubt, finally confessing that she
+could no longer walk alone through squares and wide streets.
+We will not go very closely into her complicated condition, which
+requires at least two diagnoses: agoraphobia and obsessional
+neurosis; but will turn our attention to the ritual elaborated
+by this young girl preparatory to going to bed, as a result of
+which she caused her parents great distress. In a certain sense,
+every normal person may be said to carry out a ritual before
+going to sleep, or at least, he requires certain conditions without
+which he is hindered in going to sleep; the transition from waking
+life to sleep has been made into a regular formula which is repeated
+every night in the same manner. But everything that a
+healthy person requires as a condition of sleep can be rationally
+explained, and if the external circumstances make any alteration
+necessary he adapts himself easily to it without waste of time.
+The morbid ritual on the other hand is inexorable, it will be
+maintained at the greatest sacrifices; it is disguised, too, under
+rational motives and appears superficially to differ from the
+normal only in a certain exaggerated carefulness of execution.
+On a closer examination, however, it is clear that the disguise
+is insufficient, that the ritual includes observances which go far
+beyond what reason can justify and even some which directly
+contravene this. As the motive of her nightly precautions, our
+patient declares that she must have silence at night and must
+exclude all possibility of noise. She does two things for this
+purpose; she stops the large clock in her room and removes all
+other clocks out of the room, including even the tiny wrist-watch
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_225'>225</span>on her bed-table. Flower-pots and vases are placed carefully
+together on the writing-table, so that they cannot fall down in
+the night and break, and so disturb her sleep. She knows that
+these precautions have only an illusory justification in the demand
+for quiet; the ticking of the little watch could not be heard,
+even if it lay on the table by the bed; and we all know that the
+regular ticking of a pendulum-clock never disturbs sleep, but is
+more likely to induce it. She also admits that her fear that
+the flower-pots and vases, if left in their places at night, might
+fall down of themselves and break is utterly improbable. For
+some other practices in her ritual this insistence upon silence
+as a motive is dropped; indeed, by ordaining that the door
+between her bedroom and that of her parents shall remain half-open
+(a condition which she ensures by placing various objects
+in the doorway) she seems, on the contrary, to open the way
+to sources of noise. The most important observances are concerned
+with the bed itself, however. The bolster at the head of
+the bed must not touch the back of the wooden bedstead. The
+pillow must lie across the bolster exactly in a diagonal position
+and in no other; she then places her head exactly in the middle
+of this diamond, lengthways. The eiderdown must be shaken
+before she puts it over her, so that all the feathers sink to the
+foot-end; she never fails, however, to press this out and redistribute
+them all over it again.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I will pass over other trivial details of her ritual; they
+would teach us nothing new and lead us too far from our purpose.
+Do not suppose, though, that all this is carried out with perfect
+smoothness. Everything is accompanied by the anxiety that
+it has not all been done properly; it must be tested and repeated;
+her doubts fix first upon one, then another, of the precautions;
+and the result is that one or two hours elapse before the girl
+herself can sleep, or lets the intimidated parents sleep.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The analysis of these torments did not proceed so simply as
+that of the former patient’s obsessive act. I had to offer hints
+and suggestions of its interpretation which were invariably
+received by her with a positive denial or with scornful doubt.
+After this first reaction of rejection, however, there followed
+a period in which she herself took up the possibilities suggested
+to her, noted the associations they aroused, produced memories,
+and established connections until she herself had accepted all
+the interpretations in working them out for herself. In proportion
+as she did this she began to relax the performance of
+her obsessive precautions and before the end of the treatment
+she had given up the whole ritual. I must also tell you that
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_226'>226</span>analytic work, as we conduct it nowadays, definitely excludes
+any uninterrupted concentration on a single symptom until its
+meaning becomes fully clear. It is necessary, on the contrary,
+to abandon a given theme again and again, in the assurance
+that one will come upon it anew in another context. The interpretation
+of the symptom, which I am now going to tell you, is
+therefore a synthesis of the results which, amid the interruptions
+of work on other points, took weeks and months to procure.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The patient gradually learnt to understand that she banished
+clocks and watches from her room at night because they were
+symbols of the female genitals. Clocks, which we know may
+have other symbolic meanings besides this, acquire this significance
+of a genital organ by their relation to periodical processes
+and regular intervals. A woman may be heard to boast that
+menstruation occurs in her as regularly as clockwork. Now
+this patient’s special fear was that the ticking of the clocks would
+disturb her during sleep. The ticking of a clock is comparable
+to the throbbing of the clitoris in sexual excitation. This sensation,
+which was distressing to her, had actually on several occasions
+wakened her from sleep; and now her fear of an erection
+of the clitoris expressed itself by the imposition of a rule to
+remove all going clocks and watches far away from her during
+the night. Flower-pots and vases are, like all receptacles, also
+symbols of the female genitals. Precautions to prevent them
+from falling and breaking during the night are therefore not
+lacking in meaning. We know the very widespread custom of
+breaking a vessel or a plate on the occasion of a betrothal; everyone
+present possesses himself of a fragment in symbolic acceptance
+of the fact that he may no longer put forward any claims
+to the bride, presumably a custom which arose with monogamy.
+The patient also contributed a recollection and several associations
+to this part of her ritual. Once as a child she had fallen
+while carrying a glass or porcelain vessel, and had cut her finger
+which had bled badly. As she grew up and learnt the facts
+about sexual intercourse, she developed the apprehension that
+on her wedding-night she would not bleed and so would prove
+not to be a virgin. Her precautions against the vases breaking
+signified a rejection of the whole complex concerned with
+virginity and with the question of bleeding during the first act
+of intercourse; a rejection of the anxiety both that she would
+bleed and that she would not bleed. These precautions were
+in fact only remotely connected with the prevention of noise.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>One day she divined the central idea of her ritual when she
+suddenly understood her rule not to let the bolster touch the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_227'>227</span>back of the bed. The bolster had always seemed a woman to
+her, she said, and the upright back of the bedstead a man. She
+wished therefore, by a magic ceremony, as it were, to keep man
+and woman apart; that is to say, to separate the parents and
+prevent intercourse from occurring. Years before the institution
+of her ritual, she had attempted to achieve this end by a more
+direct method. She had simulated fear, or had exploited a
+tendency to fear, so that the door between her bedroom and
+that of her parents should not be closed. This regulation was
+still actually included in her present ritual; in this way she
+managed to make it possible to overhear her parents; a proceeding
+which at one time had caused her months of sleeplessness.
+Not content with disturbing her parents in this way, she at that
+time even succeeded occasionally in sleeping between the father
+and mother in their bed. “Bolster” and “bedstead” were
+then really prevented from coming together. As she finally
+grew too big to be comfortable in the same bed with the parents,
+she achieved the same thing by consciously simulating fear and
+getting her mother to change places with her and to give up to
+her her place by the father. This incident was undoubtedly
+the starting-point of phantasies, the effect of which was evident
+in the ritual.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>If the bolster was a woman, then the shaking of the eiderdown
+till all the feathers were at the bottom, making a protuberance
+there, also had a meaning. It meant impregnating a woman;
+she did not neglect, though, to obliterate the pregnancy again,
+for she had for years been terrified that intercourse between
+her parents might result in another child and present her with
+a rival. On the other hand, if the large bolster meant the mother
+then the small pillow could only represent the daughter. Why
+had this pillow to be placed diamond-wise upon the bolster and
+her head be laid exactly in its middle lengthways? She was
+easily reminded that a diamond is repeatedly used in drawings
+on walls to signify the open female genitals. The part of the
+man (the father) she thus played herself and replaced the male
+organ by her own head. (Cf. Symbolism of beheading for
+castration.)</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Horrible thoughts, you will say, to run in the mind of a
+virgin girl. I admit that; but do not forget that I have not
+invented these ideas, only exposed them. A ritual of this kind
+before sleep is also peculiar enough, and you cannot deny the
+correspondence, revealed by the interpretation, between the
+ceremonies and the phantasies. It is more important to me,
+however, that you should notice that the ritual was the outcome,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_228'>228</span>not of one single phantasy, but of several together which of course
+must have had a nodal point somewhere. Note, too, that the
+details of the ritual reflect the sexual wishes both positively and
+negatively, and serve in part as expressions of them, in part as
+defences against them.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It would be possible to obtain much more out of the analysis
+of this ritual by bringing it into its place in connection with the
+patient’s other symptoms. But that is not our purpose at the
+moment. You must be content with a reference to an erotic
+attachment to the father, originating very early in childhood,
+which had enslaved this girl. It was perhaps for this reason
+that she was so unfriendly towards her mother. Also we cannot
+overlook the fact that the analysis of this symptom has again
+led to the patient’s sexual life. The more insight we gain into
+the meaning and purpose of neurotic symptoms, the less surprising
+will this seem.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>From two selected examples I have now shown you that
+neurotic symptoms have meaning, like errors and like dreams,
+and that they are closely connected with the events of the patient’s
+life. Can I expect you to believe this exceptionally significant
+statement on the strength of two examples? No. But can
+you expect me to go on quoting examples to you until you declare
+yourselves convinced? Again, no; for in view of the explicit
+treatment given to each individual case I should have to devote
+five hours a week for a whole term to the consideration of this
+one point in the theory of the neuroses. I will content myself
+therefore with the samples given, as evidence of my statement;
+and will refer you for more to the literature on the subject, to
+the classical interpretation of symptoms in Breuer’s first case
+(hysteria), to the striking elucidations of very obscure symptoms
+in dementia præcox, so-called, made by C. G. Jung at a time
+when this investigator was a mere psycho-analyst and did not
+yet aspire to be a prophet, and to all the subsequent contributions
+with which our periodicals have been filled since then. Precisely
+this type of investigation is plentiful. Analysis, interpretation,
+and translation of neurotic symptoms has proved so
+attractive to psycho-analysts that in comparison they have
+temporarily neglected the other problems of the neuroses.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Anyone of you who makes the necessary effort to look up
+this question will certainly be strongly impressed by the wealth
+of evidential material. But he will also meet with a difficulty.
+The meaning of a symptom lies, as we have seen, in its connection
+with the life of the patient. The more individually the symptom
+has been formed, the more clearly may we expect to establish
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_229'>229</span>this connection. Then the task resolves itself specifically into
+a discovery, for every nonsensical idea and every useless action,
+of the past situation in which the idea was justified and the
+action served a useful purpose. The obsessive act of the patient
+who ran to the table and rang for the maid is a perfect model
+of this kind of symptom. But symptoms of quite a different
+type are very frequently seen. They are what we call <em>typical</em>
+symptoms of a disease, in each case they are practically identical,
+the individual differences in them vanish or at least fade away,
+so that it is difficult to connect them with the patient’s life or
+to relate them to special situations in his past. Let us consider
+the obsessional neurosis again. The second patient’s ceremonies
+preparatory to sleep are in many ways quite typical, although
+showing enough individual features as well to make an “historical”
+interpretation, so to speak, possible. But all obsessional patients
+are given to repetitions, to isolating certain of their actions and
+to rhythmic performances. Most of them wash too much. Those
+patients who suffer from agoraphobia (topophobia, fear of space),
+no longer reckoned as an obsessional neurosis but now classified
+as anxiety-hysteria, reproduce the same features of the pathological
+picture often with fatiguing monotony. They fear enclosed
+spaces, wide, open squares, long stretches of road, and
+avenues; they feel protected if accompanied, or if a vehicle
+drives behind them, and so on. Nevertheless, on this groundwork
+of similarity the various patients construct individual
+conditions of their own, moods, one might call them, which
+directly contrast with other cases. One fears narrow streets
+only, another wide streets only, one can walk only when few
+people are about, others only when surrounded with people.
+Similarly in hysteria, beside the wealth of individual features
+there are always plenty of common typical symptoms which
+appear to resist an easy interpretation on historical lines. Do
+not let us forget that it is these typical symptoms which enable
+us to take our bearings in forming a diagnosis. Supposing we
+do trace back a typical symptom in a case of hysteria to an experience
+or to a chain of similar experiences (for instance, an
+hysterical vomiting to a series of impressions of a disgusting
+nature), it will be confusing to discover in another case of
+vomiting an entirely dissimilar series of apparently causative
+experiences. It almost looks as though hysterical patients must
+vomit, for some unknown reason, and as though the historical
+factors revealed by analysis were but pretexts, seized upon by
+an inner necessity, when opportunity offered, to serve its purpose.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This brings us to the discouraging conclusion that although
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_230'>230</span>individual forms of neurotic symptoms can certainly be satisfactorily
+explained by their relation to the patient’s experiences,
+yet our science fails us for the far more frequent typical symptoms
+in the same cases. In addition to this, I have not nearly explained
+to you all the difficulties that arise during a resolute pursuit of
+the historical meaning of a symptom. Nor shall I do so; for
+although my intention is to conceal nothing from you and to
+gloss over nothing, I do not need to confuse you and stupefy
+you at the outset of our studies together. It is true that our
+understanding of symptom-interpretation has only just begun,
+but we will hold fast to the knowledge gained and proceed to
+overcome step by step the difficulties of the unknown. I will
+try to cheer you with the thought that it is hardly possible to
+presume a fundamental difference between the one kind of
+symptom and the other. If the individual form of symptom
+is so unmistakably connected with the patient’s experiences, it
+is possible that the typical symptom relates to an experience
+which is itself typical and common to all humanity. Other
+regularly recurring features of a neurosis, such as the repetition
+and doubt of the obsessional neurosis, may be universal reactions
+which the patient is compelled to exaggerate by the nature of
+the morbid change. In short, there is no reason to give up
+hastily in despair; let us see what more we can find out.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>There is a very similar difficulty met with in the theory of
+dreams, one which I could not deal with in the course of our
+previous discussions of dreams. The manifest content of dreams
+is multifarious and highly differentiated individually, and we
+have shown exhaustively what can be obtained by analysis
+from this content. But there are also dreams which may in
+the same way be called <em>typical</em> and occur in everybody,
+dreams with an identical content, which present the same difficulties
+to analysis. These are the dreams of falling, flying,
+floating, swimming, of being hindered, of being naked, and certain
+other anxiety-dreams; which yield first this, then that, interpretation,
+according to the person concerned, without any explanation
+of their monotonous and typical recurrence. But we
+notice that in these dreams also the common groundwork is
+embroidered with additions of an individually varying character.
+Most probably they too will prove to fit in with other knowledge
+about the dream-life, gained from a study of other kinds of
+dreams—not by any forcible twist, but by a gradual widening
+of our comprehension of these things.</p>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_231'>231</span>
+ <h3 class='c002'><span class='c014'>EIGHTEENTH LECTURE</span><br> FIXATION UPON TRAUMATA: THE UNCONSCIOUS</h3>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c006'>I said last time that we would take, as a starting-point for further
+work, the knowledge we have gained already, and not the doubts
+which it has roused in us. We have not yet even begun to discuss
+two of the most interesting conclusions arising from the analysis
+of the two examples.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>First: both the patients give the impression that they are
+“<em>fixed</em>” to a particular point in their past, that they do not
+know how to release themselves from it, and are consequently
+alienated from both present and future. They are marooned
+in their illness, as it were; just as in former times people used
+to withdraw to the cloister to live out their unhappy fate there.
+In the case of the first patient, it was the marriage to the husband,
+which in reality had long ago come to an end, that had settled
+this doom upon her. Her symptoms enabled her to continue
+her relationship with him; we could perceive in them the voices
+which pleaded for him, excused him, exalted him, lamented his
+loss. Although she is young and could attract other men, she
+has seized upon every possible real and imaginary (magical)
+precaution that will preserve her fidelity to him. She will not
+meet strangers, she neglects her appearance; moreover, she
+cannot readily rise from any chair which she sits upon, and she
+refuses to sign her name and can give no presents, because no
+one must have anything which is hers.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>With the second patient, the young girl, it is the erotic
+attachment to the father established in the years before
+puberty that plays this part in her life. She also has herself
+perceived that she cannot marry as long as she is so ill. We
+may suspect that she became so ill in order to be unable to
+marry and so to remain with her father.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>We cannot avoid asking the question how, by what means,
+and impelled by what motives, anyone can take up such an extraordinary
+and unprofitable attitude towards life. Provided,
+that is, that this attitude is a universal character of neurosis and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_232'>232</span>is not a special peculiarity of these two patients. As a matter
+of fact, this is so; it is a universal trait common to every neurosis,
+and one of great practical significance. Breuer’s first hysterical
+patient was <em>fixated</em>, in the same way, to the time when her father
+was seriously ill and she nursed him. In spite of her recovery,
+she has remained to some extent cut off from life since that time;
+for although she has remained healthy and active, she did not
+take up the normal career of a woman. In every one of our
+patients we learn through analysis that the symptoms and their
+effects have set the sufferer back into some past period of his
+life. In the majority of cases it is actually a very early phase
+of the life-history which has been thus selected, a period in
+childhood, even, absurd as it may sound, the period of existence
+as a suckling infant.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The closest analogy to this behaviour in our nervous patients
+is provided by the forms of illness recently made so common by
+the war—the so-called <em>traumatic neuroses</em>. Of course similar
+cases had occurred before the war, after railway accidents and
+other terrifying experiences involving danger to life. The
+traumatic neuroses are not fundamentally the same as those
+which occur spontaneously, which we investigate analytically
+and are accustomed to treat; neither have we been successful
+so far in correlating them with our views on other subjects;
+later on I hope to show you where this limitation lies. Yet there
+is a complete agreement between them on one point which
+may be emphasized. The traumatic neuroses demonstrate very
+clearly that a fixation to the moment of the traumatic occurrence
+lies at their root. These patients regularly reproduce the traumatic
+situation in their dreams; in cases showing attacks of an
+hysterical type in which analysis is possible, it appears that the
+attack constitutes a complete reproduction of this situation.
+It is as though these persons had not yet been able to deal adequately
+with the situation, as if this task were still actually before
+them unaccomplished. We take this attitude of theirs in all
+seriousness; it points the way to what we may call an <em>economic</em>
+conception of the mental processes. The term ‘<em>traumatic</em>’
+has actually no other meaning but this <em>economic</em> one. An
+experience which we call traumatic is one which within a very
+short space of time subjects the mind to such a very high increase
+of stimulation that assimilation or elaboration of it can no longer
+be effected by normal means, so that lasting disturbances must
+result in the distribution of the available energy in the mind.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This analogy tempts us also to classify as traumatic those
+experiences to which our nervous patients seem to be fixated.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_233'>233</span>In this way we should be provided with a simple condition for
+a neurotic illness; it would be comparable to a traumatic illness
+and would result from an incapacity to deal with an overpowering
+affective experience. Indeed, the first formula in which Breuer
+and I, in 1893–95, reduced our new observations to a theory
+was expressed very similarly. A case like that of the first patient
+described, the young woman separated from her husband,
+fits very well into this description; she had not been able to
+“get over” the impracticability of her marriage and was still
+attached to her trauma. But the second case of the young girl
+who was tied to her father shows us at once that the formula
+is not comprehensive enough. On the one hand, an infantile
+adoration of her father by a little girl is such a common experience
+and so frequently grown out of that the term ‘traumatic’
+would lose all its meaning if applied to it; on the other hand,
+the history of the case shows that this first erotic fixation was
+gone through by the patient quite harmlessly at the time, to
+all appearances, and only several years later came to expression
+in the obsessional neurosis. So we see that there are complications
+ahead, a considerable variety and number of determining
+factors in neurosis; but we divine that the traumatic view will
+not necessarily be abandoned as false, and that it will fit in and
+have to be co-ordinated properly elsewhere.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Here again we must leave the path we have been following.
+At the moment it will take us no further, and we have much
+more to learn before we can find a satisfactory continuation of
+it. But before leaving the subject of fixation to traumata it
+should be noted that it is a phenomenon manifested extensively
+outside the neuroses; every neurosis contains such a fixation,
+but not every fixation leads to a neurosis, or is necessarily combined
+with a neurosis, or arises in the course of a neurosis. Grief is
+a prototype and perfect example of an affective fixation upon
+something that is past, and, like the neuroses, it also involves a
+state of complete alienation from the present and the future.
+But even the lay public distinguishes clearly between grief and
+neurosis. On the other hand, there are neuroses which may be
+described as morbid forms of grief.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It does also happen that persons may be brought to a complete
+standstill in life by a traumatic experience which has
+shaken the whole structure of their lives to the foundations,
+so that they give up all interest in the present and the future,
+and live permanently absorbed in their retrospections; but
+these unhappy persons do not necessarily become neurotic.
+Therefore this single feature must not be overestimated as a
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_234'>234</span>characteristic of neurosis, however invariable and significant it
+may be otherwise.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now let us turn to the second conclusion to be drawn from
+our analyses; it is one upon which we shall not need to impose
+any subsequent limitation. With the first patient we have
+heard of the senseless obsessive act she performed and of the
+intimate memories she recalled in connection with it; we also
+considered the relation between the two, and deduced the purpose
+of the obsessive act from its connection with the memory. But
+there is one factor which we have entirely neglected, and yet it
+is one which deserves our fullest attention. As long as the
+patient continued this performance she did not know that it
+was in any way connected with the previous experience; the
+connection between the two things was hidden; she could
+quite truly answer that she did not know what impulse led her
+to do it. Then it happened suddenly that, under the influence
+of the treatment, she found this connection and was able to tell
+it. But even then she knew nothing of the purpose she had in
+performing the action, the purpose that was to correct a painful
+event of the past and to raise the husband she loved in her own
+estimation. It took a long time and much effort for her to grasp,
+and admit to me, that such a motive as this alone could have
+been the driving force behind the obsessive act.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The connection with the scene on the morning after the
+unhappy bridal-night, and the patient’s own tender feeling for
+her husband, together, make up what we have called the “meaning”
+of the obsessive act. But both sides of this meaning
+were hidden from her, she understood neither the <em>whence</em> nor
+the <em>whither</em> of her act, as long as she carried it on. Mental
+processes had been at work in her, therefore, of which the obsessive
+act was the effect; she was aware in a normal manner
+of their effect; but nothing of the mental antecedents of this
+effect had come to the knowledge of her consciousness. She was
+behaving exactly like a subject under hypnotism whom Bernheim
+had ordered to open an umbrella in the ward five minutes after
+he awoke, but who had no idea why he was doing it. This is the
+kind of occurrence we have in mind when we speak of the existence
+of <em>unconscious mental processes</em>; we may challenge anyone in
+the world to give a more correctly scientific explanation of this
+matter, and will then gladly withdraw our inference that unconscious
+mental processes exist. Until they do, however, we will
+adhere to this inference and, when anyone objects that in a
+scientific sense the Unconscious has no reality, that it is a mere
+makeshift, <em>une façon de parler</em>, we must resign ourselves with a
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_235'>235</span>shrug to rejecting his statement as incomprehensible. Something
+unreal, which can nevertheless produce something so real and
+palpable as an obsessive action!</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In the second patient fundamentally the same thing is found.
+She has instituted a rule that the bolster must not touch the
+back of the bedstead, and she had to carry out this rule, but she
+does not know whence it comes, what it means, or to what it
+owes its strength. Whether she regards it indifferently, or
+struggles against it, or rages against it, or determines to overcome
+it, matters not; it will be followed. It must be followed;
+in vain she asks herself why. It is undeniable that these symptoms
+of the obsessional neurosis, these ideas and these impulses which
+arise no man knows where and which oppose such a powerful
+resistance against all the influences to which an otherwise normal
+mental life is susceptible, give the impression, even to the patients
+themselves, of being all-powerful visitants from another world,
+immortal beings mingling in the whirlpool of mortal things.
+In these symptoms lies the clearest indication of a special sphere
+of mental activity cut off from all the rest. They show the
+way unmistakably to conviction on the question of the unconscious
+in the mind; and for that very reason clinical
+psychiatry, which only recognizes a psychology of consciousness,
+can do nothing with these symptoms except to stigmatize
+them as signs of a special kind of degeneration. Naturally,
+the obsessive ideas and impulses are not themselves unconscious,
+any more than is the performance of the obsessive acts. They
+would not have become symptoms if they had not penetrated
+into consciousness. But the mental antecedents of them
+disclosed by analysis, the connections into which they fit after
+interpretation, are unconscious, at least until the time when
+we make the patient conscious of them by the work of the
+analysis.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Consider now, in addition, that the facts established in these
+two cases are confirmed in every symptom of every neurotic
+disease; that always and everywhere the meaning of the symptoms
+is unknown to the sufferer; that analysis invariably shows that
+these symptoms are derived from unconscious mental processes
+which can, however, under various favourable conditions, become
+conscious. You will then understand that we cannot dispense
+with the unconscious part of the mind in psycho-analysis, and
+that we are accustomed to deal with it as with something actual
+and tangible. Perhaps you will also be able to realize how
+unfitted all those who only know the Unconscious as a phrase,
+who have never analysed, never interpreted dreams, or translated
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_236'>236</span>neurotic symptoms into their meaning and intention, are to
+form an opinion on this matter. I will repeat the substance of
+it again in order to impress it upon you: The fact that it is possible
+to find meaning in neurotic symptoms by means of analytic
+interpretation is an irrefutable proof of the existence—or, if
+you prefer it, of the necessity for assuming the existence—of
+unconscious mental processes.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But that is not all. Thanks to a second discovery of Breuer’s,
+for which he alone deserves credit and which seems to me even
+more far-reaching in its significance than the first, more still
+has been learnt about the relation between the Unconscious and
+the symptoms of neurotics. Not merely is the meaning of the
+symptom invariably unconscious; there exists also a connection
+of a substitutive nature between the two; the existence of the
+symptom is only possible by reason of this unconscious activity.
+You will soon understand what I mean. With Breuer, I maintain
+the following: Every time we meet with a symptom we
+may conclude that definite unconscious activities which contain
+the meaning of the symptom are present in the patient’s mind.
+Conversely, this meaning must be unconscious before a symptom
+can arise from it. Symptoms are not produced by conscious
+processes; as soon as the unconscious processes involved are
+made conscious the symptom must vanish. You will perceive
+at once that here is an opening for therapy, a way by which
+symptoms can be made to disappear. It was by this means
+that Breuer actually achieved the recovery of his patient, that
+is, freed her from her symptoms; he found a method of bringing
+into her consciousness the unconscious processes which contained
+the meaning of her symptoms and the symptoms vanished.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This discovery of Breuer’s was not the result of any speculation
+but of a fortunate observation made possible by the co-operation
+of the patient. Now you must not rack your brains
+to try and understand this by seeking to compare it with something
+similar that is already familiar to you; but you must
+recognize in it a fundamentally new fact, by means of which
+much else becomes explicable. Allow me therefore to express
+it again to you in other words.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The symptom is formed as a substitute for something else
+which remains submerged. Certain mental processes would,
+under normal conditions, develop until the person became aware
+of them consciously. This has not happened; and, instead,
+the symptom has arisen out of these processes which have been
+interrupted and interfered with in some way and have had
+to remain unconscious. Thus something in the nature of an
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_237'>237</span>exchange has occurred; if we can succeed in reversing this
+process by our therapy we shall have performed our task of dispersing
+the symptom.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Breuer’s discovery still remains the foundation of psycho-analytic
+therapy. The proposition that symptoms vanish when
+their unconscious antecedents have been made conscious has
+been borne out by all subsequent research; although the most
+extraordinary and unexpected complications are met with in
+attempting to carry this proposition out in practice. Our therapy
+does its work by transforming something unconscious into something
+conscious, and only succeeds in its work in so far as it is
+able to effect this transformation.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now for a rapid digression, lest you should run the risk of
+imagining that this therapeutic effect is achieved too easily.
+According to the conclusions we have reached so far, neurosis
+would be the result of a kind of ignorance, a not-knowing of mental
+processes which should be known. This would approach very
+closely to the well-known Socratic doctrine according to which
+even vice is the result of ignorance. Now it happens in analysis
+that an experienced practitioner can usually surmise very easily
+what those feelings are which have remained unconscious in
+each individual patient. It should not therefore be a matter of
+great difficulty to cure the patient by imparting this knowledge
+to him and so relieving his ignorance. At least, one side of the
+unconscious meaning of the symptom would be easily dealt
+with in this way, although it is true that the other side of it, the
+connection between the symptom and the previous experiences in
+the patient’s life, can hardly be divined thus; for the analyst
+does not know what the experiences have been, he has to wait
+till the patient remembers them and tells him. But one might
+find a substitute even for this in many cases. One might ask
+for information about his past life from the friends and relations;
+they are often in a position to know what events have been of a
+traumatic nature, perhaps they can even relate some of which
+the patient is ignorant because they took place at some very early
+period of childhood. By a combination of these two means
+it would seem that the pathogenic ignorance of the patients might
+be overcome in a short time without much trouble.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>If only it were so! But we have made discoveries that we
+were quite unprepared for at first. There is knowing and
+knowing; they are not always the same thing. There are various
+kinds of knowing, which psychologically are not by any means
+of equal value. <i><span lang="fr">Il y a fagots et fagots</span></i>, as Molière says. Knowing
+on the part of the physician is not the same thing as knowing
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_238'>238</span>on the part of the patient and does not have the same effect.
+When the physician conveys his knowledge to the patient by
+telling him what he knows, it has no effect. No, it would be
+incorrect to say that. It does not have the effect of dispersing
+the symptoms; but it has a different one, it sets the analysis
+in motion, and the first result of this is often an energetic denial.
+The patient has learned something that he did not know before—the
+meaning of his symptom—and yet he knows it as little as
+ever. Thus we discover that there is more than one kind of
+ignorance. It requires a considerable degree of insight and
+understanding of psychological matters in order to see in what
+the difference consists. But the proposition that symptoms
+vanish with the acquisition of knowledge of their meaning remains
+true, nevertheless. The necessary condition is that the
+knowledge must be founded upon an inner change in the patient
+which can only come about by a mental operation directed to
+that end. We are here confronted by problems which to us will
+soon develop into the <em>dynamics</em> of symptom-formation.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now I must really stop and ask you whether all that I have
+been saying is not too obscure and complicated? Am I confusing
+you by so often qualifying and restricting, spinning out trains
+of thought and then letting them drop? I should be sorry if
+it were so. But I have a strong dislike of simplification at the
+expense of truth, I am not averse from giving you a full impression
+of the many-sidedness and intricacy of the subject, and also
+I believe that it does no harm to tell you more about each point
+than you can assimilate at the moment. I know that every
+listener and every reader arranges what is offered him as suits
+him in his own mind, shortens it, simplifies it, and extracts
+from it what he will retain. Within certain limits it is true that
+the more we begin with the more we shall have at the end. So
+let me hope that, in spite of the elaboration, you will have grasped
+the essential substance of my remarks concerning the meaning
+of symptoms, the Unconscious, and the connection between the
+two. You have probably understood also that our further efforts
+will proceed in two directions; first, towards discovering how
+people become ill, how they come to take up the characteristic
+neurotic attitude towards life, which is a clinical problem; and
+secondly, how they develop the morbid symptoms out of the
+conditions of a neurosis, which remains a problem of mental
+dynamics. The two problems must somewhere have a point of
+contact.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I shall not go further into this to-day; but as our time is not
+yet up I propose to draw your attention to another characteristic
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_239'>239</span>of our two analyses; namely, <em>the memory gaps or amnesias</em>,
+again a point which only later will appear in its full significance.
+You have heard that the task of the psycho-analytic treatment
+can be summed up in this formula: everything pathogenic in
+the Unconscious must be transferred into consciousness. Now
+you will be perhaps astonished to hear that another formula
+may be substituted for that one: all gaps in the patient’s memory
+must be filled in, his amnesias removed. It amounts to the
+same thing; which means that an important connection is to
+be recognized between the development of the symptoms and
+the amnesias. If you consider the case of the first patient analysed
+you will, however, not find this view of amnesia justified; the
+patient had not forgotten the scene from which the obsessive
+act is derived; on the contrary, it was vivid in her memory,
+nor is there any other forgotten factor involved in the formation
+of her symptom. The situation is quite analogous, although
+less clear, in the second case, the girl with the obsessional ceremonies.
+She, too, had not really forgotten her behaviour in
+former years, the fact that she had insisted upon the open door
+between her parents’ bedroom and her own, and that she had
+turned her mother out of her place in the parents’ bed; she remembered
+it quite clearly, although with hesitation and unwillingness.
+What is remarkable about it is that the first patient,
+although she had carried out her obsessive act such a countless
+number of times, had not <em>once</em> been reminded of its similarity
+to the scene after the wedding-night, nor did this recollection
+ever occur to her when she was directly asked to search for the
+origin of her obsessive act. The same thing is true in the case
+of the girl, where not merely the ritual, but the situation which
+gave rise to it, was repeated identically every evening. In
+neither case was there really an amnesia, a lapse of memory;
+but a connection, which should have existed intact and have
+led to the reproduction, the recollection, of the memory, had
+been broken. This kind of disturbance of memory suffices for
+the obsessional neurosis; in hysteria it is different. This latter
+neurosis is usually characterized by amnesias on a grand scale.
+As a rule the analysis of each single hysterical symptom leads to
+a whole chain of former impressions, which upon their return
+may be literally described as having been hitherto forgotten.
+This chain reaches, on the one hand, back to the earliest years
+of childhood, so that the hysterical amnesia is seen to be a direct
+continuation of the infantile amnesia which hides the earliest
+impressions of our mental life from all of us. On the other hand,
+we are astonished to find that the most recent experiences of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_240'>240</span>the patient are liable to be forgotten also, and that in particular
+the provocations which induced the outbreak of the disease or
+aggravated it are at least partially obliterated, if not entirely
+wiped out, by amnesia. From the complete picture of any such
+recent recollection important details have invariably disappeared
+or been replaced by falsifications. It happens again and again,
+almost invariably, that not until shortly before the completion
+of an analysis do certain recollections of recent experiences come
+to the surface, which had managed to be withheld throughout
+it and had left noticeable gaps in the context.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>These derangements in the capacity to recall memories are,
+as I have said, characteristic of hysteria, in which disease it also
+happens even that states occur as symptoms (the hysterical
+attacks) without necessarily leaving a trace of recollection behind
+them. Since it is otherwise in the obsessional neurosis, you
+may infer that these amnesias are part of the psychological
+character of the hysterical change and are not a universal trait
+of neurosis in general. The importance of this difference will
+be diminished by the following consideration. Two things are
+combined to constitute the meaning of a symptom; its <em>whence</em>
+and its <em>whither</em> or <em>why</em>; that is, the impressions and experiences
+from which it sprang, and the purpose which it serves. The
+<em>whence</em> of a symptom is resolved into impressions which have
+been received from without, which were necessarily at one
+time conscious, and which may have become unconscious by
+being forgotten since that time. The <em>why</em> of the symptom,
+its tendency, is however always an endo-psychic process, which
+may possibly have been conscious at first, but just as possibly
+may never have been conscious and may have remained in the
+Unconscious from its inception. Therefore it is not very important
+whether the amnesia has also infringed upon the <em>whence</em>, the
+impressions upon which the symptom is supported, as happens
+in hysteria; the <em>whither</em>, the tendency of the symptom, which
+may have been unconscious from the beginning, is what maintains
+the symptom’s dependence upon the Unconscious, in the
+obsessional neurosis no less strictly than in hysteria.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>By thus emphasizing the unconscious in mental life we have
+called forth all the malevolence in humanity in opposition to
+psycho-analysis. Do not be astonished at this and do not suppose
+that this opposition relates to the obvious difficulty of conceiving
+the Unconscious or to the relative inaccessibility of the evidence
+which supports its existence. I believe it has a deeper source.
+Humanity has in the course of time had to endure from the hands
+of science two great outrages upon its naïve self-love. The first
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_241'>241</span>was when it realized that our earth was not the centre of the
+universe, but only a tiny speck in a world-system of a magnitude
+hardly conceivable; this is associated in our minds with the
+name of Copernicus, although Alexandrian doctrines taught
+something very similar. The second was when biological research
+robbed man of his peculiar privilege of having been specially
+created, and relegated him to a descent from the animal world,
+implying an ineradicable animal nature in him: this transvaluation
+has been accomplished in our own time upon the instigation
+of Charles Darwin, Wallace, and their predecessors, and not
+without the most violent opposition from their contemporaries.
+But man’s craving for grandiosity is now suffering the third and
+most bitter blow from present-day psychological research which
+is endeavouring to prove to the “ego” of each one of us that he
+is not even master in his own house, but that he must remain
+content with the veriest scraps of information about what is
+going on unconsciously in his own mind. We psycho-analysts
+were neither the first nor the only ones to propose to mankind
+that they should look inward; but it appears to be our lot to
+advocate it most insistently and to support it by empirical evidence
+which touches every man closely. This is the kernel of
+the universal revolt against our science, of the total disregard of
+academic courtesy in dispute, and the liberation of opposition
+from all the constraints of impartial logic. And besides this,
+we have been compelled to disturb the peace of the world in yet
+another way, as you will soon hear.</p>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_242'>242</span>
+ <h3 class='c002'><span class='c014'>NINETEENTH LECTURE</span><br> RESISTANCE AND REPRESSION</h3>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c006'>We now need more data before we can advance further in our
+understanding of the neuroses; two observations lie to hand
+for us. Both are very remarkable and at first were very surprising.
+You are of course prepared for both of them by the
+work we did last year.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>First: when we undertake to cure a patient of his symptoms
+he opposes against us a vigorous and tenacious <em>resistance</em> throughout
+the entire course of the treatment. This is such an extraordinary
+thing that we cannot expect much belief in it. It is best
+to say nothing about it to the patient’s relations, for they invariably
+regard it as a pretext set up by us to excuse the length or the
+failure of the treatment. The patient, too, exhibits all the manifestations
+of this resistance without recognizing it as such, and
+it is a great step forward when we have brought him to realize
+this fact and to reckon with it. To think that the patient, whose
+symptoms cause him and those about him such suffering, who
+is willing to make such sacrifices in time, money, effort, and
+self-conquest in order to be freed from them,—that he should,
+in the interests of his illness, resist the help offered him. How
+improbable this statement must sound! And yet it is so, and
+if the improbability is made a reproach against us we need only
+reply that it is not without its analogies; for a man who has
+rushed off to a dentist with a frightful toothache may very well
+fend him off when he takes his forceps to the decayed tooth.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The resistance shown by patients is highly varied and exceedingly
+subtle, often hard to recognize and protean in the manifold
+forms it takes; the analyst needs to be continually suspicious
+and on his guard against it. In psycho-analytic therapy we
+employ the technique which is already familiar to you through
+dream-interpretation: we require the patient to put himself
+into a condition of calm self-observation, without trying to think
+of anything, and then to communicate everything which he
+becomes inwardly aware of, feelings, thoughts, remembrances,
+in the order in which they arise in his mind. We expressly warn
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_243'>243</span>him against giving way to any kind of motive which would
+cause him to select from or to exclude any of the ideas (associations),
+whether because they are too “disagreeable,” or too
+“indiscreet” to be mentioned, or too “unimportant” or “irrelevant”
+or “nonsensical” to be worth saying. We impress
+upon him that he has only to attend to what is on the surface
+consciously in his mind, and to abandon all objections to whatever
+he finds, no matter what form they take; and we inform him
+that the success of the treatment, and, above all, its duration,
+will depend upon his conscientious adherence to this fundamental
+technical rule. We know from the technique of dream-interpretation
+that it is precisely those associations against which
+innumerable doubts and objections are raised that invariably
+contain the material leading to the discovery of the unconscious.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The first thing that happens as a result of instituting this
+technical rule is that it becomes the first point of attack for
+the resistance. The patient attempts to escape from it by
+every possible means. First he says nothing comes into his
+head, then that so much comes into his head that he can’t grasp
+any of it. Then we observe with displeasure and astonishment
+that he is giving in to his critical objections, first to this, then
+to that; he betrays it by the long pauses which occur in his
+talk. At last he admits that he really cannot say something,
+he is ashamed to, and he lets this feeling get the better of his
+promise. Or else, he has thought of something but it concerns
+someone else and not himself, and is therefore to be made an
+exception to the rule. Or else, what he has just thought of is
+really too unimportant, too stupid and too absurd, I could never
+have meant that he should take account of such thoughts. So
+it goes on, with untold variations, to which one continually
+replies that telling everything really means telling everything.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>One hardly ever meets with a patient who does not attempt
+to make a reservation in some department of his thoughts, in
+order to guard them against intrusion by the analysis. One
+patient, who in the ordinary way was remarkably intelligent,
+concealed a most intimate love-affair from me for weeks in this
+way; when accused of this violation of the sacred rule he defended
+himself with the argument that he considered this particular
+story his private affair. Naturally analytic treatment cannot
+countenance a right of sanctuary like this; one might as well
+try to allow an exception to be made in certain parts of a town
+like Vienna, and forbid that any arrests should be made in the
+market-place or in the square by St. Stephen’s church, and
+then attempt to take up a “wanted” man. Of course he would
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_244'>244</span>never be found anywhere but in those safe places. Once I
+decided to permit a man to make an exception of such a point;
+for a great deal depended on his recovering his capacity for
+work and he was bound by his oath as a civil servant not to
+communicate certain matters to any other person. He was
+content with the result, it is true, but I was not: I made up my
+mind never again to repeat the attempt under such conditions.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Obsessional patients are exceedingly clever at making the
+technical rule almost useless by bringing their over-conscientiousness
+and doubt to bear upon it. Patients with anxiety-hysteria
+sometimes succeed in reducing it to absurdity by only producing
+associations which are so far removed from what is wanted that
+they yield nothing for analysis. However, I do not intend to
+introduce you to these technical difficulties of the treatment.
+It is enough to know that finally, with resolution and perseverance,
+we do succeed in extracting from the patient a certain amount
+of obedience for the rule of the technique; and then the resistance
+takes another line altogether. It appears as intellectual opposition,
+employs arguments as weapons, and turns to its own use all
+the difficulties and improbabilities which normal but uninstructed
+reasoning finds in analytical doctrines. We then have to hear
+from the mouth of the individual patient all the criticisms and
+objections which thunder about us in chorus in scientific literature.
+What the critics outside shout at us is nothing new, therefore.
+It is indeed a storm in a teacup. Still, the patient can be argued
+with; he is very glad to get us to instruct him, teach him, defeat
+him, point out the literature to him so that he can learn more;
+he is perfectly ready to become a supporter of psycho-analysis
+on the condition that analysis shall spare him personally. We
+recognize resistance in this desire for knowledge, however;
+it is a digression from the particular task in hand and we refuse
+to allow it. In the obsessional neurosis the resistance makes
+use of special tactics which we are prepared for. It permits
+the analysis to proceed uninterruptedly along its course, so that
+more and more light is thrown upon the problems of the case,
+until we begin to wonder at last why these explanations have
+no practical effect and entail no corresponding improvement
+in the symptoms. Then we discover that the resistance has
+fallen back upon the doubt characteristic of the obsessional
+neurosis and is holding us successfully at bay from this vantage-point.
+The patient has said to himself something of this kind:
+“This is all very pretty and very interesting. I should like to
+go on with it. I am sure it would do me a lot of good if it were
+true. But I don’t believe it in the least, and as long as I don’t
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_245'>245</span>believe it, it doesn’t affect my illness.” So it goes on for a long
+time, until at last this reservation itself is reached and then the
+decisive battle begins.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The intellectual resistances are not the worst; one can always
+get the better of them. But the patient knows how to set up
+resistances within the boundaries of analysis proper, and the
+defeat of these is one of the most difficult tasks of the technique.
+Instead of remembering certain of the feelings and states of mind
+of his previous life, he reproduces them, lives through again such
+of them as, by means of what is called the ‘transference,’ may
+be made effective in opposition against the physician and the
+treatment. If the patient is a man, he usually takes this material
+from his relationship with his father, in whose place he has now
+put the physician; and in so doing he erects resistances out of his
+struggles to attain to personal independence and independence
+of judgement, out of his ambition, the earliest aim of which
+was to equal or to excel the father, out of his disinclination to
+take the burden of gratitude upon himself for the second time
+in his life. There are periods in which one feels that the patient’s
+desire to put the analyst in the wrong, to make him feel his
+impotence, to triumph over him, has completely ousted the
+worthier desire to bring the illness to an end. Women have a
+genius for exploiting in the interests of resistance a tender erotically-tinged
+transference to the analyst; when this attraction
+reaches a certain intensity all interest in the actual situation of
+treatment fades away, together with every obligation incurred
+upon undertaking it. The inevitable jealousy and the embitterment
+consequent upon the unavoidable rejection, however considerately
+it is handled, is bound to injure the personal relationship
+with the physician, and so to put out of action one of the most
+powerful propelling forces in the analysis.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Resistances of this kind must not be narrowly condemned.
+They contain so much of the most important material from the
+patient’s past life and bring it back in so convincing a fashion
+that they come to be of the greatest assistance to the analysis,
+if a skilful technique is employed correctly to turn them to the
+best use. What is noteworthy is that this material always serves
+at first as a resistance and comes forward in a guise which is
+inimical to the treatment. Again it may be said that they are
+character-traits, individual attitudes of the Ego, which are thus
+mobilized to oppose the attempted alterations. One learns
+then how these character-traits have been developed in connection
+with the conditions of the neurosis and in reaction against
+its demands, and observes features in this character which would
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_246'>246</span>not otherwise have appeared, at least, not so clearly: that is,
+which may be designated latent. Also you must not carry away
+the impression that we look upon the appearance of these resistances
+as an unforeseen danger threatening our analytic influence.
+No, we know that these resistances are bound to appear; we are
+dissatisfied only if we cannot rouse them definitely enough and
+make the patient perceive them as such. Indeed, we understand
+at last that the overcoming of these resistances is the essential
+work of the analysis, that part of the work which alone assures
+us that we have achieved something for the patient.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Besides this, you must take into account that all accidental
+occurrences arising during the treatment are made use of by the
+patient to interfere with it, anything which could distract him
+or deter him from it, every hostile expression of opinion from
+anyone in his circle whom he can regard as an authority, any
+chance organic illness or one complicating the neurosis; indeed,
+he even converts every improvement in his condition into a motive
+for slackening his efforts. Then you will have obtained an
+approximate, though still incomplete, picture of the forms and
+the measures taken by the resistances which must be met and
+overcome in the course of every analysis. I have given such a
+detailed consideration to this point because I am about to inform
+you that our dynamic conception of the neuroses is founded upon
+this experience of ours of the resistances that neurotic patients
+set up against the cure of their symptoms. Breuer and I both
+originally practised psycho-therapy by the hypnotic method.
+Breuer’s first patient was treated throughout in a state of hypnotic
+suggestibility; at first I followed his example. I admit that at
+that time my work went forward more easily and agreeably and
+also took much less time: but the results were capricious and
+not permanent; therefore I finally gave up hypnotism. And
+then I understood that no comprehension of the dynamics of
+these affections was possible as long as hypnosis was employed.
+In this condition the very existence of resistances is concealed
+from the physician’s observation. Hypnosis drives back the
+resistances and frees a certain field for the work of the analysis,
+but dams them up at the boundaries of this field so that they are
+insurmountable; it is similar in effect to the doubt of the obsessional
+neurosis. Therefore I may say that true psycho-analysis
+only began when the help of hypnosis was discarded.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>If it is a matter of such importance to establish these resistances
+then surely it would be wise to allow caution and doubt
+full play, in case we have been too ready with our assumption
+that they exist. Perhaps cases of neurosis may be found in which
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_247'>247</span>the associations really fail for other reasons, perhaps the arguments
+against our theories really deserve serious attention, and
+we may be wrong in so conveniently disposing of the patient’s
+intellectual objections by stigmatizing them as resistance. Well,
+I can only assure you that our judgement in this matter has not
+been formed hastily; we have had opportunity to observe these
+critical patients both before the resistance comes to the surface
+and after it disappears. In the course of the treatment the
+resistance varies in intensity continually; it always increases
+as a new topic is approached, it is at its height during the work
+upon it, and dies down again when this theme has been dealt
+with. Unless certain technical errors have been committed
+we never have to meet the full measure of resistance, of which
+any patient is capable, at once. Thus we could definitely ascertain
+that the same man would take up and then abandon his
+critical objections over and over again in the course of the analysis.
+Whenever we are on the point of bringing to his consciousness
+some piece of unconscious material which is particularly painful
+to him, then he is critical in the extreme; even though he may
+have previously understood and accepted a great deal, yet now
+all these gains seem to be obliterated; in his struggles to oppose
+at all costs he can behave just as though he were mentally deficient,
+a form of ‘emotional stupidity.’ If he can be successfully
+helped to overcome this new resistance he regains his insight and
+comprehension. His critical faculty is not functioning independently,
+and therefore is not to be respected as if it were; it is
+merely a maid-of-all-work for his affective attitudes and is directed
+by his resistance. When he dislikes anything he can defend
+himself against it most ingeniously; but when anything suits
+his book he can be credulous enough. We are perhaps all much
+the same; a person being analysed shows this dependence of
+the intellect upon the affective life so clearly because in the analysis
+he is so hard-pressed.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In what way can we now account for this fact observed,
+that the patient struggles so energetically against the relief of
+his symptoms and the restoration of his mental processes to
+normal functioning? We say that we have come upon the
+traces of powerful forces at work here opposing any change in
+the condition; they must be the same forces that originally
+induced the condition. In the formation of symptoms some
+process must have been gone through, which our experience in
+dispersing them makes us able to reconstruct. As we already
+know from Breuer’s observations, it follows from the existence
+of a symptom that some mental process has not been carried
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_248'>248</span>through to an end in a normal manner so that it could become
+conscious; the symptom is a substitute for that which has not
+come through. Now we know where to place the forces which
+we suspect to be at work. A vehement effort must have been
+exercised to prevent the mental process in question from penetrating
+into consciousness and as a result it has remained unconscious;
+being unconscious it had the power to construct a symptom.
+The same vehement effort is again at work during analytic treatment,
+opposing the attempt to bring the unconscious into consciousness.
+This we perceive in the form of resistances. The
+pathogenic process which is demonstrated by the resistances we
+call <span class='sc'>Repression</span>.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It will now be necessary to make our conception of this process
+of <em>repression</em> more precise. It is the essential preliminary
+condition for the development of symptoms, but it is also something
+else, a thing to which we have no parallel. Let us take as
+a model an impulse, a mental process seeking to convert itself
+into action: we know that it can suffer rejection, by virtue
+of what we call “repudiation” or “condemnation”; whereupon
+the energy at its disposal is withdrawn, it becomes powerless,
+but it can continue to exist as a memory. The whole process
+of decision on the point takes place with the full cognizance of
+the Ego. It is very different when we imagine the same impulse
+subject to <em>repression</em>: it would then retain its energy and no
+memory of it would be left behind; the process of repression,
+too, would be accomplished without the cognizance of the Ego.
+This comparison therefore brings us no nearer to the nature of
+repression.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I will expound to you those theoretical conceptions which
+alone have proved useful in giving greater definiteness to the term
+<em>repression</em>. For this purpose it is first necessary that we should
+proceed from the purely descriptive meaning of the word “unconscious”
+to its systematic meaning; that is, we resolve to
+think of the consciousness or unconsciousness of a mental process
+as merely one of its qualities and not necessarily definitive.
+Suppose that a process of this kind has remained unconscious,
+its being withheld from consciousness may be merely a sign
+of the fate it has undergone, not necessarily the fate itself. Let
+us suppose, in order to gain a more concrete notion of this fate,
+that every mental process—there is one exception, which I will
+go into later—first exists in an unconscious state or phase, and
+only develops out of this into a conscious phase, much as a photograph
+is first a negative and then becomes a picture through the
+printing of the positive. But not every negative is made into
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_249'>249</span>a positive, and it is just as little necessary that every unconscious
+mental process should convert itself into a conscious one. It
+may be best expressed as follows: Each single process belongs
+in the first place to the unconscious psychical system; from this
+system it can under certain conditions proceed further into
+the conscious system.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The crudest conception of these systems is the one we shall
+find most convenient, a spatial one. The unconscious system
+may therefore be compared to a large ante-room, in which the
+various mental excitations are crowding upon one another, like
+individual beings. Adjoining this is a second, smaller apartment,
+a sort of reception-room, in which, too, consciousness resides.
+But on the threshold between the two there stands a personage
+with the office of door-keeper, who examines the various mental
+excitations, censors them, and denies them admittance to the
+reception-room when he disapproves of them. You will see
+at once that it does not make much difference whether the door-keeper
+turns any one impulse back at the threshold, or drives
+it out again once it has entered the reception-room; that is
+merely a matter of the degree of his vigilance and promptness
+in recognition. Now this metaphor may be employed to widen
+our terminology. The excitations in the unconscious, in the antechamber,
+are not visible to consciousness, which is of course
+in the other room, so to begin with they remain unconscious.
+When they have pressed forward to the threshold and been
+turned back by the door-keeper, they are ‘<em>incapable of becoming
+conscious</em>’; we call them then <em>repressed</em>. But even those excitations
+which are allowed over the threshold do not necessarily
+become conscious; they can only become so if they succeed
+in attracting the eye of consciousness. This second chamber
+therefore may be suitably called <em>the preconscious system</em>. In
+this way the process of becoming conscious retains its purely
+descriptive sense. Being repressed, when applied to any single
+impulse, means being unable to pass out of the unconscious system
+because of the door-keeper’s refusal of admittance into the preconscious.
+The door-keeper is what we have learnt to know as
+resistance in our attempts in analytic treatment to loosen the
+repressions.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now I know very well that you will say that these conceptions
+are as crude as they are fantastic and not at all permissible in
+a scientific presentation. I know they are crude; further indeed,
+we even know that they are incorrect, and unless I am mistaken,
+we have something better ready as a substitute for them; whether
+you will then continue to think them so fantastic, I do not know.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_250'>250</span>At the moment they are useful aids to understanding, like <em>Ampère’s</em>
+manikin swimming in the electric current, and, in so far as they
+do assist comprehension, are not to be despised. Still, I should
+like to assure you that these crude hypotheses, the two chambers,
+the door-keeper on the threshold between the two, and consciousness
+as a spectator at the end of the second room, must indicate
+an extensive approximation to the actual reality. I should
+also like to hear you admit that our designations, unconscious,
+preconscious, and conscious, are less prejudicial and more easily
+defensible than some others which have been suggested or have
+come into use, e.g. sub-conscious, inter-conscious, co-conscious, etc.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>If so, I should think it more significant if you then went
+on to point out that any such constitution of the mental apparatus
+as I have assumed in order to account for neurotic symptoms
+can only be of universal validity and must throw light on normal
+functioning. In this, of course, you are perfectly right. We
+cannot follow up this conclusion at the moment; but our interest
+in the psychology of symptom-development would certainly be
+enormously increased if we could see any prospect of obtaining,
+by the study of pathological conditions, an insight into normal
+mental functioning, hitherto such a mystery.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Do you not recognize, moreover, what it is that supports these
+conceptions of the two systems and the relationship between
+them and consciousness? The door-keeper between the unconscious
+and the preconscious is nothing else than the <em>censorship</em>
+to which we found the form of the manifest dream subjected.
+The residue of the day’s experiences, which we found to be the
+stimuli exciting the dream, was preconscious material which
+at night during sleep had been influenced by unconscious and
+repressed wishes and excitations; and had thus by association
+with them been able to form the latent dream, by means of their
+energy. Under the dominion of the unconscious system this
+material had been elaborated (worked over)—by condensation
+and displacement—in a way which in normal mental life, i.e.
+in the preconscious system, is unknown or admissible very rarely.
+This difference in their manner of functioning is what distinguishes
+the two systems for us; the relationship to consciousness, which
+is a permanent feature of the preconscious, indicates to which
+of the two systems any given process belongs. Neither is dreaming
+a pathological phenomenon; every healthy person may
+dream while asleep. Every inference concerning the constitution
+of the mental apparatus which comprises an understanding of
+both dreams and neurotic symptoms has an irrefutable claim
+to be regarded as applying also to normal mental life.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_251'>251</span>This is as much as we will say about repression for the present.
+Moreover, it is but a necessary preliminary condition, a prerequisite,
+of symptom-formation. We know that the symptom
+is a substitute for some other process which was held back by
+repression; but even given repression we have still a long way
+to go before we can obtain comprehension of this substitute-formation.
+There are other sides to the problem of repression
+itself which present questions to be answered: What kind of
+mental excitations suffer repression? What forces effect it?
+and from what motives? On one point only, so far, have we
+gained any knowledge relevant to these questions. While investigating
+the problem of resistance we learned that the forces
+behind it proceed from the Ego, from character-traits, recognizable
+or latent: it is these forces therefore which have also effected
+the repression, or at least they have taken a part in it. We know
+nothing more than this at present.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The second observation for which I prepared you will help
+us now. By means of analysis we can always discover the purpose
+behind the neurotic symptom. This is of course nothing new
+to you: I have already pointed it out in two cases of neurosis.
+But, to be sure, what do two cases signify? You have a right
+to demand two hundred cases, innumerable cases, in demonstration
+of it. But then, I cannot comply with that. So you must
+fall back on personal experience, or upon belief, which in this
+matter can rely upon the unanimous testimony of all psycho-analysts.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>You will remember that in the two cases in which we submitted
+the symptoms to detailed investigation analysis led to the innermost
+secrets of the patient’s sexual life. In the first case, moreover,
+the purpose or tendency of the symptom under examination was
+particularly evident; in the second case, it was perhaps to some
+extent veiled by another factor to be mentioned later. Well
+now, what we found in these two examples we should find in
+every case we submitted to analysis. Every time we should
+be led by analysis to the sexual experiences and desires of the
+patient, and every time we should have to affirm that the symptom
+served the same purpose. This purpose shows itself to be the
+gratification of sexual wishes; the symptoms serve the purpose
+of sexual gratification for the patient; they are a substitute for
+satisfactions which he does not obtain in reality.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Think of the obsessive act of our first patient. This woman
+has to do without the husband she loved so intensely; on account
+of his deficiencies and short-comings she could not share his life.
+She had to be faithful to him; she could not put anyone else in
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_252'>252</span>his place. Her obsessional symptom gives her what she so much
+desires; it exalts her husband, denies and corrects his deficiencies,
+above all, his impotence. This symptom is fundamentally a
+wish-fulfilment, in that respect exactly like a dream; it is,
+moreover, what a dream is not always, an erotic wish-fulfilment.
+In the case of the second patient you could see that her ritual
+aims at preventing intercourse between the parents or at hindering
+the procreation of another child; you have probably also
+divined that fundamentally it seeks to set her in her mother’s
+place. It again therefore constitutes a removal of hindrances
+to sexual satisfaction and the fulfilment of the subject’s own
+sexual wishes. Of the complications referred to in the second
+case I shall speak shortly.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I wish to avoid making reservations later on about the universal
+applicability of these statements, and therefore I will
+ask you to notice that all I have just been saying about repression,
+symptom-formation and symptom-interpretation has been
+obtained from the study of three types of neurosis, and for the
+present is only applicable to these three types—namely, <em>anxiety-hysteria</em>,
+<em>conversion-hysteria</em>, and <em>the obsessional neurosis</em>.
+These three disorders, which we are accustomed to combine
+together in a group as the <span class='fss'>TRANSFERENCE NEUROSES</span>, constitute
+the field open to psycho-analytic therapy. The other neuroses
+have been far less closely studied psycho-analytically; in one
+group of them the impossibility of therapeutic influence has no
+doubt been one reason for this neglect. You must not forget
+that psycho-analysis is still a very young science, that much time
+and trouble are required for the study of it, and that not so very
+long ago there was only one man practising it: yet we are
+approaching from all directions to a nearer comprehension
+of these other conditions which are not transference neuroses.
+I hope I shall still be able to tell you of the developments that
+our hypotheses and conclusions have undergone in the course of
+adaptation to this new material, and to show you that these
+further studies have not yielded contradictions but have led to
+a higher degree of unification in our knowledge. Everything that
+has been said, then, applies only to the three transference neuroses
+and I will now add another piece of information which throws
+further light upon the significance of the symptoms. A comparative
+examination of the situations out of which the disease
+arose yields the following result, which may be reduced to a
+formula—namely, that these persons have fallen ill owing to
+some kind of <span class='fss'>PRIVATION</span> which they suffer when reality withholds
+from them gratification of their sexual wishes. You will perceive
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_253'>253</span>how beautifully these two conclusions supplement one another.
+The symptoms are now explicable as substitute-gratifications for
+desires which are unsatisfied in life.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It is certainly possible to make all kinds of objections to the
+proposition that neurotic symptoms are substitutes for sexual
+gratifications. I will discuss two of them to-day. If any one
+of you has himself undertaken the analysis of a large number
+of neurotics, he will perhaps shake his head and say: “In certain
+cases this is not at all applicable, in them the symptoms seem
+rather to contain the opposite purpose, of excluding or of discontinuing
+sexual gratification.” I shall not dispute your
+interpretation. In psycho-analysis things are often a good deal
+more complicated than we could wish: if they had been simpler
+psycho-analysis would perhaps not have been required to bring
+them to light. Certain features of the ritual of our second patient
+are distinctly recognizable as being of this ascetic character,
+inimical to sexual satisfaction; e.g., her removing the clocks for
+the magic purpose of preventing erections at night, or her trying
+to prevent the falling and breaking of vessels, which amounts
+to a protection of her virginity. In other cases of ceremonials
+on going to bed which I have analysed this negative character
+was far more marked; the whole ritual could consist of defensive
+regulations against sexual recollections and temptations. But
+we have long ago learnt from psycho-analysis that opposites do
+not constitute a contradiction. We might extend our proposition
+and say that the purpose of the symptom is either a sexual
+gratification or a defence against it; in hysteria the positive, wish-fulfilling
+character predominates on the whole, and in the obsessional
+neurosis the negative ascetic character. The symptoms can
+serve the purpose both of sexual gratification and of its opposite
+so well because this double-sidedness, or <em>polarity</em>, has a most
+suitable foundation in one element of their mechanism which
+we have not yet had an opportunity to mention. They are in
+fact, as we shall see, the effects of <em>compromises</em> between two
+opposed tendencies, acting on one another; they represent both
+that which is repressed, and also that which has effected the
+repression and has co-operated in bringing them about. The
+representation of either one or another of these two factors may
+predominate in the symptom, but it happens very rarely that one
+of them is absent altogether. In hysteria a collaboration of the
+two tendencies in one symptom is usually achieved. In the
+obsessional neurosis the two parts are often distinct: the symptom
+is then a double one and consists of two successive actions
+which cancel each other.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_254'>254</span>It will not be so easy to dispose of a second difficulty. When
+you consider a whole series of symptom-interpretations your
+first opinion would probably be that the conception of a sexual
+substitute-gratification has to be stretched to its widest limits
+in order to include them. You will not neglect to point out
+that these symptoms offer nothing real in the way of gratification,
+that often enough they are confined to re-animating a sensation,
+or to enacting a phantasy arising from some sexual complex.
+Further, that the ostensible sexual gratification is very often of
+an infantile and unworthy character, perhaps approximating
+to a masturbatory act, or is reminiscent of dirty habits which
+long ago in childhood had been forbidden and abandoned. And
+further still, you will express your astonishment that anyone
+should reckon among sexual gratifications those which can only
+be described as gratifications of cruel or horrible appetites, or
+which may be termed unnatural. Indeed, we shall come to no
+agreement on these latter points until we have submitted human
+sexuality to a thorough investigation and have thus established
+what we are justified in calling sexual.</p>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_255'>255</span>
+ <h3 class='c002'><span class='c014'>TWENTIETH LECTURE</span><br> THE SEXUAL LIFE OF MAN</h3>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c006'>One would certainly think that there could be no doubt about
+what is to be understood by the term “sexual.” First and foremost,
+of course, it means the “improper,” that which must
+not be mentioned. I have been told a story about some pupils
+of a famous psychiatrist, who once endeavoured to convince their
+master that the symptoms of an hysteric are frequently representations
+of sexual things. With this object, they took him to
+the bedside of an hysterical woman whose attacks were unmistakable
+imitations of childbirth. He objected, however: “Well,
+there is nothing sexual about childbirth.” To be sure, childbirth
+is not necessarily always improper.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I perceive that you don’t approve of my joking about such
+serious matters. It is not altogether a joke, however. Seriously,
+it is not so easy to define what the term sexual includes. Everything
+connected with the difference between the two sexes is
+perhaps the only way of hitting the mark; but you will find
+that too general and indefinite. If you take the sexual act
+itself as the central point, you will perhaps declare sexual to mean
+everything which is concerned with obtaining pleasurable gratification
+from the body (and particularly the sexual organs) of the
+opposite sex; in the narrowest sense, everything which is directed
+to the union of the genital organs and the performance of the
+sexual act. In doing so, however, you come very near to reckoning
+the sexual and the improper as identical, and childbirth
+would really have nothing to do with sex. If then you make
+the function of reproduction the kernel of sexuality you run
+the risk of excluding from it a whole host of things like masturbation,
+or even kissing, which are not directed towards reproduction,
+but which are nevertheless undoubtedly sexual. However,
+we have already found that attempts at definition always
+lead to difficulties; let us give up trying to do any better in this
+particular case. We may suspect that in the development
+of the concept “sexual” something has happened which has
+resulted in what H. Silberer has aptly called a ‘covering error.’
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_256'>256</span>On the whole, indeed, we know pretty well what is meant
+by sexual.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In the popular view, which is sufficient for all practical purposes
+in ordinary life, sexual is something which combines references
+to the difference between the sexes, to pleasurable excitement
+and gratification, to the reproductive function, and to the idea
+of impropriety and the necessity for concealment. But this
+is no longer sufficient for science. For painstaking researches
+(only possible, of course, in a spirit of self-command maintained
+by self-sacrifice) have revealed that classes of human beings
+exist whose sexual life deviates from the usual one in the
+most striking manner. One group among these “perverts”
+has, as it were, expunged the difference between the sexes from
+its scheme of life. In these people, only the same sex as their
+own can rouse sexual desire; the other sex (especially the genital
+organ of the other sex) has absolutely no sexual attraction for
+them, can even in extreme cases be an object of abhorrence
+to them. They have thus of course foregone all participation
+in the process of reproduction. Such persons are called homosexuals
+or inverts. Often, though not always, they are men and
+women who otherwise have reached an irreproachably high standard
+of mental growth and development, intellectually and
+ethically, and are only afflicted with this one fateful peculiarity.
+Through the mouths of their scientific spokesmen they lay claim
+to be a special variety of the human race, a “third sex,” as they
+call it, standing with equal rights alongside the other two. We
+may perhaps have an opportunity of critically examining these
+claims. They are not, of course, as they would gladly maintain,
+the “elect” of mankind; they contain in their ranks at least as
+many inferior and worthless individuals as are to be found amongst
+those differently constituted sexually.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>These perverts do at least seek to achieve very much the
+same ends with the objects of their desires as normal people do
+with theirs. But after them comes a long series of abnormal
+types, in whom the sexual activities become increasingly further
+removed from anything which appears attractive to a reasonable
+being. In their manifold variety and their strangeness these
+types may be compared to the grotesque monstrosities painted
+by P. Breughel to represent the temptations of St. Anthony,
+or to the long procession of effete gods and worshippers which
+G. Flaubert shows us passing before his pious penitent, and to
+nothing else. The chaotic assembly calls out for classification
+if it is not to bewilder us completely. We divide them into those
+in whom the <em>sexual object</em> has been altered, as with the homosexuals,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_257'>257</span>and those in whom, first and foremost, the <em>sexual aim</em> has been
+altered. In the first group belong those who have dispensed with
+the mutual union of the genital organs and who have substituted
+for the genitals, in one of the partners in the act, another organ
+or part of the body (mouth or anus, in place of the vagina) making
+light of both the anatomical difficulties and the suppression of
+disgust involved. There follow others who, it is true, still retain
+the genital organs as object; not, however, by virtue of their
+sexual function, but on account of other functions in which they
+take part anatomically or by reason of their proximity. These
+people demonstrate that the excretory functions, which in the
+course of the child’s upbringing are relegated to a limbo as indecent,
+remain capable of attracting the entire sexual interest.
+There are others who have given up altogether the genital organs
+as object; and, instead, have exalted some other part of the
+body to serve as the object of desire, a woman’s breast, foot, or
+plait of hair. There are others yet to whom even a part of the
+body is meaningless, while a particle of clothing, a shoe or a piece
+of underclothing, will gratify all their desires; these are the
+fetichists. Farther on in the scale come those who indeed demand
+the object as a whole: but whose requirements in regard to it
+take specific forms, of an extraordinary or horrible nature—even
+to the point of seeking it as a defenceless corpse and, urged on
+by their criminal obsessions, of making it one in order so to enjoy
+it. But enough of these horrors!</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Foremost in the second group are those perverts whose
+sexual desires aim at the performance of an act which normally
+is but an introductory or preparatory one. They are those who
+seek gratification in looking and touching, or in watching the
+other person’s most intimate doings; or those who expose parts
+of their own bodies which should be concealed, in the vague expectation
+of being rewarded by a similar action on the part of the other.
+Then come the incomprehensible sadists, in whom all affectionate
+feeling strains towards the one goal of causing their object pain
+and torture, ranging in degree from mere indications of a tendency
+to humiliate the other up to the infliction of severe bodily injuries.
+Then, as though complementary to these, come the masochists
+whose only longing is to suffer, in real or in symbolic form,
+humiliations and tortures at the hands of the loved object. There
+are others yet, in whom several abnormal characteristics of this
+kind are combined and interwoven with one another. Finally,
+we learn that the persons belonging to each of these groups may
+be divided again: into those who seek their particular form of
+sexual satisfaction in reality and those who are satisfied merely
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_258'>258</span>to imagine it in their own minds, needing no real object at all
+but being able to substitute for it a creation of phantasy.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>There is not the slightest possible doubt that these mad,
+extraordinary and horrible things do actually constitute the sexual
+activities of these people. Not merely do they themselves so
+regard them, recognizing their substitutive character; but we
+also have to acknowledge that they play the same part in their
+lives as normal sexual satisfaction plays in ours, exacting the
+same, often excessive, sacrifices. It is possible to trace out,
+both broadly and in great detail, where these abnormalities merge
+into the normal and where they diverge from it. Nor will it
+escape you that that quality of impropriety which adheres inevitably
+to a sexual activity is not absent from these forms
+of it: in most of them it is intensified to the point of
+odium.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Well, now, what attitude are we to take up to these unusual
+forms of sexual satisfaction? Indignation and expressions of
+our personal disgust, together with assurances that we do not
+share these appetites, will obviously not carry us very far. That
+is not the point at issue. After all, this is a field of phenomena
+like any other; attempts to turn away and flee from it, on the
+pretext that these are but rarities and curiosities, could easily
+be rebutted. On the contrary, the phenomena are common
+enough and widely distributed. But if it is objected that our
+views on the sexual life of mankind require no revision on this
+account, since these things are one and all aberrations and divagations
+of the sexual instinct, a serious reply will be necessary.
+If we do not understand these morbid forms of sexuality and
+cannot relate them to what is normal in sexual life, then neither
+can we understand normal sexuality. It remains, in short,
+our undeniable duty to account satisfactorily in theory for the
+existence of all the perversions described and to explain their
+relation to normal sexuality, so-called.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In this task we can be helped by a point of view, and by
+two new evidential observations. The first we owe to Ivan
+Bloch; according to him, the view that all the perversions are
+“signs of degeneration” is incorrect; because of the evidence
+existing that such aberrations from the sexual aim, such erratic
+relationships to the sexual object, have been manifested since
+the beginning of time through every age of which we have knowledge,
+in every race from the most primitive to the most highly
+civilized, and at times have succeeded in attaining to toleration
+and general prevalence. The two evidential observations have
+been made in the course of psycho-analytic investigations of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_259'>259</span>neurotic patients; they must undoubtedly influence our conception
+of sexual perversions in a decisive manner.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>We have said that neurotic symptoms are substitutes for
+sexual satisfactions and I have already indicated that many
+difficulties will be met with in proving this statement from the
+analysis of symptoms. It is, indeed, only accurate if the “perverse”
+sexual needs, so-called, are included under the sexual
+satisfactions; for an interpretation of the symptoms on this
+basis is forced upon us with astonishing frequency. The claim
+made by homosexuals or inverts, that they constitute a select
+class of mankind, falls at once to the ground when we discover
+that in every single neurotic evidence of homosexual tendencies
+is forthcoming and that a large proportion of the symptoms are
+expressions of this latent inversion. Those who openly call
+themselves homosexuals are merely those in whom the inversion
+is conscious and manifest; their number is negligible compared
+with those in whom it is latent. We are bound, in fact, to regard
+the choice of an object of the same sex as a regular type of offshoot
+of the capacity to love, and are learning every day more
+and more to recognize it as especially important. The differences
+between manifest homosexuality and the normal attitude are
+certainly not thereby abrogated; they have their practical importance,
+which remains, but theoretically their value is very
+considerably diminished. In fact, we have even come to the
+conclusion that one particular mental disorder, paranoia, no
+longer to be reckoned among the transference neuroses, invariably
+arises from an attempt to subdue unduly powerful homosexual
+tendencies. Perhaps you will remember that one of our patients,<a id='r47'></a><a href='#f47' class='c015'><sup>[47]</sup></a>
+in her obsessive act, played the part of a man—of her own husband,
+that is, whom she had left; such symptoms, representing the
+impersonation of a man, are very commonly produced by neurotic
+women. If this is not actually attributable to homosexuality,
+it is certainly very closely connected with its origins.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>As you probably know, the neurosis of hysteria can create
+its symptoms in all systems of the body (circulatory, respiratory,
+etc.) and may thus disturb all the functions. Analysis shows
+that all those impulses, described as perverse, which aim at
+replacing the genital organ by another come to expression in these
+symptoms. These organs thus behave as substitutes for the
+genital organs: it is precisely from the study of hysterical symptoms
+that we have arrived at the view that, besides their functional
+rôle, a sexual—<em>erotogenic</em>—significance must be ascribed
+to the bodily organs; and that the needs of the former will
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_260'>260</span>be interfered with if the demands of the latter upon them are
+too great. Countless sensations and innervations, which we
+meet as hysterical symptoms, in organs apparently not concerned
+with sexuality, are thus discovered to be essentially fulfilments
+of perverse sexual desires, by the other organs having usurped
+the function of the genitalia. In this way also the very great
+extent to which the organs of nutrition and of excretion, in
+particular, may serve in yielding sexual excitement is brought
+home to us. It is indeed the same thing as is manifested in the
+perversions; except that in the latter it is unmistakable and
+recognizable without any difficulty, whereas in hysteria we have
+to make the <em>détour</em> of interpreting the symptom, and then do
+not impute the perverse sexual impulse in question to the person’s
+consciousness, but account it to the unconscious part of his
+personality.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Of the many types of symptom characteristic of the obsessional
+neurosis the most important are found to be brought
+about by the undue strength of one group of sexual tendencies
+with a perverted aim, i.e. the sadistic group. These symptoms,
+in accordance with the structure of the obsessional neurosis,
+serve mainly as a defence against these wishes or else they express
+the conflict between satisfaction and rejection. Satisfaction
+does not find short shrift, however; it knows how to get its own
+way by a roundabout route in the patient’s behaviour, by preference
+turning against him in self-inflicted torment. Other
+forms of this neurosis are seen in excessive “worry” and brooding;
+these are the expressions of an exaggerated sexualization of acts
+which are normally only preparatory to sexual satisfaction:
+the desire to see, to touch and to investigate. In this lies the
+explanation of the very great importance dread of contact and
+obsessive washing attains to in this disease. An unsuspectedly
+large proportion of obsessive actions are found to be disguised
+repetitions and modifications of masturbation, admittedly the
+only uniform act which accompanies all the varied flights of sexual
+phantasy.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It would not be difficult to show you the connections between
+perversion and neurosis in a much more detailed manner, but
+I believe that I have said enough for our purposes. We must
+beware, however, of overestimating the frequency and intensity
+of the perverse tendencies in mankind, after these revelations of
+their importance in the interpretation of symptoms. You have
+heard that <em>privation</em> in normal sexual satisfactions may lead to the
+development of neurosis. In consequence of this privation in reality
+the need is forced into the abnormal paths of sexual excitation.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_261'>261</span>Later you will be able to understand how this happens. You will
+at any rate understand that a “collateral” damming-up of this
+kind must swell the force of the perverse impulses, so that they
+become more powerful than they would have been had no hindrance
+to normal sexual satisfaction been present in reality. Incidentally,
+a similar factor may be recognized also in the manifest perversions.
+In many cases they are provoked or activated by the unduly
+great difficulties in the way of normal satisfaction of the sexual
+instinct which are produced either by temporary conditions or
+by permanent social institutions. In other cases, certainly,
+perverse tendencies are quite independent of such conditions;
+they are, as it were, the natural kind of sexual life for the individual
+concerned.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Perhaps you are momentarily under the impression that all
+this tends to confuse rather than to explain the relations between
+normal and perverted sexuality. But keep in mind this consideration.
+If it is correct that real obstacles to sexual satisfaction
+or privation in regard to it bring to the surface perverse tendencies
+in people who would otherwise have shown none, we must conclude
+that something in these people is ready to embrace the
+perversions; or, if you prefer it, the tendencies must have been
+present in them in a latent form. Thus we come to the second
+of the new evidential observations of which I spoke. Psycho-Analytic
+investigation has found it necessary also to concern itself
+with the sexual life of children, for the reason that in the analysis
+of symptoms the forthcoming reminiscences and associations
+invariably lead back to the earliest years of childhood. That
+which we discovered in this way has since been corroborated
+point by point by the direct observation of children. In this
+way it has been found that all the perverse tendencies have their
+roots in childhood, that children are disposed towards them all
+and practise them all to a degree conforming with their immaturity;
+in short, <em>perverted sexuality</em> is nothing else but <em>infantile sexuality</em>,
+magnified and separated into its component parts.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now you will see the perversions in an altogether different
+light and no longer ignore their connection with the sexual life
+of mankind; but what distressing emotions these astonishing
+and grotesque revelations will provoke in you! At first you
+will certainly be tempted to deny everything—the fact that
+there is anything in children which can be termed sexual life,
+the accuracy of our observations, and the justification of our
+claim to see in the behaviour of children any connection with
+that which in later years is condemned as perverted. Permit
+me first to explain to you the motives of your antagonism and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_262'>262</span>then to put before you a summary of our observations. That
+children should have no sexual life—sexual excitement, needs,
+and gratification of a sort—but that they suddenly acquire these
+things in the years between twelve and fourteen would be, apart
+from any observations at all, biologically just as improbable,
+indeed, nonsensical, as to suppose that they are born without
+genital organs which first begin to sprout at the age of puberty.
+What does actually awake in them at this period is the reproductive
+function, which then makes use for its own purposes of
+material lying to hand in body and mind. You are making the
+mistake of confounding sexuality and reproduction with each other
+and thus you obstruct your own way to the comprehension of sexuality,
+the perversions, and the neuroses. This mistake, moreover,
+has a meaning in it. Strange to say, its origin lies in the fact
+that you yourselves have all been children and as children were
+subject to the influences of education. For it is indeed one
+of the most important social tasks of education to restrain, confine,
+and subject to an individual control (itself identical with
+the demands of society) the sexual instinct when it breaks forth
+in the form of the reproductive function. In its own interests,
+accordingly, society would postpone the child’s full development
+until it has attained a certain stage of intellectual maturity,
+since educability practically ceases with the full onset of the
+sexual instinct. Without this the instinct would break all
+bounds and the laboriously erected structure of civilization would
+be swept away. Nor is the task of restraining it ever an easy
+one; success in this direction is often poor and, sometimes, only
+too great. At bottom society’s motive is economic; since it
+has not means enough to support life for its members without
+work on their part, it must see to it that the number of these
+members is restricted and their energies directed away from
+sexual activities on to their work—the eternal primordial struggle
+for existence, therefore, persisting to the present day.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Experience must have taught educators that the task of
+moulding the sexual will of the next generation can only be
+carried out by beginning to impose their influence very early,
+and intervening in the sexual Life of children before puberty,
+instead of waiting till the storm bursts. Consequently almost
+all infantile sexual activities are forbidden or made disagreeable
+to the child; the ideal has been to make the child’s life asexual,
+and in course of time it has come to this that it is really believed
+to be asexual, and is given out as such, even at the hands of
+science. In order then to avoid any contradiction with established
+beliefs and aims, the sexual activity of children is overlooked—no
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_263'>263</span>small achievement, by the way—while science contents itself
+with otherwise explaining it away. The little child is supposed
+to be pure and innocent; he who says otherwise shall be condemned
+as a hardened blasphemer against humanity’s tenderest
+and most sacred feelings.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The children alone take no part in this convention; they
+assert their animal nature naïvely enough and demonstrate
+persistently that they have yet to learn their “purity.” Strange
+to say, those who deny sexuality in children are the last to relax
+educative measures against it; they follow up with the greatest
+severity every manifestation of the “childish tricks” the existence
+of which they deny. Moreover, it is theoretically of great interest
+that the time of life which most flagrantly contradicts the prejudice
+about asexual childhood, the years of infancy up to five or six, is
+precisely the period which is veiled by oblivion in most people’s
+memories; an oblivion which can only be dispelled completely
+by analytic investigation but which is nevertheless sufficiently
+penetrable to allow of the formation of single dreams.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I will now tell you the most clearly recognizable of the child’s
+sexual activities. It will be expedient if I first introduce you
+to the term <span class='sc'>Libido</span>. In every way analogous to <em>hunger</em>, Libido is
+the force by means of which the instinct, in this case the sexual
+instinct, as, with hunger, the nutritional instinct, achieves expression.
+Other terms, such as sexual excitation and satisfaction,
+require no definition. Interpretation finds most to do in regard
+to the sexual activities of the infant, as you will easily perceive;
+and no doubt you will find it a reason for objections. This interpretation
+is formed on the basis of analytic investigation, working
+backwards from a given symptom. The infant’s first sexual
+excitations appear in connection with the other functions important
+for life. Its chief interest, as you know, is concerned with
+taking nourishment; as it sinks asleep at the breast, utterly satisfied,
+it bears a look of perfect content which will come back again
+later in life after the experience of the sexual orgasm. This
+would not be enough to found a conclusion upon. However,
+we perceive that infants wish to repeat, without really getting
+any nourishment, the action necessary to taking nourishment;
+they are therefore not impelled to this by hunger. We call this
+action “<i><span lang="de">lutschen</span></i>” or “<i><span lang="de">ludeln</span></i>” (German words signifying the
+enjoyment of sucking for its own sake—as with a rubber “comforter”);
+and as when it does this the infant again falls asleep
+with a blissful expression we see that the action of sucking is
+sufficient in itself to give it satisfaction. Admittedly, it very
+soon contrives not to go to sleep without having sucked in this
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_264'>264</span>way. An old physician for children in Budapest, Dr. Lindner, was
+the first to maintain the sexual nature of this procedure. Nurses
+and people who look after children appear to take the same view
+of this kind of sucking (<i><span lang="de">lutschen</span></i>), though without taking up any
+theoretic attitude about it. They have no doubt that its only
+purpose is in the pleasure derived; they account it one of the
+child’s “naughty tricks”; and take severe measures to force it
+to give it up, if it will not do so of its own accord. And so we
+learn that an infant performs actions with no other object but
+that of obtaining pleasure. We believe that this pleasure is
+first of all experienced while nourishment is being taken, but
+that the infant learns rapidly to enjoy it apart from this condition.
+The gratification obtained can only relate to the region
+of the mouth and lips; we therefore call these areas of the body
+<em>erotogenic zones</em> and describe the pleasure derived from sucking
+(<i><span lang="de">lutschen</span></i>) as a <em>sexual</em> one. To be sure, we have yet to discuss
+the justification for the use of this term.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>If the infant could express itself it would undoubtedly acknowledge
+that the act of sucking at its mother’s breast is far
+and away the most important thing in life. It would not be wrong
+in this, for by this act it gratifies at the same moment the two
+greatest needs in life. Then we learn from psycho-analysis,
+not without astonishment, how much of the mental significance
+of this act is retained throughout life. Sucking at the mother’s
+breast (<i><span lang="de">saugen</span></i>) becomes the point of departure from which the
+whole sexual life develops, the unattainable prototype of every
+later sexual satisfaction, to which in times of need phantasy
+often enough reverts. The desire to suck includes within it
+the desire for the mother’s breast, which is therefore the first
+<em>object</em> of sexual desire; I cannot convey to you any adequate
+idea of the importance of this first object in determining every
+later object adopted, of the profound influence it exerts, through
+transformation and substitution, upon the most distant fields of
+mental life. First of all, however, as the infant takes to sucking
+for its own sake (<i><span lang="de">lutschen</span></i>) this object is given up and is replaced by
+a part of its own body; it sucks its thumb or its own tongue.
+For purposes of obtaining pleasure it thus makes itself independent
+of the concurrence of the outer world and, in addition, it extends
+the region of excitation to a second area of the body, thus intensifying
+it. The erotogenic zones are not all equally capable
+of yielding enjoyment; it is therefore an important experience
+when, as Dr. Lindner says, the infant in feeling about on its
+own body discovers the particularly excitable region of its genitalia,
+and so finds the way from sucking (<i><span lang="de">lutschen</span></i>) to onanism.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_265'>265</span>This assessment of the nature of sucking (<i><span lang="de">lutschen</span></i>) has now
+brought to our notice two of the decisive characteristics of infantile
+sexuality. It appears in connection with the satisfaction of
+the great organic needs, and it behaves <em>auto-erotically</em>, that
+is to say, it seeks and finds its objects in its own person. What
+is most clearly discernible in regard to the taking of nourishment
+is to some extent repeated with the process of excretion. We
+conclude that infants experience pleasure in the evacuation of
+urine and the contents of the bowels, and that they very soon
+endeavour to contrive these actions so that the accompanying
+excitation of the membranes in these erotogenic zones may secure
+them the maximum possible gratification. As Lou Andreas
+has pointed out, with fine intuition, the outer world first steps
+in as a hindrance at this point, a hostile force opposed to the
+child’s desire for pleasure—the first hint he receives of external
+and internal conflicts to be experienced later on. He is not
+to pass his excretions whenever he likes but at times appointed
+by other people. To induce him to give up these sources of
+pleasure he is told that everything connected with these functions
+is “improper,” and must be kept concealed. In this way he is first
+required to exchange pleasure for value in the eyes of others.
+His own attitude to the excretions is at the outset very different.
+His own fæces produce no disgust in him; he values them as
+part of his own body and is unwilling to part with them, he
+uses them as the first “present” by which he can mark out
+those people whom he values especially. Even after education
+has succeeded in alienating him from these tendencies, he continues
+to feel the same high regard for his “presents” and his
+“money”; while his achievements in the way of urination
+appear to be the subject of particular pride.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I know that for some time you have been longing to interrupt
+me with cries of: “Enough of these monstrosities! The
+motions of the bowels a source of pleasurable sexual satisfaction
+exploited even by infants! Fæces a substance of great value
+and the anus a kind of genital organ! We do not believe it;
+but we understand why children’s physicians and educationists
+have emphatically rejected psycho-analysis and its conclusions!”
+Not at all; you have merely forgotten for the moment that I
+have been endeavouring to show you the connection between
+the actual facts of infantile sexual life and the actual facts of
+the sexual perversions. Why should you not know that in many
+adults, both homosexual and heterosexual, the anus actually
+takes over the part played by the vagina in sexual intercourse?
+And that there are many persons who retain the pleasurable
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_266'>266</span>sensations accompanying evacuations of the bowels throughout
+life and describe them as far from insignificant? You may hear
+from children themselves, when they are a little older and able
+to talk about these things, what an interest they take in the act
+of defæcation and what pleasure they find in watching others
+in the act. Of course if you have previously systematically
+intimidated these children they will understand very well that
+they are not to speak of such things. And for all else that you
+refuse to believe I refer you to the evidence brought out in analysis
+and to the direct observation of children and I tell you that it
+will require the exercise of considerable ingenuity to avoid seeing
+all this or to see it in a different light. Nor am I at all
+averse from your thinking the relationship between childish
+sexual activities and the sexual perversions positively striking.
+It is a matter of course that there should be this relationship;
+for if a child has a sexual life at all it must be of a perverted order,
+since apart from a few obscure indications he is lacking in all
+that transforms sexuality into the reproductive function. Moreover,
+it is a characteristic common to all the perversions that
+in them reproduction as an aim is put aside. This is actually
+the criterion by which we judge whether a sexual activity is
+perverse—if it departs from reproduction in its aims and pursues
+the attainment of gratification independently. You will understand
+therefore that the gulf and turning-point in the development
+of the sexual life lies at the point of its subordination to
+the purposes of reproduction. Everything that occurs before
+this conversion takes place, and everything which refuses to
+conform to it and serves the pursuit of gratification alone, is
+called by the unhonoured title of “perversion” and as such is
+despised.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>So let me continue my brief account of infantile sexuality.
+I could supplement what I have told you concerning two of the
+bodily systems by extending the same scrutiny to the others.
+The sexual life of the child consists entirely in the activities of
+a series of component-instincts which seek for gratification independently
+of one another, some in his own body and others
+already in an external object. Among the organs of these bodily
+systems the genitalia rapidly take the first place; there are
+people in whom pleasurable gratification in their own genital
+organ, without the aid of any other genital organ or object, is
+continued without interruption from the onanism habitual in
+the suckling period of infancy to the onanism of necessity occurring
+in the years of puberty, and then maintained indefinitely beyond
+that. Incidentally, the subject of onanism is not so easily
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_267'>267</span>exhausted; it contains material for consideration from various
+angles.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In spite of my wish to limit the extent of this discussion
+I must still say something about sexual curiosity in children.
+It is too characteristic of childish sexuality and too important
+for the symptom-formation of the neuroses to be omitted. Infantile
+sexual curiosity begins very early, sometimes before
+the third year. It is not connected with the difference between
+the sexes, which is nothing to children, since they—boys, at
+least—ascribe the same male genital organ to both sexes. If
+then a boy discovers the vagina in a little sister or play-mate
+he at once tries to deny the evidence of his senses; for he cannot
+conceive of a human being like himself without his most important
+attribute. Later, he is horrified at the possibilities it reveals
+to him; the influence of previous threats occasioned by too
+great a preoccupation with his own little member now begins
+to be felt. He comes under the dominion of the castration complex,
+which will play such a large part in the formation of his
+character if he remains healthy, and of his neurosis if he falls
+ill, and of his resistances if he comes under analytic treatment.
+Of little girls we know that they feel themselves heavily handicapped
+by the absence of a large visible penis and envy the
+boy’s possession of it; from this source primarily springs the
+wish to be a man which is resumed again later in the neurosis,
+owing to some mal-adjustment to a female development. The
+clitoris in the girl, moreover, is in every way equivalent during
+childhood to the penis; it is a region of especial excitability in
+which auto-erotic satisfaction is achieved. In the transition
+to womanhood very much depends upon the early and complete
+relegation of this sensitivity from the clitoris over to the vaginal
+orifice. In those women who are sexually anæsthetic, as it is
+called, the clitoris has stubbornly retained this sensitivity.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The sexual interest of children is primarily directed to the
+problem of birth—the same problem that lies behind the riddle
+of the Theban Sphinx. This curiosity is for the most part aroused
+by egoistic dread of the arrival of another child. The answer
+which the nursery has ready for the child, that the stork brings
+the babies, meets with incredulity even in little children much
+more often than we imagine. The feeling of having been deceived
+by grown-up people, and put off with lies, contributes greatly
+to a sense of isolation and to the development of independence.
+But the child is not able to solve this problem on his own account.
+His undeveloped sexual constitution sets definite limits to his
+capacity to understand it. He first supposes that children are
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_268'>268</span>made by mixing some special thing with the food taken; nor
+does he know that only women can have children. Later, he
+learns of this limitation and gives up the idea of children being
+made by food, though it is retained in fairy tales. A little
+later he soon sees that the father must have something to do with
+making babies, but he cannot discover what it is. If by chance
+he is witness of the sexual act he conceives it as an attempt to
+overpower the woman, as a combat, the sadistic misconception
+of coitus; at first, however, he does not connect this act with the
+creation of children; if he discovers blood on the mother’s bed
+or underlinen he takes it as evidence of injury inflicted by the
+father. In still later years of childhood he probably guesses that
+the male organ of the man plays an essential part in the procreation
+of children, but cannot ascribe to this part of the body
+any function but that of urination.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Children are all united from the outset in the belief that
+the birth of a child takes place by the bowel; that is to say, that
+the baby is produced like a piece of fæces. Not until all interest
+has been weaned from the anal region is this theory abandoned
+and replaced by the supposition that the navel opens, or that
+the area between the two nipples is the birthplace of the child.
+In some such manner as this the enquiring child approaches some
+knowledge of the facts of sex, unless, misled by his ignorance,
+he overlooks them until he receives an imperfect and discrediting
+account of them, usually in the period before puberty, which
+not infrequently affects him traumatically.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now you will probably have heard that the term “sexual”
+has suffered an unwarrantable expansion of meaning at the hands
+of psycho-analysis, in order that its assertions regarding the
+sexual origin of the neuroses and the sexual significance of the
+symptoms may be maintained. You can now judge for yourselves
+whether this amplification is justified or not. We have
+extended the meaning of the concept “sexuality” only so far
+as to include the sexual life of perverted persons and also of
+children; that is to say, we have restored to it its true breadth
+of meaning. What is called sexuality outside psycho-analysis
+applies only to the restricted sexual life that is subordinated to
+the reproductive function and is called normal.</p>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_269'>269</span>
+ <h3 class='c002'><span class='c014'>TWENTY-FIRST LECTURE</span><br> DEVELOPMENT OF THE LIBIDO AND SEXUAL ORGANIZATIONS</h3>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c006'>It is my impression that I have not succeeded in bringing home
+to you with complete conviction the importance of the perversions
+for our conception of sexuality. I wish therefore, as far as I
+am able, to review and improve upon what I have already said
+on this subject.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now I do not wish you to think that it was the perversions
+alone that required us to make the alteration in the meaning
+of the term sexuality which has aroused such vehement opposition.
+The study of infantile sexuality has contributed even more to
+it, and the unanimity between the two was decisive. But,
+however unmistakable they may be in the later years of childhood,
+the manifestations of infantile sexuality in its earliest forms do
+seem to fade away indefinably. Those who do not wish to
+pay attention to evolution and to the connections brought out
+by analysis will dispute the sexual nature of them, and will
+ascribe in consequence some other, undifferentiated character
+to them. You must not forget that as yet we have no generally
+acknowledged criterion for the sexual nature of a phenomenon,
+unless it is some connection with the reproductive function—a
+definition which we have had to reject as too narrow. The
+biological criteria, such as the periodicities of twenty-three and
+twenty-eight days, suggested by W. Fliess, are exceedingly
+debatable; the peculiar chemical features which we may perhaps
+assume for sexual processes are yet to be discovered. The
+sexual perversions in adults, on the other hand, are something
+definite and unambiguous. As their generally accepted description
+implies, they are unquestionably of a sexual nature; whether
+you call them marks of degeneration or anything else, no one
+has yet been so bold as to rank them anywhere but among the
+phenomena of sexual life. In view of them alone we are justified
+in maintaining that sexuality and the reproductive function
+are not identical, for they one and all abjure the aim of reproduction.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_270'>270</span>I notice a not uninteresting parallel here. Whereas, for
+most people, the word ‘mental’ means ‘conscious,’ we found
+ourselves obliged to widen the application of the term ‘mental’
+to include a part of the mind that is not conscious. In a precisely
+similar way, most people declare ‘sexual’ identical with ‘pertaining
+to reproduction’—or, if you like it expressed more concisely,
+with ‘genital’; whereas we cannot avoid admitting
+things as ‘sexual’ that are not ‘genital’ and have nothing to
+do with reproduction. It is only a formal analogy, but it is not
+without deeper significance.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>However, if the existence of sexual perversions is such a
+forcible argument on this point, why has it not long ago done
+its work and settled the question? I really am unable to say.
+It seems to me that the sexual perversions have come under
+a very special ban, which insinuates itself into the theory, and
+interferes even with scientific judgement on the subject. It
+seems as if no one could forget, not merely that they are detestable,
+but that they are also something monstrous and terrifying;
+as if they exerted a seductive influence; as if at bottom a secret
+envy of those who enjoy them had to be strangled—the same
+sort of feeling that is confessed by the count who sits in judgement
+in the famous parody of <cite>Tannhäuser</cite>:</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c016'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>So in the Mount of Venus conscience, duty, are forgot!</div>
+ <div class='line'>—Remarkable that such a thing has never been my lot!</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c018'>In reality, perverts are more likely to be poor devils who have
+to pay most bitterly for the satisfactions they manage to procure
+with such difficulty.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>That which makes perverse activities so unmistakably sexual,
+in spite of all that seems unnatural in their objects or their aims,
+is the fact that in perverse satisfaction the act still terminates
+usually in a complete orgasm with evacuation of the genital
+product. This is of course only the consequence of adult development
+in the persons concerned; in children, orgasm and genital
+excretion are not very well possible; as substitutes they have
+approximations to them which are again not recognized definitely
+as sexual.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I must still add something more in order to complete our
+assessment of the sexual perversions. Abominated as they are,
+sharply distinguished from normal sexual activity as they may
+be, simple observation will show that very rarely is one feature
+or another of them absent from the sexual life of a normal person.
+The kiss to begin with has some claim to be called a perverse act,
+for it consists of the union of the two erotogenic mouth zones
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_271'>271</span>instead of the two genital organs. But no one condemns it as
+perverse; on the contrary, in the theatre it is permitted as a
+refined indication of the sexual act. Nevertheless, kissing is a
+thing that can easily become an absolute perversion—namely,
+when it occurs in such intensity that orgasm and emission directly
+accompany it, which happens not at all uncommonly. Further,
+it will be found that gazing at and handling the object are in
+one person an indispensable condition of sexual enjoyment, while
+another at the height of sexual excitement pinches or bites;
+that in another lover not always the genital region, but some
+other bodily region in the object, provokes the greatest excitement,
+and so on in endless variety. It would be absurd to
+exclude people with single idiosyncrasies of this kind from the
+ranks of the normal and place them among perverts; rather,
+it becomes more and more clear that what is essential to the
+perversions lies, not in the overstepping of the sexual aim, not
+in the replacement of the genitalia, not always even in the variations
+in the object, but solely in the <em>exclusiveness</em> with which
+these deviations are maintained, so that the sexual act which
+serves the reproductive process is rejected altogether. In so
+far as perverse performances are included in order to intensify
+or to lead up to the performance of the normal sexual act, they
+are no longer actually perverse. Facts of the kind just described
+naturally tend to diminish the gulf between normal and perverse
+sexuality very considerably. The obvious inference is that
+normal sexuality has arisen, out of something existing prior to
+it, by a process of discarding some components of this material
+as useless, and by combining the others so as to subordinate
+them to a new aim, that of reproduction.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The point of view thus gained in regard to the perversions
+can now be employed by us in penetrating more deeply, with a
+clearer perspective, into the problem of infantile sexuality;
+but before doing this I must draw your attention to an important
+difference between the two. Perverse sexuality is as a rule
+exceedingly concentrated, its whole activity is directed to one—and
+mostly to only one—aim; one particular component-impulse
+is supreme; it is either the only one discernible or it
+has subjected the others to its own purposes. In this respect
+there is no difference between perverse and normal sexuality,
+except that the dominating component-impulse, and therefore
+the sexual aim, is a different one. Both of them constitute a
+well-organized tyranny; only that in one case one ruling family
+has usurped all the power, and in the other, another. This
+concentration and organization, on the other hand, is in the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_272'>272</span>main absent from infantile sexuality; its component-impulses
+are equally valid, each of them strives independently after its
+own pleasure. Both the lack of this concentration (in childhood)
+and the presence of it (in the adult) correspond well with the
+fact that both normal and perverse sexuality are derived from
+the same source, namely, infantile sexuality. There are indeed
+also cases of perversion which correspond even more closely to
+infantile sexuality in that numerous component-instincts, independently
+of one another, with their aims, are developed or,
+better, perpetuated in them. With these cases it is more correct
+to speak of infantilism than of perversion of the sexual life.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Thus prepared we may now go on to consider a suggestion
+which we shall certainly not be spared. It will be said: “Why
+are you so set upon declaring as already belonging to sexuality
+those indefinite manifestations of childhood out of which what
+is sexual later develops, and which you yourself admit to be
+indefinite? Why are you not content rather to describe them
+physiologically and simply to say that activities, such as sucking
+for its own sake and the retaining of excreta, may be observed
+already in young infants, showing that they seek <em>pleasure in
+their organs</em>? In that way you would have avoided the conception
+of a sexual life even in babies which is so repugnant to all
+our feelings.” Well, I can only answer that I have nothing
+against pleasure derived from the organs of the body; I know
+indeed that the supreme pleasure of the sexual union is also
+only a bodily pleasure, derived from the activity of the genital
+organ. But can you tell me when this originally indifferent
+bodily pleasure acquires the sexual character that it undoubtedly
+possesses in later phases of development? Do we know any
+more about this ‘organ-pleasure’ than we know about sexuality?
+You will answer that the sexual character is added to it when
+the genitalia begin to play their part; sexuality simply means
+genital. You will even evade the obstacle of the perversions
+by pointing out that after all with most of them a genital orgasm
+occurs, although brought about by other means than the union
+of the genitalia. If you were to eliminate the relation to reproduction
+from the essential characteristics of sexuality since this
+view is untenable in consequence of the existence of the perversions,
+and were to emphasize instead activity of the genital
+organs, you would actually take up a much better position.
+But then we should no longer differ very widely; it would be a
+case of the genital organs <em>versus</em> the other organs. What do
+you now make of the abundant evidence that the genital organs
+may be replaced by other organs for the purpose of gratification,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_273'>273</span>as in the normal kiss, or the perverse practices of loose living,
+or in the symptomatology of hysteria? In this neurosis it is
+quite usual for stimulation phenomena, sensations, innervations,
+and even the processes of erection, which properly belong to the
+genitalia to be displaced on to other distant areas of the body
+(e.g. the displacement from below upwards to the head and face).
+Thus you will find that nothing is left of all that you cling to as
+essentially characteristic of sexuality; and you will have to
+make up your minds to follow my example and extend the designation
+‘sexual’ to include those activities of early infancy which
+aim at ‘organ-pleasure.’</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>And now will you permit me to bring forward two further
+considerations in support of my view. As you know, we call
+the doubtful and indefinable activities of earliest infancy towards
+pleasure ‘sexual,’ because in the course of analysing symptoms
+we reach them by way of material that is undeniably sexual.
+They would not thereby necessarily be sexual themselves, let
+us grant; but let us take an analogous case. Suppose that
+there were no way to observe the development from seed of two
+dicotyledonous plants—the apple-tree and the bean; but imagine
+that in both it was possible to follow back its development from
+the fully-developed plant to the first seedling with two cotyledons.
+The two cotyledons are indistinguishable in each; they look
+exactly alike in both plants. Shall I conclude from this that
+they actually are exactly alike and that the specific differences
+between apple-tree and bean-plant arise <em>later</em> in the plant’s
+development? Or is it not more correct biologically to believe
+that this difference exists <em>already</em> in the seedlings, although
+I cannot see any in the cotyledons? This is what we do when
+we call infantile pleasurable activities sexual. Whether each
+and every organ-pleasure may be called sexual or whether there
+exists, besides the sexual, another kind of pleasure that does not
+deserve this name is a matter I cannot discuss here. I know
+too little about organ-pleasure and its conditions; and I am
+not at all surprised that in consequence of the retrogressive
+character of analysis I arrive finally at factors which at the
+present time do not permit of definite classification.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>One thing more. You have on the whole gained very little
+for what you are so eager to maintain, the sexual ‘purity’ of
+children, even if you can convince me that the infant’s activities
+had better not be regarded as sexual. For from the third year
+onwards there is no longer any doubt about sexual life in the
+child; at this period the genital organs begin already to show
+signs of excitation; there is a perhaps regular period of infantile
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_274'>274</span>masturbation, that is, of gratification in the genital organs. The
+mental and social sides of sexual life need no longer be overlooked:
+choice of object, distinguishing of particular persons
+with affection, even decision in favour of one sex or the other,
+and jealousy, were conclusively established independently by
+impartial observation before the time of psycho-analysis; they
+may be confirmed by any observer who will use his eyes. You
+will object that you never doubted the early awakening of affection
+but only that this affection was of a ‘sexual’ quality. Children
+between the ages of three and eight have certainly learnt to conceal
+this element in it; but nevertheless if you look attentively
+you will collect enough evidence of the ‘sensual’ nature of this
+affection, and whatever still escapes your notice will be amply
+and readily supplied by analytic investigation. The sexual
+aims in this period of life are in closest connection with the
+sexual curiosity arising at the same time, of which I have given
+you some description. The perverse character of some of these
+aims is a natural result of the immature constitution of the child
+who has not yet discovered the aim of the act of intercourse.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>From about the sixth or eighth year onwards a standstill or
+retrogression is observed in the sexual development, which
+in those cases reaching a high cultural standard deserves to be
+called a <em>latency period</em>. This latency period, however, may be
+absent; nor does it necessarily entail an interruption of sexual
+activities and sexual interests over the whole field. Most of the
+mental experiences and excitations occurring before the latency
+period then succumb to the infantile amnesia, already discussed,
+which veils our earliest childhood from us and estranges us from
+it. It is the task of every psycho-analysis to bring this forgotten
+period of life back into recollection; one cannot resist the supposition
+that the beginnings of sexual life belonging to this period
+are the motive for this forgetting, that is, that this oblivion is
+an effect of repression.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>From the third year onwards the sexual life of children shows
+much in common with that of adults; it is differentiated from
+the latter, as we already know, by the absence of a stable organization
+under the primacy of the genital organs, by inevitable traits
+of a perverse order, and of course also by far less intensity in the
+whole impulse. But those phases of the sexual development,
+or as we will call it, of the <em>Libido-development</em>, which are of greatest
+interest theoretically lie before this period. This development
+is gone through so rapidly that direct observation alone would
+perhaps never have succeeded in determining its fleeting forms.
+Only by the help of psycho-analytic investigation of the neuroses
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_275'>275</span>has it become possible to penetrate so far back and to discover
+these still earlier phases of Libido-development. These phases
+are certainly only theoretic constructions, but in the practice
+of psycho-analysis you will find them necessary and valuable
+constructions. You will soon understand how it happens that
+a pathological condition enables us to discover phenomena which
+we should certainly overlook in normal conditions.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Thus we can now define the forms taken by the sexual life
+of the child before the primacy of the genital zone is reached;
+this primacy is prepared for in the early infantile period, before
+the latent period, and is permanently organized from puberty
+onwards. In this early period a loose sort of organization exists
+which we shall call <em>pre-genital</em>; for during this phase it is not
+the genital component-instincts, but the <em>sadistic</em> and <em>anal</em>, which
+are most prominent. The contrast between <em>masculine</em> and <em>feminine</em>
+plays no part as yet; instead of it there is the contrast between
+<em>active</em> and <em>passive</em>, which may be described as the forerunner
+of the sexual polarity with which it also links up later. That
+which in this period seems masculine to us, regarded from the
+standpoint of the genital phase, proves to be the expression of
+an impulse to mastery, which easily passes over into cruelty.
+Impulses with a passive aim are connected with the erotogenic
+zone of the rectal orifice, at this period very important; the
+impulses of skoptophilia (gazing) and curiosity are powerfully
+active; the function of excreting urine is the only part actually
+taken by the genital organ in the sexual life. Objects are not
+wanting to the component-instincts in this period, but these
+objects are not necessarily all comprised in one object. The
+sadistic-anal organization is the stage immediately preceding
+the phase of primacy of the genital zone. Closer study reveals
+how much of it is retained intact in the later final structure, and
+what are the paths by which these component-instincts are
+forced into the service of the new <em>genital organization</em>. Behind
+the sadistic-anal phase of the Libido-development we obtain a
+glimpse of an even more primitive stage of development, in which
+the erotogenic mouth zone plays the chief part. You can guess
+that the sexual activity of sucking (for its own sake) belongs to
+this stage; and you may admire the understanding of the ancient
+Egyptians in whose art a child, even the divine Horus, was
+represented with a finger in the mouth. Abraham has quite
+recently published work showing that traces of this primitive
+<em>oral</em> phase of development survive in the sexual life of later years.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I can indeed imagine that you will have found this last information
+about the sexual organizations less of an enlightenment
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_276'>276</span>than an infliction. Perhaps I have again gone too much
+into detail; but have patience! what you have just heard will
+be of more use when we employ it later. Keep in view at the
+moment the idea that the sexual life—the <em>Libido-function</em>, as
+we call it—does not first spring up in its final form, does not
+even expand along the lines of its earliest forms, but goes through
+a series of successive phases unlike one another; in short, that
+many changes occur in it, like those in the development of the
+caterpillar into the butterfly. The turning-point of this development
+is the <em>subordination of all the sexual component-instincts under
+the primacy of the genital zone</em> and, together with this, the enrolment
+of sexuality in the service of the reproductive function. Before
+this happens the sexual life is, so to say, disparate—independent
+activities of single component-impulses each seeking <em>organ-pleasure</em>
+(pleasure in a bodily organ). This anarchy is modified
+by attempts at <em>pre</em>-genital ‘organizations,’ of which the chief
+is the sadistic-anal phase, behind which is the oral, perhaps the
+most primitive. In addition there are the various processes,
+about which little is known as yet, which effect the transition
+from one stage of organization to the next above it. Of what
+significance this long journey over so many stages in the development
+of the Libido is for comprehension of the neuroses we shall
+learn later on.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>To-day we will follow up another aspect of this development—namely,
+the relation of the sexual component-impulses to an
+<em>object</em>; or, rather, we will take a fleeting glimpse over this
+development so that we may spend more time upon a comparatively
+late result of it. Certain of the component-impulses
+of the sexual instinct have an object from the very beginning
+and hold fast to it: such are the impulse to mastery (sadism),
+to gazing (skoptophilia) and curiosity. Others, more plainly
+connected with particular erotogenic areas in the body, only
+have an object in the beginning, so long as they are still dependent
+upon the non-sexual functions, and give it up when they become
+detached from these latter. Thus the first object of the oral
+component of the sexual instinct is the mother’s breast which
+satisfies the infant’s need for nutrition. In the act of sucking
+for its own sake (<i><span lang="de">lutschen</span></i>) the erotic component, also gratified
+in sucking for nutrition (<i><span lang="de">saugen</span></i>), makes itself independent,
+gives up the object in an external person, and replaces it by a
+part of the child’s own person. The oral impulse becomes <em>auto-erotic</em>,
+as the anal and other erotogenic impulses are from the
+beginning. Further development has, to put it as concisely as
+possible, two aims: first, to renounce auto-erotism, to give
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_277'>277</span>up again the object found in the child’s own body in exchange
+again for an external one; and secondly, to combine the various
+objects of the separate impulses and replace them by one single
+one. This naturally can only be done if the single object is again
+itself complete, with a body like that of the subject; nor can it
+be accomplished without some part of the auto-erotic impulse-excitations
+being abandoned as useless.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The processes by which an object is found are rather involved,
+and have not so far received comprehensive exposition. For our
+purposes it may be emphasized that, when the process has reached
+a certain point in the years of childhood before the latency
+period, the object adopted proves almost identical with the first
+object of the oral pleasure impulse, adopted by reason of the
+child’s dependent relationship to it; it is, namely, the mother,
+although not the mother’s breast. We call the mother the first
+<em>love</em>-object. We speak of ‘love’ when we lay the accent upon the
+mental side of the sexual impulses and disregard, or wish to forget
+for a moment, the demands of the fundamental physical or
+‘sensual’ side of the impulses. At about the time when the
+mother becomes the love-object, the mental operation of repression
+has already begun in the child and has withdrawn from
+him the knowledge of some part of his sexual aims. Now with
+this choice of the mother as love-object is connected all that
+which, under the name of ‘<em>the Oedipus complex</em>,’ has become
+of such great importance in the psycho-analytic explanation of
+the neuroses, and which has had a perhaps equally important
+share in causing the opposition against psycho-analysis.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Here is a little incident which occurred during the present
+war. One of the staunch adherents of psycho-analysis was
+stationed in his medical capacity on the German front in Poland;
+he attracted the attention of his colleagues by the fact that he
+occasionally effected an unexpected influence upon a patient.
+On being questioned, he admitted that he worked with psycho-analytic
+methods and with readiness agreed to impart his knowledge
+to his colleagues. So every evening the medical men of the
+corps, his colleagues and superiors, met to be initiated into the
+mysteries of psycho-analysis. For a time all went well; but
+when he had introduced his audience to the Oedipus complex
+a superior officer rose and announced that he did not believe
+this, it was the behaviour of a cad for the lecturer to relate such
+things to brave men, fathers of families, who were fighting for
+their country, and he forbade the continuation of the lectures.
+This was the end; the analyst got himself transferred to another
+part of the front. In my opinion, however, it is a bad outlook
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_278'>278</span>if a victory for German arms depends upon an ‘organization’
+of science such as this, and German science will not prosper
+under any such organization.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now you will be impatiently waiting to hear what this terrible
+Oedipus complex comprises. The name tells you: you all know
+the Greek myth of King Oedipus, whose destiny it was to slay
+his father and to wed his mother, who did all in his power to
+avoid the fate prophesied by the oracle, and who in self-punishment
+blinded himself when he discovered that in ignorance he had
+committed both these crimes. I trust that many of you have
+yourselves experienced the profound effect of the tragic drama
+fashioned by Sophocles from this story. The Attic poet’s work
+portrays the gradual discovery of the deed of Oedipus, long
+since accomplished, and brings it slowly to light by skilfully
+prolonged enquiry, constantly fed by new evidence; it has thus
+a certain resemblance to the course of a psycho-analysis. In the
+dialogue the deluded mother-wife, Jocasta, resists the continuation
+of the enquiry; she points out that many people in their dreams
+have mated with their mothers, but that dreams are of no account.
+To us dreams are of much account, especially typical dreams which
+occur in many people; we have no doubt that the dream Jocasta
+speaks of is intimately related to the shocking and terrible story
+of the myth.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It is surprising that Sophocles’ tragedy does not call forth
+indignant remonstrance in its audience; this reaction would be
+much better justified in them than it was in the blunt army
+doctor. For at bottom it is an immoral play; it sets aside the
+individual’s responsibility to social law, and displays divine
+forces ordaining the crime and rendering powerless the moral
+instincts of the human being which would guard him against
+the crime. It would be easy to believe that an accusation against
+destiny and the gods was intended in the story of the myth;
+in the hands of the critical Euripides, at variance with the gods,
+it would probably have become such an accusation. But with
+the reverent Sophocles there is no question of such an intention;
+the pious subtlety which declares it the highest morality to bow
+to the will of the gods, even when they ordain a crime, helps him
+out of the difficulty. I do not believe that this moral is one of
+the virtues of the drama, but neither does it detract from its
+effect; it leaves the hearer indifferent; he does not react to this,
+but to the secret meaning and content of the myth itself. He
+reacts as though by self-analysis he had detected the Oedipus
+complex in himself, and had recognized the will of the gods and
+the oracle as glorified disguises of his own Unconscious; as
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_279'>279</span>though he remembered in himself the wish to do away with his
+father and in his place to wed his mother, and must abhor the
+thought. The poet’s words seem to him to mean: “In vain
+do you deny that you are accountable, in vain do you proclaim
+how you have striven against these evil designs. You are guilty,
+nevertheless; for you could not stifle them; they still survive
+unconsciously in you.” And psychological truth is contained
+in this; even though man has repressed his evil desires into his
+Unconscious and would then gladly say to himself that he is no
+longer answerable for them, he is yet compelled to feel his responsibility
+in the form of a sense of guilt for which he can discern
+no foundation.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>There is no possible doubt that one of the most important
+sources of the sense of guilt which so often torments neurotic
+people is to be found in the Oedipus complex. More than this:
+in 1913, under the title of <cite><span lang="de">Totem und Tabu</span></cite>, I published a study
+of the earliest forms of religion and morality in which I expressed
+a suspicion that perhaps the sense of guilt of mankind as a
+whole, which is the ultimate source of religion and morality, was
+acquired in the beginnings of history through the Oedipus complex.
+I should much like to tell you more of this, but I had better not;
+it is difficult to leave this subject when once one begins upon it,
+and we must return to individual psychology.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now what does direct observation of children, at the period of
+object-choice before the latency period, show us in regard to the
+Oedipus complex? Well, it is easy to see that the little man
+wants his mother all to himself, finds his father in the way,
+becomes restive when the latter takes upon himself to caress
+her, and shows his satisfaction when the father goes away or is
+absent. He often expresses his feelings directly in words and
+promises his mother to marry her; this may not seem much
+in comparison with the deeds of Oedipus, but it is enough in fact;
+the kernel of each is the same. Observation is often rendered
+puzzling by the circumstance that the same child on other
+occasions at this period will display great affection for the father;
+but such contrasting—or, better, <em>ambivalent</em>—states of feeling,
+which in adults would lead to conflicts, can be tolerated alongside
+one another in the child for a long time, just as later on
+they dwell together permanently in the Unconscious. One
+might try to object that the little boy’s behaviour is due to egoistic
+motives and does not justify the conception of an erotic complex;
+the mother looks after all the child’s needs and consequently it
+is to the child’s interest that she should trouble herself about
+no one else. This too is quite correct; but it is soon clear that
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_280'>280</span>in this, as in similar dependent situations, egoistic interests only
+provide the occasion on which the erotic impulses seize. When
+the little boy shows the most open sexual curiosity about his
+mother, wants to sleep with her at night, insists on being in the
+room while she is dressing, or even attempts physical acts of
+seduction, as the mother so often observes and laughingly relates,
+the erotic nature of this attachment to her is established without
+a doubt. Moreover, it should not be forgotten that a mother
+looks after a little daughter’s needs in the same way without
+producing this effect; and that often enough a father eagerly
+vies with her in trouble for the boy without succeeding in winning
+the same importance in his eyes as the mother. In short, the
+factor of sex preference is not to be eliminated from the situation
+by any criticisms. From the point of view of the boy’s egoistic
+interests it would merely be foolish if he did not tolerate two people
+in his service rather than only one of them.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>As you see, I have only described the relationship of a boy
+to his father and mother; things proceed in just the same way,
+with the necessary reversal, in little girls. The loving devotion
+to the father, the need to do away with the superfluous mother
+and to take her place, the early display of coquetry and the arts
+of later womanhood, make up a particularly charming picture
+in a little girl, and may cause us to forget its seriousness and
+the grave consequences which may later result from this situation.
+Let us not fail to add that frequently the parents themselves
+exert a decisive influence upon the awakening of the Oedipus
+complex in a child, by themselves following the sex attraction
+where there is more than one child; the father in an unmistakable
+manner prefers his little daughter with marks of tenderness, and
+the mother, the son: but even this factor does not seriously
+impugn the spontaneous nature of the infantile Oedipus complex.
+When other children appear, the Oedipus complex expands and
+becomes a family complex. Reinforced anew by the injury
+resulting to the egoistic interests, it actuates a feeling of aversion
+towards these new arrivals and an unhesitating wish to get rid
+of them again. These feelings of hatred are as a rule much more
+often openly expressed than those connected with the parental
+complex. If such a wish is fulfilled and after a short time death
+removes the unwanted addition to the family, later analysis
+can show what a significant event this death is for the child,
+although it does not necessarily remain in memory. Forced
+into the second place by the birth of another child and for the
+first time almost entirely parted from the mother, the child finds
+it very hard to forgive her for this exclusion of him; feelings
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_281'>281</span>which in adults we should describe as profound embitterment
+are roused in him, and often become the groundwork of a lasting
+estrangement. That sexual curiosity and all its consequences is
+usually connected with these experiences has already been mentioned.
+As these new brothers and sisters grow up the child’s
+attitude to them undergoes the most important transformations.
+A boy may take his sister as love-object in place of his faithless
+mother; where there are several brothers to win the favour of
+a little sister hostile rivalry, of great importance in after life,
+shows itself already in the nursery. A little girl takes an older
+brother as a substitute for the father who no longer treats her
+with the same tenderness as in her earliest years; or she takes a
+little sister as a substitute for the child that she vainly wished
+for from her father.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>So much and a great deal more of a similar kind is shown
+by direct observation of children, and by consideration of clear
+memories of childhood, uninfluenced by any analysis. Among
+other things you will infer from this that a child’s position in
+the sequence of brothers and sisters is of very great significance
+for the course of his later life, a factor to be considered in every
+biography. What is even more important, however, is that in
+the face of these enlightening considerations, so easily to be
+obtained, you will hardly recall without smiling the scientific
+theories accounting for the prohibition of incest. What has not
+been invented for this purpose! We are told that sexual attraction
+is diverted from the members of the opposite sex in
+one family owing to their living together from early childhood;
+or that a biological tendency against in-breeding has a mental
+equivalent in the horror of incest! Whereby it is entirely overlooked
+that no such rigorous prohibitions in law and custom
+would be required if any trustworthy natural barriers against
+the temptation to incest existed. The opposite is the truth.
+The first choice of object in mankind is regularly an incestuous
+one, directed to the mother and sister of men, and the most
+stringent prohibitions are required to prevent this sustained
+infantile tendency from being carried into effect. In the savage
+and primitive peoples surviving to-day the incest prohibitions
+are a great deal stricter than with us; Theodor Reik has recently
+shown in a brilliant work that the meaning of the savage rites
+of puberty which represent rebirth is the loosening of the boy’s
+incestuous attachment to the mother and his reconciliation with
+the father.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Mythology will show you that incest, ostensibly so much
+abhorred by men, is permitted to their gods without a thought;
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_282'>282</span>and from ancient history you may learn that incestuous marriage
+with a sister was prescribed as a sacred duty for kings (the
+Pharaohs of Egypt and the Incas of Peru); it was therefore in
+the nature of a privilege denied to the common herd.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Incest with the mother is one of the crimes of Oedipus and
+parricide the other. Incidentally, these are the two great offences
+condemned by totemism, the first social-religious institution of
+mankind. Now let us turn from the direct observation of children
+to the analytic investigation of adults who have become neurotic;
+what does analysis yield in further knowledge of the Oedipus
+complex? Well, this is soon told. The complex is revealed
+just as the myth relates it; it will be seen that every one of these
+neurotics was himself an Oedipus or, what amounts to the same
+thing, has become a Hamlet in his reaction to the complex.
+To be sure, the analytic picture of the Oedipus complex is an
+enlarged and accentuated edition of the infantile sketch; the
+hatred of the father and the death-wishes against him are no
+longer vague hints, the affection for the mother declares itself
+with the aim of possessing her as a woman. Are we really to
+accredit such grossness and intensity of the feelings to the tender
+age of childhood; or does the analysis deceive us by introducing
+another factor? It is not difficult to find one. Every time anyone
+describes anything past, even if he be a historian, we have
+to take into account all that he unintentionally imports into
+that past period from present and intermediate times, thereby
+falsifying it. With the neurotic it is even doubtful whether this
+retroversion is altogether unintentional; we shall hear later on
+that there are motives for it and we must explore the whole
+subject of the ‘retrogressive phantasy-making’ which goes
+back to the remote past. We soon discover, too, that the hatred
+against the father has been strengthened by a number of motives
+arising in later periods and other relationships in life, and that
+the sexual desires towards the mother have been moulded into
+forms which would have been as yet foreign to the child. But
+it would be a vain attempt if we endeavoured to explain the
+whole of the Oedipus complex by ‘retrogressive phantasy-making,’
+and by motives originating in later periods of life. The infantile
+nucleus, with more or less of the accretions to it, remains intact,
+as is confirmed by direct observation of children.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The clinical fact which confronts us behind the form of the
+Oedipus complex as established by analysis now becomes of the
+greatest practical importance. We learn that at the time of
+puberty, when the sexual instinct first asserts its demands in
+full strength, the old familiar incestuous objects are taken up
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_283'>283</span>again and again invested by the Libido. The infantile object-choice
+was but a feeble venture in play, as it were, but it laid
+down the direction for the object-choice of puberty. At this
+time a very intense flow of feeling towards the Oedipus complex
+or in reaction to it comes into force; since their mental antecedents
+have become intolerable, however, these feelings must
+remain for the most part outside consciousness. From the time
+of puberty onward the human individual must devote himself
+to the great task of <em>freeing himself from the parents</em>; and only
+after this detachment is accomplished can he cease to be a child
+and so become a member of the social community. For a son,
+the task consists in releasing his libidinal desires from his mother,
+in order to employ them in the quest of an external love-object
+in reality; and in reconciling himself with his father if he has
+remained antagonistic to him, or in freeing himself from his
+domination if, in the reaction to the infantile revolt, he has
+lapsed into subservience to him. These tasks are laid down
+for every man; it is noteworthy how seldom they are carried
+through ideally, that is, how seldom they are solved in a manner
+psychologically as well as socially satisfactory. In neurotics,
+however, this detachment from the parents is not accomplished
+at all; the son remains all his life in subjection to his father,
+and incapable of transferring his Libido to a new sexual object.
+In the reversed relationship the daughter’s fate may be the
+same. In this sense the Oedipus complex is justifiably regarded
+as the kernel of the neuroses.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>You will imagine how incompletely I am sketching a large
+number of the connections bound up with the Oedipus complex
+which practically and theoretically are of great importance. I
+shall not go into the variations and possible inversions of it
+at all. Of its less immediate effects I should like to allude to
+one only, which proves it to have influenced literary production
+in a far-reaching manner. Otto Rank has shown in a very
+valuable work that dramatists throughout the ages have drawn
+their material principally from the Oedipus and incest complex
+and its variations and masked forms. It should also be remarked
+that long before the time of psycho-analysis the two criminal
+offences of Oedipus were recognized as the true expressions of
+unbridled instinct. Among the works of the Encyclopædist
+Diderot you will find the famous dialogue, <cite><span lang="fr">Le neveu de Rameau</span></cite>,
+which was translated into German by no less a person than
+Goethe. There you may read these remarkable words: <i><span lang="fr">Si le
+petit sauvage était abandonné à lui-même, qu’il conserva toute son
+imbecillité et qu’il réunit au peu de raison de l’enfant au berceau
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_284'>284</span>la violence des passions de l’homme de trente ans, il tordrait le cou
+à son père et coucherait avec sa mère</span></i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>There is yet one thing more which I cannot pass over. The
+mother-wife of Oedipus must not remind us of dreams in vain.
+Do you still remember the results of our dream-analyses, how
+so often the dream-forming wishes proved perverse and incestuous
+in their nature, or betrayed an unsuspected enmity to near and
+beloved relatives? We then left the source of these evil strivings
+of feeling unexplained. Now you can answer this question
+yourselves. They are dispositions of the Libido, and investments
+of objects by Libido, belonging to early infancy and long since
+given up in conscious life, but which at night prove to be still
+present and in a certain sense capable of activity. But, since
+all men and not only neurotic persons have perverse, incestuous,
+and murderous dreams of this kind, we may infer that those
+who are normal to-day have also made the passage through
+the perversions and the object-investments of the Oedipus complex;
+and that this is the path of normal development; only
+that neurotics show in a magnified and exaggerated form what
+we also find revealed in the dream-analyses of normal people.
+And this is one of the reasons why we chose the study of dreams
+to lead up to that of neurotic symptoms.</p>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_285'>285</span>
+ <h3 class='c002'><span class='c014'>TWENTY-SECOND LECTURE</span><br> ASPECTS OF DEVELOPMENT AND REGRESSION. ÆTIOLOGY</h3>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c006'>As we have heard, the Libido-function goes through an
+extensive development before it can enter the service of reproduction
+in the way that is called normal. Now I wish to
+show you the significance of this fact for the causation of the
+neuroses.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I think that it will be in agreement with the doctrines of
+general pathology to assume that such a development involves
+two dangers; first, that of <em>inhibition</em>, and secondly, that of
+<em>regression</em>. That is to say, owing to the general tendency to
+variation in biological processes it must necessarily happen that
+not all these preparatory phases will be passed through and
+completely outgrown with the same degree of success; some
+parts of the function will be permanently arrested at these early
+stages, with the result that with the general development there
+goes a certain amount of inhibited development.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Let us seek analogies to these processes in other fields. When
+a whole people leaves its dwellings in order to seek a new country,
+as often happened in earlier periods of human history, their
+entire number certainly did not reach the new destination. Apart
+from losses due to other causes, it must invariably have happened
+that small groups or bands of the migrating people halted on the
+way, and settled down in these stopping-places, while the main
+body went further. Or, to take a nearer comparison, you know
+that in the higher mammals the seminal glands, which are
+originally located deep in the abdominal cavity, begin a movement
+at a certain period of intra-uterine development which
+brings them almost under the skin of the pelvic extremity. In
+a number of males it is found that one of this pair of organs
+has remained in the pelvic cavity, or else that it has taken up
+a permanent position in the inguinal canal which both of them
+had to pass through on the journey, or at least that this canal
+has not closed as it normally should after the passage of the
+seminal glands through it. When as a young student I was
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_286'>286</span>doing my first piece of scientific research under v. Brücke, I
+was working on the origin of the dorsal nerve-roots in the spinal
+cord of a small fish, still very archaic in form. I found that the
+nerve-fibres of these roots grew out of large cells in the posterior
+horn of the grey matter, a condition which is no longer found in
+other vertebrates. But soon after I discovered that similar
+nerve-cells were to be found outside the grey matter along the
+whole length to the so-called spinal ganglion of the posterior
+roots, from which I concluded that the cells of this ganglion
+had moved out of the spinal cord along the nerve-roots. Evolutionary
+development shows this too; in this little fish, however,
+the whole route of this passage was marked by cells arrested on
+the way. Closer consideration will soon show you the weak points
+of these comparisons. Therefore let me simply say that we
+consider it possible that single portions of every separate sexual
+impulse may remain in an early stage of development, although
+at the same time other portions of it may have reached their
+final goal. You will see from this that we conceive each such
+impulse as a current continuously flowing from the beginning of
+life, and that we have divided its flow to some extent artificially
+into separate successive forward movements. Your impression
+that these conceptions require further elucidation is correct, but
+the attempt would lead us too far afield. We will, however,
+decide at this point to call this <em>arrest</em> in a component-impulse
+at an early stage a <span class='fss'>FIXATION</span> (of the impulse).</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The second danger in a development by stages such as this we
+call <span class='fss'>REGRESSION</span>; it also happens that those portions which have
+proceeded further may easily revert in a backward direction
+to these earlier stages. The impulse will find occasion to <em>regress</em>
+in this way when the exercise of its function in a later and more
+developed form meets with powerful external obstacles, which
+thus prevent it from attaining the goal of satisfaction. It is a
+short step to assume that fixation and regression are not independent
+of each other; the stronger the fixations in the path
+of development the more easily will the function yield before
+the external obstacles, by regressing on to those fixations; that
+is, the less capable of resistance against the external difficulties in
+its path will the developed function be. If you think of a migrating
+people who have left large numbers at the stopping-places on their
+way, you will see that the foremost will naturally fall back upon
+these positions when they are defeated or when they meet with
+an enemy too strong for them. And again, the more of their
+number they leave behind in their progress, the sooner will they
+be in danger of defeat.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_287'>287</span>It is important for comprehension of the neuroses that you
+should keep in mind this relation between fixation and regression.
+You will thus acquire a secure foothold from which to investigate
+the causation of the neuroses—their ætiology—which we shall
+soon consider.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>For the present we will keep to the question of regression.
+After what you have heard about the development of the Libido
+you may anticipate two kinds of regression; a return to the
+first objects invested with Libido, which we know to be incestuous
+in character, and a return of the whole sexual organization to
+earlier stages. Both kinds occur in the transference neuroses,
+and play a great part in their mechanism. In particular, the
+return to the first incestuous objects of the Libido is a feature
+found with quite fatiguing regularity in neurotics. There is
+much more to be said about the regressions of Libido if another
+group of neuroses, called the narcissistic, is taken into account;
+but this is not our intention at the moment. These affections
+yield conclusions about other developmental processes of the
+Libido-function, not yet mentioned, and also show us new types
+of regression corresponding with them. I think, however, that
+I had better warn you now above all not to confound <em>Regression</em>
+with <em>Repression</em> and that I must assist you to clear your minds
+about the relation between the two processes. <em>Repression</em>, as
+you will remember, is the process by which a mental act capable
+of becoming conscious (that is, one which belongs to the preconscious
+system) is made unconscious and forced back into
+the unconscious system. And we also call it <em>repression</em> when
+the unconscious mental act is not permitted to enter the adjacent
+preconscious system at all, but is turned back upon the threshold
+by the censorship. There is therefore no connection with
+sexuality in the concept ‘<em>repression</em>’; please mark this very
+carefully. It denotes a purely psychological process; and
+would be even better described as <em>topographical</em>, by which we
+mean that it has to do with the spatial relationships we assume
+within the mind, or, if we again abandon these crude aids to the
+formulation of theory, with the structure of the mental apparatus
+out of separate psychical systems.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The comparisons just now instituted showed us that hitherto
+we have not been using the word ‘<em>regression</em>’ in its general
+sense but in a quite specific one. If you give it its general sense,
+that of a reversion from a higher to a lower stage of development
+in general, then repression also ranges itself under regression;
+for repression can also be described as reversion to an earlier
+and lower stage in the development of a mental act. Only,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_288'>288</span>in repression this retrogressive direction is not a point of any
+moment to us; for we also call it repression in a dynamic sense
+when a mental process is arrested before it leaves the lower stage
+of the Unconscious. Repression is thus a topographic-dynamic
+conception, while regression is a purely descriptive one. But
+what we have hitherto called ‘<em>regression</em>’ and considered in its
+relation to fixation signified exclusively the return of <em>the Libido</em>
+to its former halting-places in development, that is, something
+which is essentially quite different from repression and quite
+independent of it. Nor can we call regression of the Libido
+a purely psychical process; neither do we know where to localize
+it in the mental apparatus; for though it may exert the most
+powerful influence upon mental life, the organic factor in it is
+nevertheless the most prominent.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Discussions of this sort tend to be rather dry; therefore
+let us turn to clinical illustrations of them in order to get a
+more vivid impression of them. You know that the group of
+the transference neuroses consists principally of hysteria and
+the obsessional neurosis. Now in hysteria, a regression of the
+Libido to the primary incestuous sexual objects is without
+doubt quite regular, but there is little or no regression to an earlier
+stage of sexual organization. Consequently the principal part
+in the mechanism of hysteria is played by repression. If I may
+be allowed to supplement by a construction the certain knowledge
+of this neurosis acquired up to the present I might describe the
+situation as follows: The fusion of the component-impulses under
+the primacy of the genital zone has been accomplished; but the
+results of this union meet with resistance from the direction of
+the preconscious system with which consciousness is connected.
+The genital organization therefore holds good for the Unconscious,
+but not also for the preconscious, and this rejection on the part of
+the preconscious results in a picture which has a certain likeness
+to the state prior to the primacy of the genital zone. It is nevertheless
+actually quite different. Of the two kinds of regression of
+the Libido, that on to an earlier phase of sexual organization
+is much the more striking. Since it is absent in hysteria and
+our whole conception of the neuroses is still far too much dominated
+by the study of hysteria which came first in point of time, the
+significance of Libido-regression was recognized much later than
+that of repression. We may be sure that our points of view
+will undergo still further extensions and alterations when we
+include consideration of still other neuroses (the narcissistic) in
+addition to hysteria and the obsessional neurosis.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In the obsessional neurosis, on the other hand, regression of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_289'>289</span>the Libido to the antecedent stage of the sadistic-anal organization
+is the most conspicuous factor and determines the form
+taken by the symptoms. The impulse to love must then mask
+itself under the sadistic impulse. The obsessive thought, “I
+should like to murder you,” means (when it has been detached
+from certain superimposed elements that are not, however,
+accidental but indispensable to it) nothing else but “I should
+like to enjoy love of you.” When you consider in addition
+that regression to the primary objects has also set in at the same
+time, so that this impulse concerns only the nearest and most
+beloved persons, you can gain some idea of the horror roused in
+the patient by these obsessive ideas and at the same time how
+unaccountable they appear to his conscious perception. But
+repression also has its share, a great one, in the mechanism of
+this neurosis, and one which is not easy to expound in a rapid
+survey such as this. Regression of Libido without repression
+would never give rise to a neurosis, but would result in a perversion.
+You will see from this that repression is the process which distinguishes
+the neuroses particularly and by which they are best
+characterized. Perhaps, however, I may have an opportunity
+at some time of expounding to you what we know of the mechanism
+of the perversions, and you will then see that there again nothing
+proceeds so simply as we should like to imagine in our constructions.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I think that you will be soonest reconciled to this exposition
+of fixation and regression of the Libido if you will regard it as
+preparatory to a study of the <em>ætiology</em> of the neuroses. So far
+I have only given you one piece of information on this subject,
+namely, that people fall ill of a neurosis when the possibility
+of satisfaction for the Libido is removed from them—they fall
+ill in consequence of a ‘privation,’ as I called it, therefore—and
+that their symptoms are actually substitutes for the missing
+satisfaction. This of course does not mean that every privation
+in regard to libidinal satisfaction makes everyone who meets
+with it neurotic, but merely that in all cases of neurosis investigated
+the factor of privation was demonstrable. The statement therefore
+cannot be reversed. You will no doubt have understood
+that this statement was not intended to reveal the whole secret
+of the ætiology of the neuroses, but that it merely emphasized
+an important and indispensable condition.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now in order to consider this proposition further we do not
+know whether to begin upon the nature of the privation or the
+particular character of the person affected by it. The privation
+is very rarely a comprehensive and absolute one; in order to have
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_290'>290</span>a pathogenic effect it would probably have to strike at the only
+form of satisfaction which that person desires, the only form
+of which he is capable. In general, there are very many ways
+by which it is possible to endure lack of libidinal satisfaction
+without falling ill. Above all we know of people who are able to
+take such abstinence upon themselves without injury; they
+are then not happy, they suffer from unsatisfied longing, but
+they do not become ill. We therefore have to conclude that
+the sexual impulse-excitations are exceptionally ‘plastic,’ if I
+may use the word. One of them can step in in place of another;
+if satisfaction of one is denied in reality, satisfaction of another
+can offer full recompense. They are related to one another
+like a network of communicating canals filled with fluid, and
+this in spite of their subordination to the genital primacy, a
+condition which is not at all easily reduced to an image. Further,
+the component-instincts of sexuality, as well as the united sexual
+impulse which comprises them, show a great capacity to change
+their object, to exchange it for another—i.e. for one more easily
+attainable; this capacity for displacement and readiness to
+accept surrogates must produce a powerful counter-effect to
+the effect of a privation. One amongst these processes serving
+as protection against illness arising from want has reached a
+particular significance in the development of culture. It consists
+in the abandonment, on the part of the sexual impulse, of an
+aim previously found either in the gratification of a component-impulse
+or in the gratification incidental to reproduction, and the
+adoption of a new aim—which new aim, though genetically
+related to the first, can no longer be regarded as sexual, but
+must be called social in character. We call this process
+<span class='fss'>SUBLIMATION</span>, by which we subscribe to the general standard
+which estimates social aims above sexual (ultimately selfish)
+aims. Incidentally, sublimation is merely a special case of
+the connections existing between sexual impulses and other,
+asexual ones. We shall have occasion to discuss this again in
+another context.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Your impression now will be that we have reduced want of
+satisfaction to a factor of negligible proportions by the recognition
+of so many means of enduring it. But no; this is not so: it
+retains its pathogenic power. The means of dealing with it
+are not always sufficient. The measure of unsatisfied Libido
+that the average human being can take upon himself is limited.
+The plasticity and free mobility of the Libido is not by any
+means retained to the full in all of us; and sublimation can
+never discharge more than a certain proportion of Libido, apart
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_291'>291</span>from the fact that many people possess the capacity for sublimation
+only in a slight degree. The most important of these limitations
+is clearly that referring to the mobility of the Libido, since it
+confines the individual to the attaining of aims and objects
+which are very few in number. Just remember that incomplete
+development of the Libido leaves behind it very extensive (and
+sometimes also numerous) Libido-fixations upon earlier phases
+of organization and types of object-choice, mostly incapable of
+satisfaction in reality; you will then recognize fixation of Libido
+as the second powerful factor working together with privation
+in the causation of illness. We may condense this schematically
+and say that Libido-fixation represents the internal, predisposing
+factor, while privation represents the external, accidental factor,
+in the ætiology of the neuroses.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I will take this opportunity to warn you against taking sides
+in a quite superfluous dispute. It is a popular habit in scientific
+matters to seize upon one side of the truth and set it up as the
+whole truth, and then in favour of that element of truth to dispute
+all the rest which is equally true. More than one faction has
+already split off in this way from the psycho-analytic movement;
+one of them recognizes only the egoistic impulses and denies
+the sexual; another perceives only the influence of real tasks in
+life but overlooks that of the individual’s past life, and so on.
+Now here is occasion for another of these antitheses and moot-points:
+Are the neuroses exogenous or endogenous diseases—the
+inevitable result of a certain type of constitution or the
+product of certain injurious (traumatic) events in the person’s
+life? In particular, are they brought about by the fixation of
+Libido and the rest of the sexual constitution, or by the pressure
+of privation? This dilemma seems to me about as sensible as
+another I could point to: Is the child created by the father’s
+act of generation or by the conception in the mother? You
+will properly reply: Both conditions are alike indispensable.
+The conditions underlying the neuroses are very similar, if not
+exactly the same. From the point of view of causation, cases
+of neurotic illness fall into a <em>series</em>, within which the two factors—sexual
+constitution and events experienced, or, if you wish,
+fixation of Libido and privation—are represented in such a way
+that where one of them predominates the other is proportionately
+less pronounced. At one end of the series stand those extreme
+cases of whom one can say: These people would have fallen ill
+whatever happened, whatever they experienced, however merciful
+life had been to them, because of their anomalous Libido-development.
+At the other end stand cases which call forth the opposite
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_292'>292</span>verdict—they would undoubtedly have escaped illness if life
+had not put such and such burdens upon them. In the intermediate
+cases in the series, more or less of the disposing factor
+(the sexual constitution) is combined with less or more of the
+injurious impositions of life. Their sexual constitution would not
+have brought about their neurosis if they had not gone through
+such and such experiences, and life’s vicissitudes would not
+have worked traumatically upon them if the Libido had been
+otherwise constituted. In this series I can perhaps admit a
+certain preponderance in the effect of the predisposing factor,
+but this admission again depends upon where you draw the line
+in marking the boundaries of nervousness.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I shall now suggest to you that we should call series such
+as these <em>complemental series</em>, and will inform you beforehand
+that we shall find occasion to establish others of this kind.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The tenacity with which the Libido holds to particular
+channels and particular objects, the ‘<em>adhesiveness</em>’ of the Libido,
+so to say, seems to be an independent factor, varying in individuals,
+the determining conditions of which are completely unknown
+to us, but the importance of which in the ætiology of the neuroses
+we shall certainly no longer underestimate. At the same time
+we should not overestimate the close relation between the two
+things. A similar ‘adhesiveness’ of the Libido occurs—from
+unknown causes—in normal people under numerous conditions,
+and is found as a decisive factor in those persons who in a certain
+sense are the extreme opposite of neurotics—namely, perverted
+persons. It was known before the time of psycho-analysis that
+in the anamnesis of such persons a very early impression, relating
+to an abnormal instinct-tendency or object-choice, is frequently
+discovered, to which the Libido of that person henceforth remains
+attached for life (Binet). It is often hard to say what has enabled
+this impression to exert such an intense power of attraction upon
+the Libido. I will describe a case of this kind observed by
+myself. A man to whom the genitals and all the other attractions
+in a woman now mean nothing can be roused to irresistible sexual
+excitation only by a shoe-clad foot of a certain shape; he can
+remember an event in his sixth year which determined this
+fixation of Libido. He was sitting upon a stool by the side of
+his governess who was to give him an English lesson. She was
+a plain, elderly, shrivelled old maid, with watery blue eyes and
+a snub nose, and on this day she had hurt her foot and had it
+therefore stretched out on a cushion in a velvet slipper, with
+the leg itself most decorously concealed. Later on, after a timid
+attempt at normal sexual activity during puberty, a thin sinewy
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_293'>293</span>foot like that of the governess became his only sexual object;
+and if still other features in the person reminded him of the type
+of woman represented by the English governess the man was
+helplessly attracted. This fixation of the Libido, however,
+rendered him not neurotic but perverse; he became, as we say,
+a foot-fetichist. So you see that although an excessive and,
+in addition, premature fixation of Libido is an indispensable
+condition in the causation of neurosis, the extent of its influence
+far exceeds the boundaries of the neuroses. This condition by
+itself is also as little decisive as the privation mentioned previously.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>So the problem of the causation of the neuroses seems to
+become more complicated. In fact, psycho-analytic investigation
+acquaints us with yet a new factor, not considered in our ætiological
+series, and best observed in someone whose previous good health
+is suddenly disturbed by falling ill of a neurosis. In these people
+signs of contradictory and opposed wishes, or, as we say, of
+<em>mental conflict</em>, are regularly found. One side of the personality
+stands for certain wishes, while another part struggles against
+them and fends them off. There is no neurosis without such a
+<span class='fss'>CONFLICT</span>. There might seem to be nothing very special in this;
+you know that mental life in all of us is perpetually engaged
+with conflicts that have to be decided. Therefore it would seem
+that special conditions must be fulfilled before such a conflict
+can become pathogenic; we may ask what these conditions
+are, what forces in the mind take part in these pathogenic conflicts,
+and what relation conflict bears to the other causative factors.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I hope to be able to give you answers to these questions which
+will be satisfactory although perhaps schematically condensed.
+Conflict is produced by privation, in that the Libido which lacks
+satisfaction is urged to seek other paths and other objects. A
+condition of it then is that these other paths and objects arouse
+disfavour in one side of the personality, so that a veto ensues,
+which at first makes the new way of satisfaction impossible.
+This is the point of departure for the formation of symptoms,
+which we shall follow up later. The rejected libidinal longings
+manage to pursue their course by circuitous paths, though not
+indeed without paying toll to the prohibition in the form of
+certain disguises and modifications. The circuitous paths are
+the ways of symptom-formation; the symptoms are the new or
+substitutive satisfactions necessitated by the fact of the privation.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The significance of the mental conflict can be defined in
+another way, thus: in order to become pathogenic <em>external</em>
+privation must be supplemented by <em>internal</em> privation. When this
+is so, the external and the internal privation relate of course to
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_294'>294</span>different paths and different objects; external privation removes
+one possibility of satisfaction, internal privation tries to exclude
+another possibility, and it is this second possibility which becomes
+the debatable ground of the conflict. I choose this form of
+presentation because it contains a certain implication; it implies
+that the internal impediment arose originally, in primitive phases
+of human development, out of real external obstacles.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But what are these forces out of which the prohibition against
+the libidinal longings proceeds, the other parties in the pathogenic
+conflict? Speaking very broadly, we may say that they are
+the non-sexual instincts. We include them all under the name
+‘<em>Ego-instincts</em>’; analysis of the transference neuroses offers
+no adequate opportunity for further investigation of them; at
+most we learn something of them from the resistances opposed
+to the analysis. The pathogenic conflict is, therefore, one between
+the Ego-instincts and the sexual instincts. In a whole series
+of cases it looks as though there might also be conflict between
+various purely sexual impulses; at bottom, however, this is
+the same thing, because of the two sexual impulses engaged in a
+conflict one will always be found ‘consistent with the Ego’
+(<i><span lang="de">ichgerecht</span></i>) while the other calls forth a protest from the Ego. It
+remains, therefore, a conflict between Ego and sexuality.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Over and over again when psycho-analysis has regarded
+something happening in the mind as an expression of the
+sexual instincts indignant protests have been raised to the effect
+that other instincts and other interests exist in mental life besides
+the sexual, that one should not derive “everything” from sexuality,
+and so on. Well, it is a real pleasure for once to be in agreement
+with one’s opponents. Psycho-analysis has never forgotten
+that non-sexual instincts also exist; it has been built upon a
+sharp distinction between sexual instincts and Ego-instincts; and
+in the face of all opposition it has insisted, <em>not</em> that they arise from
+sexuality, but that the neuroses owe their origin to a <em>conflict</em>
+between Ego and sexuality. It has no conceivable motive in
+denying the existence or the significance of the Ego-instincts
+while it investigates the part played by sexual instincts in disease
+and in life generally. Only, psycho-analysis has been destined
+to concern itself first and foremost with the sexual instincts,
+because in the transference neuroses these are the most accessible
+to investigation, and because it was obliged to study what others
+had neglected.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It is not any more accurate to say that psycho-analysis has
+not occupied itself at all with the non-sexual side of the personality.
+The very distinction between the Ego and sexuality
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_295'>295</span>has shown us with particular clearness that the Ego-instincts
+also undergo an important development which is neither entirely
+independent of the development of the Libido nor without influence
+upon the latter. We certainly understand the development of
+the Ego much less well than the development of the Libido,
+because it is only by the study of the narcissistic neuroses that
+we have just reached some hope of insight into the structure of the
+Ego. Nevertheless, we have already a notable attempt on the
+part of Ferenczi<a id='r48'></a><a href='#f48' class='c015'><sup>[48]</sup></a> to reconstruct theoretically the developmental
+stages of the Ego; and there are at least two points at which
+we have a secure foothold from which to examine this development
+further. We are not at all disposed to think that the libidinal
+interests of a human being are from the outset in opposition to
+the interests of self-preservation; the Ego is rather impelled at
+every stage to attempt to remain in harmony with the corresponding
+stage of sexual organization and to accommodate itself
+to that. The succession of the separate phases in the development
+of the Libido probably follows a prescribed course; it is undeniable,
+however, that this course may be influenced from the
+direction of the Ego. A certain parallelism, a definite correspondence
+between the phases in the two developments (of the Ego
+and of the Libido) may also be assumed; indeed, a disturbance
+in this correspondence may become a pathogenic factor. More
+important to us is the question how the Ego behaves when the
+Libido has undergone a powerful fixation at an earlier point in
+its development. The Ego may countenance the fixation and
+will then be perverse to that extent, or, what is the same thing,
+infantile; it may, however, hold itself averse from this attachment
+of Libido, the result of which is that where the Libido
+undergoes a <em>fixation</em> there the Ego institutes an act of
+<em>repression</em>.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In this way we arrive at the conclusion that the third factor
+in the ætiology of the neuroses, the susceptibility to conflict,
+is as much connected with the development of the Ego as with
+the development of the Libido; our insight into the causation
+of the neuroses is thus enlarged. First, there is the most general
+condition of privation, then the fixation of Libido (forcing it into
+particular channels), and thirdly, the <em>susceptibility to conflict</em>
+produced by the development of the Ego having repudiated
+libidinal excitations of that particular kind. The thing is therefore
+not so very obscure and intricate—as you probably thought it
+during the course of my exposition. To be sure, though, after
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_296'>296</span>all, we have not done with it yet; there is still something new
+to add and something we already know to dissect further.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In order to demonstrate the effect of the development of the
+Ego upon the tendency to conflict and therewith upon the
+causation of the neurosis, I will quote an example which, although
+entirely imaginary, is not at all improbable in any respect. I will
+give it the title of Nestroy’s farce: <cite>On the Ground-Floor and in the
+Mansion</cite>. Suppose that a caretaker is living on the ground-floor
+of a house, while the owner, a rich and well-connected man, lives
+above. They both have children, and we will assume that the
+owner’s little girl is permitted to play freely without supervision
+with the child of lower social standing. It may then very easily
+happen that their games become “naughty,” that is, take on
+a sexual character: that they play “father and mother,” watch
+each other in the performance of intimate acts, and stimulate
+each other’s genital parts. The caretaker’s daughter may have
+played the temptress in this, since in spite of her five or six
+years she has been able to learn a great deal about sexual matters.
+These occurrences, even though they are only kept up for a short
+period, will be enough to rouse certain sexual excitations in both
+children which will come to expression in the practice of masturbation
+for a few years, after the games have been discontinued.
+There is common ground so far, but the final result will be very
+different in the two children. The caretaker’s daughter will continue
+masturbation, perhaps up to the onset of menstruation, and
+then give it up without difficulty; a few years later will find
+a lover, perhaps bear a child; choose this or that path in life,
+perhaps become a popular actress and end as an aristocrat.
+Probably her career will turn out less brilliantly, but in any
+case she will be unharmed by the premature sexual activity,
+free from neurosis, and able to live her life. Very different is
+the result in the other child. She will very soon, while yet a child,
+acquire a sense of having done wrong; after a fairly short time
+she will give up the masturbatory satisfaction, though perhaps
+only with a tremendous struggle, but will nevertheless retain an
+inner feeling of subdued depression. When later on as a young
+girl she comes to learn something of sexual intercourse, she will
+turn from it with inexplicable horror and wish to remain ignorant.
+Probably she will then again suffer a fresh irresistible impulse to
+masturbation about which she will not dare to unburden herself
+to anyone. When the time comes for a man to choose her as a
+wife the neurosis will break out and cheat her out of marriage
+and the joy of life. If analysis makes it possible to obtain an
+insight into this neurosis, it will be found that this well-broughtup,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_297'>297</span>intelligent and idealistic girl has completely repressed her
+sexual desires; but that they are, unconsciously, attached to
+the few little experiences she had with the childish play-mate.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The differences which ensue in these two destinies in spite of
+the common experiences undergone, arise because in one girl the
+Ego has sustained a development absent in the other. To the
+caretaker’s daughter sexual activity seemed as natural and
+harmless in later years as in childhood. The gentleman’s daughter
+had been “well-brought-up” and had adopted the standards of
+her education. Thus stimulated, her Ego had formed ideals
+of womanly purity and absence of desire that were incompatible
+with sexual acts; her intellectual training had caused her to
+depreciate the feminine rôle for which she is intended. This
+higher moral and intellectual development in her Ego has brought
+her into conflict with the claims of her sexuality.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I will explore one more aspect of the development of the
+Libido to-day, both because it leads out upon certain wide prospects,
+and also because it is well-suited to justify the sharp, and not
+immediately obvious, line of demarcation we are wont to draw between
+Ego-instincts and sexual instincts. In considering the two
+developments undergone by the Ego and by the Libido we must
+emphasize an aspect which hitherto has received little attention.
+Both of them are at bottom inheritances, abbreviated repetitions
+of the evolution undergone by the whole human race through
+long-drawn-out periods and from prehistoric ages. In the
+development of the Libido this phylogenetic origin is readily
+apparent, I should suppose. Think how in one class of animals
+the genital apparatus is in closest relation with the mouth, in
+another it is indistinguishable from the excretory mechanism,
+in another it is part of the organs of motility; you will find a
+delightful description of these facts in W. Bölsche’s valuable
+book. One sees in animals all the various perversions, ingrained,
+so to speak, in the form taken by their sexual organizations.
+Now the phylogenetic aspect is to some extent obscured in man
+by the circumstance that what is fundamentally inherited is
+nevertheless individually acquired anew, probably because the
+same conditions that originally induced its acquisition still
+prevail and exert their influence upon each individual. I would
+say, where they originally created a new response they now
+stimulate a predisposition. Apart from this, it is unquestionable
+that the course of the prescribed development in each individual
+can be disturbed and altered by current impressions from without.
+But the power which has enforced this development upon mankind,
+and still to-day maintains its pressure in the same course, is
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_298'>298</span>known to us; it is, again, the privation exacted by reality; or,
+if we give it its great real name, it is <em>Necessity</em>, the struggle for
+life, <em>’ANATKH</em>. Necessity has been a severe task-mistress, and she
+has taught us a great deal. Neurotics are those of her children
+upon whom this severity has had evil effects, but that risk is
+inevitable in any education. Incidentally, this view of the
+struggle for existence as the motive force in evolution need not
+detract from the significance of “inner evolutionary tendencies,”
+if such are found to exist.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now it is very noteworthy that sexual instincts and self-preservative
+instincts do not behave alike when confronted with
+the necessity of real life. The self-preservative instincts and all
+that hangs together with them are more easily moulded; they
+learn early to conform to necessity and to adapt their development
+according to the mandates of reality. This is comprehensible,
+for they cannot obtain the objects they require by any
+other means, and without these objects the individual must
+perish. The sexual instincts are less easily moulded; for in
+the beginning they do not know any lack of objects. Since they
+are connected parasitically, as it were, with the other physical
+functions and at the same time can be auto-erotically gratified
+on their own body, they are at first isolated from the educative
+influence of real necessity; and in most people they retain throughout
+life, in some respect or other, this character of obstinacy
+and inaccessibility to influence which we call “unreasonableness.”
+Moreover, the educability of a young person as a rule comes
+to an end when sexual desire breaks out in its final strength.
+Educators know this and act accordingly; but perhaps they
+will yet allow themselves to be influenced by the results of psycho-analysis
+so that they will transfer the main emphasis in education
+to the earliest years of childhood, from the suckling period
+onward. The little human being is frequently a finished product
+in his fourth or fifth year, and only gradually reveals in later
+years what lies buried in him.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>To appreciate the full significance of this difference between
+the two groups of instincts we must digress some distance, and
+include one of those aspects which deserve to be called <em>economic</em>;
+we enter here upon one of the most important, but unfortunately
+one of the most obscure, territories of psycho-analysis. We
+may put the question whether a main purpose is discernible in
+the operation of the mental apparatus; and our first approach
+to an answer is that this purpose is directed to the attainment
+of pleasure. It seems that our entire psychical activity is bent
+upon <em>procuring pleasure</em> and <em>avoiding pain</em>, that it is automatically
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_299'>299</span>regulated by the <span class='sc'>Pleasure-principle</span>. Now of all things in the
+world we should like to know what are the conditions giving
+rise to pleasure and pain, but that is just where we fall short.
+We may only venture to say that pleasure is <em>in some way</em> connected
+with lessening, lowering, or extinguishing the amount
+of stimulation present in the mental apparatus; and that pain
+involves a heightening of the latter. Consideration of the most
+intense pleasure of which man is capable, the pleasure in the
+performance of the sexual act, leaves little doubt upon this
+point. Since pleasurable processes of this kind are bound up
+with the distribution of quantities of mental excitation and
+energy, we term considerations of this kind <em>economic</em> ones. It
+appears that we can describe the tasks and performances of the
+mental apparatus in another way and more generally than by
+emphasizing the attainment of pleasure. We can say that the
+mental apparatus serves the purpose of mastering and discharging
+the masses of supervening stimuli, the quantities of energy. It
+is quite plain that the sexual instincts pursue the aim of gratification
+from the beginning to the end of their development;
+throughout they keep up this primary function without alteration.
+At first the other group, the Ego-instincts, do the same; but
+under the influence of necessity, their mistress, they soon learn
+to replace the pleasure-principle by a modification of it. The
+task of avoiding pain becomes for them almost equal in importance
+to that of gaining pleasure; the Ego learns that it must inevitably
+go without immediate satisfaction, postpone gratification, learn
+to endure a degree of pain, and altogether renounce certain
+sources of pleasure. Thus trained, the Ego becomes “reasonable,”
+is no longer controlled by the pleasure-principle, but follows the
+<span class='sc'>Reality-principle</span>, which at bottom also seeks pleasure—although
+a delayed and diminished pleasure, one which is assured
+by its realization of fact, its relation to reality.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The transition from the pleasure-principle to the reality-principle
+is one of the most important advances in the development
+of the Ego. We already know that the sexual instincts
+follow late and unwillingly through this stage; presently we
+shall learn what the consequences are to man that his sexuality
+is satisfied with such a slight hold upon external reality. And
+now in conclusion one more observation relevant in this connection.
+If the Ego in mankind has its evolution like the Libido, you will
+not be surprised to hear that there exist ‘Ego-regressions’ too,
+and will wish to know the part this reversion of the Ego to earlier
+stages in development can play in neurotic disease.</p>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_300'>300</span>
+ <h3 class='c002'><span class='c014'>TWENTY-THIRD LECTURE</span><br> THE PATHS OF SYMPTOM-FORMATION</h3>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c006'>In the eyes of the general public the symptoms are the essence of
+a disease, and to them a cure means the removal of the symptoms.
+In medicine, however, we find it important to differentiate between
+symptoms and disease, and state that the disappearance of the
+symptoms is by no means the same as the cure of the disease.
+The only tangible element of the disease that remains after the
+removal of the symptoms, however, is the capacity to form new
+symptoms. Therefore for the moment let us adopt the lay
+point of view and regard a knowledge of the foundation of the
+symptoms as equivalent to understanding the disease.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The symptoms—of course we are here dealing with mental
+(or psychogenic) symptoms, and mental disease—are activities
+which are detrimental, or at least useless, to life as a whole;
+the person concerned frequently complains of them as obnoxious
+to him or they involve distress and suffering for him. The
+principal injury they inflict lies in the expense of mental energy
+they entail and, besides this, in the energy needed to combat
+them. Where the symptoms are extensively developed, these
+two kinds of effort may exact such a price that the person suffers
+a very serious impoverishment in available mental energy, which
+consequently disables him for all the important tasks of life.
+This result depends principally upon the amount of energy
+taken up in this way, therefore you will see that “illness” is
+essentially a practical conception. But if you look at the matter
+from a theoretical point of view and ignore this question of
+degree you can very well say that we are all ill, i.e. neurotic;
+for the conditions required for symptom-formation are demonstrable
+also in normal persons.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Of neurotic symptoms we already know that they are the
+result of a conflict arising when a new form of satisfaction of
+Libido is sought. The two powers which have entered into
+opposition meet together again in the symptom and become
+reconciled by means of the <em>compromise</em> contained in symptom-formation.
+That is why the symptom is capable of such resistance;
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_301'>301</span>it is sustained from both sides. We also know that one
+of the two partners to the conflict is the unsatisfied Libido,
+frustrated by reality and now forced to seek other paths to
+satisfaction. If reality remains inexorable, even when the
+Libido is prepared to take another object in place of that denied,
+the Libido will then finally be compelled to resort to regression,
+and to seek satisfaction in one of the organizations it had already
+surmounted or in one of the objects it had relinquished earlier.
+The Libido is drawn into the path of regression by the fixations
+it has left behind it at these places in its development.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now the path of perversion branches off sharply from that
+of neurosis. If these regressions do not call forth a prohibition
+on the part of the Ego, no neurosis results; the Libido succeeds
+in obtaining a real, although not a normal, satisfaction. But
+if the Ego, which controls not merely consciousness but also
+the approaches to motor innervation and hence the realization
+in actuality of mental impulses, is not in agreement with these
+regressions, conflict ensues. The Libido is turned off, blocked,
+as it were, and must seek an escape by which it can find an
+outlet for its ‘<em>charge of energy</em>’ in conformity with the demands
+of the pleasure-principle: it must elude, eschew the Ego. The
+fixations upon the path of development now regressively traversed—fixations
+against which the Ego had previously guarded itself
+by repressions—offer just such an escape. In streaming backward
+and re-‘investing’ these repressed ‘positions,’ the Libido
+withdraws itself from the Ego and its laws; but it also abandons
+all the training acquired under the influence of the Ego. It was
+docile as long as satisfaction was in sight; under the double
+pressure of external and internal privation it becomes intractable
+and harks back to former happier days. That is its essential
+unchangeable character. The ideas to which the Libido now
+transfers its ‘charge of energy’ belong to the unconscious system
+and are subject to the special processes characteristic of that
+system—namely, condensation and displacement. Conditions
+are thus set up which correspond exactly with those of dream-formation.
+Just as the latent dream, first formed in the Unconscious
+out of the thoughts proper, and constituting the fulfilment
+of an unconscious wish-phantasy, meets with some
+(pre)conscious activity which exerts a censorship upon it and
+permits, according to its verdict, the formation of a compromise
+in the manifest dream, so the ideas to which the Libido is
+attached (‘libido-representatives’) in the Unconscious have still
+to contend with the power of the preconscious Ego. The opposition
+that has arisen against it in the Ego follows it as a ‘<em>counter</em><em>charge</em>’
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_302'>302</span>and forces it to adopt a form of expression by which the
+opposing forces also can at the same time express themselves.
+In this way the symptom then comes into being, as a derivative,
+distorted in manifold ways, of the unconscious libidinal wish-fulfilment,
+as a cleverly chosen ambiguity with two completely
+contradictory significations. In this last point alone is there a
+difference between dream-formation and symptom-formation;
+for the preconscious purpose in dream-formation is merely to
+preserve sleep and to allow nothing that would disturb it to
+penetrate consciousness; it does not insist upon confronting
+the unconscious wish-impulse with a sharp prohibiting “No,
+on the contrary.” It can be more tolerant because a sleeping
+person is in a less dangerous position; the condition of sleep is
+enough in itself to prevent the wish from being realized in actuality.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>You see that this escape of the Libido under the conditions
+of conflict is rendered possible by the existence of fixations.
+The regressive investment (with Libido) of these fixations leads
+to a circumventing of the repressions and to a discharge—or
+a satisfaction—of the Libido, in which the conditions of a compromise
+have nevertheless to be maintained. By this détour
+through the Unconscious and the old fixations the Libido finally
+succeeds in attaining to a real satisfaction, though the satisfaction
+is certainly of an exceedingly restricted kind and hardly recognizable
+as such. Let me add two remarks on this outcome.
+First, will you notice how closely connected the Libido and the
+Unconscious, on the one hand, and the Ego, consciousness, and
+reality, on the other, show themselves to be, although there were
+no such connections between them originally; and secondly,
+let me tell you that all I have said and have still to say on this
+point concerns the neurosis of hysteria only.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Where does the Libido find the fixations it needs in order
+to break through the repressions? In the activities and experiences
+of infantile sexuality, in the component-tendencies
+and the objects of childhood which have been relinquished and
+abandoned. It is to them, therefore, that the Libido turns back.
+The significance of childhood is a double one; on the one hand
+the congenitally-determined instinct-dispositions are first shown
+at that time, and secondly, other instincts are then first awakened
+and activated by external influences and accidental events experienced.
+In my opinion we are quite justified in laying down
+this dichotomy. That the innate predisposition comes to expression
+will certainly not be disputed; but analytic observation
+even requires us to assume that purely accidental experiences
+in childhood are capable of inducing fixations of Libido. Nor
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_303'>303</span>do I see any theoretical difficulty in this. Constitutional predispositions
+are undoubtedly the after-effects of the experiences
+of an earlier ancestry; they also have been at one time acquired;
+without such acquired characters there would be no heredity.
+And is it conceivable that the acquisition of characters which
+will be transmitted further should suddenly cease in the generation
+which is being observed to-day? The importance of the
+infantile experiences should not, however, be entirely overlooked,
+as so often happens, in favour of ancestral experiences or of
+experiences in adult life; but on the contrary they should be
+particularly appreciated. They are all the more pregnant with
+consequences because they occur at a time of uncompleted
+development, and for this very reason are likely to have a
+traumatic effect. The work done by Roux and others on the
+mechanism of development has shown that a needle pricked
+into an embryonic cell-mass undergoing division results in serious
+disturbances of the development; the same injury to a larva
+or a full-grown animal would be innocuous.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The Libido-fixation of an adult, which we have referred to
+as representing the constitutional factor in the ætiology of the
+neuroses, may therefore now be divided into two further elements:
+the inherited predisposition and the predisposition acquired in
+early childhood. Since a schematic mode of presentation is
+always acceptable to a student, let us formulate these relations
+as follows:</p>
+
+<table class='table1'>
+<colgroup>
+<col class='colwidth19'>
+<col class='colwidth19'>
+<col class='colwidth22'>
+<col class='colwidth19'>
+<col class='colwidth19'>
+</colgroup>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c019'><em>Causation of Neurosis</em> =</td>
+ <td class='c019'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c019'>Predisposition resulting from Libido-fixation</td>
+ <td class='c019'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c020'>+ Accidental (<em>traumatic</em>) Experiences</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c019'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c009'><span class='xxlarge'>↙</span></td>
+ <td class='c019'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c013'><span class='xxlarge'>↘</span></td>
+ <td class='c020'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c019'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c019'><hr></td>
+ <td class='c019'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c019'><hr></td>
+ <td class='c020'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c019'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c019'><span class='xxlarge'>↓</span></td>
+ <td class='c019'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c019'><span class='xxlarge'>↓</span></td>
+ <td class='c020'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c019'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c019'>Sexual Constitution (<em>Ancestral experiences</em>)</td>
+ <td class='c019'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c019'>Infantile Experiences</td>
+ <td class='c020'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c018'>The hereditary sexual constitution provides a great variety of
+predispositions, according as this or that component-impulse,
+alone or in combination with others, is specially strongly accentuated.
+Together with the infantile experiences the sexual
+constitution forms another ‘complemental series,’ quite similar
+to that already described as being formed out of the predisposition
+and accidental experiences of an adult. In each series similar
+extreme cases are met with, and also similar degrees and relationships
+between the factors concerned. It would be appropriate
+at this point to consider whether the most striking of the two
+kinds of Libido-regression (that which reverts to earlier stages
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_304'>304</span>of sexual organization) is not predominantly conditioned by the
+hereditary constitutional factor; but the answer to this question
+is best postponed until a wider range of forms of neurotic disease
+can be considered.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now let us devote attention to the fact that analytic investigation
+shows the Libido of neurotics to be attached to their infantile
+sexual experiences. In this light these experiences seem to be
+of enormous importance in the lives and illnesses of mankind.
+This importance remains undiminished in so far as the therapeutic
+work of analysis is concerned; but regarded from another point
+of view it is easy to see that there is a danger of a misunderstanding
+here, one which might delude us into regarding life too
+exclusively from the angle of the situation in neurotics. The
+importance of the infantile experiences is after all diminished
+by the reflection that the Libido reverts regressively to them
+<em>after</em> it has been driven from its later positions. This would
+lead us towards the opposite conclusion, that the Libido-experiences
+had no importance at the time of their occurrence,
+but only acquired it later by regression. You will remember
+that we discussed a similar alternative before, in dealing with
+the Oedipus complex.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>To decide this point is again not difficult. The statement
+is undoubtedly correct that regression greatly augments the
+investment of the infantile experiences with Libido—and with
+that their pathogenic significance; but it would be misleading
+to allow this alone to become decisive. Other considerations
+must be taken into account as well. To begin with, observation
+shows in a manner excluding all doubt that infantile experiences
+have their own importance which is demonstrated already during
+childhood. There are, indeed, neuroses in children too; in
+their neuroses the factor of displacement backwards in time is
+necessarily much diminished, or quite absent, the outbreak of
+illness following immediately upon a traumatic experience. The
+study of infantile neuroses guards us from many risks of misunderstanding
+the neuroses of adults, just as children’s dreams
+gave us the key to comprehension of the dreams of adults.
+Neurosis in children is very common, far more common than is
+usually supposed. It is often overlooked, regarded as a manifestation
+of bad behaviour or naughtiness, and often subdued
+by the authorities in the nursery; but in retrospect it is always
+easily recognizable. It appears most often in the form of
+anxiety-hysteria; we shall learn what that means on another
+occasion. When a neurosis breaks out in later life analysis
+invariably reveals it to be a direct continuation of that infantile
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_305'>305</span>neurosis, which had perhaps been expressed in a veiled and
+incipient form only; as has been said, however, there are cases
+in which the childish nervousness is carried on into lifelong
+illness without a break. In a few instances we have been able
+to analyse a child actually in a condition of neurosis; far more
+often we have had to be satisfied with the retrospective insight
+into a childhood-neurosis that can be gained through someone
+who has fallen ill in mature years, a situation in which due
+corrections and precautions must not be neglected.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In the second place, it would certainly be inexplicable that
+the Libido should regress so regularly to the time of childhood
+if there had been nothing there which could exert an attraction
+upon it. The fixation upon certain stages of development,
+which we assume, only has meaning if we regard it as attaching
+to itself a definite amount of libidinal energy. Finally, I may point
+out that a complemental relationship exists here between the
+intensity and pathogenic importance of the <em>infantile</em> and of the
+<em>later</em> experiences, again a similar relationship to that found in
+the other two series we have already studied. There are cases
+in which the whole accent of causation falls on the sexual experiences
+in childhood; cases in which these impressions undoubtedly
+had a traumatic effect, nothing more than the average
+sexual constitution and its immaturity being required to supplement
+them. Then there are others in which all the accent
+lies on the later conflicts, and the analytic emphasis upon the
+childhood-impressions seems to be the effect of regression alone.
+There exist, therefore, the two extremes—‘inhibited development’
+and ‘regression’—and between them every degree of
+combination of the two factors.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This state of things has a certain interest for those looking
+to pedagogy for the prevention of neuroses by early intervention
+in the matter of the child’s sexual development. As long as
+attention is directed mainly to the infantile sexual experiences
+one would think everything in the way of prophylaxis of later
+neurosis could be done by ensuring that this development should
+be retarded and the child secured against this kind of experience.
+But we know that the conditions causing neurosis are more
+complicated than this and that they cannot be influenced in a
+general way by attending to one factor only. Strict supervision
+in childhood loses value because it is helpless against the constitutional
+factor; more than this, it is less easy to carry out
+than specialists in education imagine; and it entails two new
+risks, which are not to be lightly disregarded. It may accomplish
+too much; in that it favours an exaggerated degree of sexual
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_306'>306</span>repression which is harmful in its effects, and it sends the child
+into life without power to resist the urgent demands of his
+sexuality that must be expected at puberty. It therefore remains
+most doubtful how far prophylaxis in childhood can go with
+advantage, and whether a changed attitude to actuality would
+not constitute a better point of departure for attempts to forestall
+the neuroses.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Let us return to consideration of the symptoms. They yield
+a satisfaction in place of one lacking in reality; they achieve
+this by means of a regression of the Libido to a previous time of
+life, with which regression is indissolubly connected, a reversion
+to earlier phases in the object-choice or in the organization.
+We learned some time ago that the neurotic is in some way <em>tied</em>
+to a period in his past life; we know now that this period in
+the past is one in which his Libido could attain satisfaction,
+one in which he was happy. He looks back on his life-story,
+seeking some such period, and goes on seeking it, even if he
+must go back to the time when he was a suckling infant to find
+it according to his recollection or his imagination of it under
+later influences. In some way the symptom reproduces that
+early infantile way of satisfaction, disguised though it is by the
+censorship implicit in the conflict, converted as it usually is into
+a sensation of suffering, and mingled with elements drawn from
+the experiences leading up to the outbreak of the illness. The
+kind of satisfaction which the symptom brings has much about
+it which estranges us, quite apart from the fact that the person
+concerned is unaware of the satisfaction and perceives this that
+we call satisfaction much more as suffering, and complains of it.
+This transformation belongs to the mental conflict, by the pressure
+of which the symptom had to be formed; what was at one time
+a satisfaction must to-day arouse resistance or horror in him.
+We are familiar with a simple but instructive instance of such
+a change of feeling: the same child that sucked milk with
+voracity from its mother’s breast often shows, some years later,
+a strong dislike of milk which can with difficulty be overcome
+by training; this dislike is intensified to the point of horror if the
+milk or any other kind of liquid containing it has a skin formed
+upon it. It is possible that this skin calls up reverberations of
+a memory of the mother’s breast, once so ardently desired; it
+is true that the traumatic experience of weaning has intervened
+meanwhile.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>There is still something else which makes the symptoms
+seem remarkable and inexplicable as a means of libidinal satisfaction.
+They so entirely fail to remind us of all that we are
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_307'>307</span>accustomed normally to connect with satisfaction. They are
+mostly quite independent of an object and thus have given up
+a relation to external reality. We understand this as a consequence
+of the rejection of the reality-principle and the return
+to the pleasure-principle; it is also, however, a return to a kind
+of amplified auto-erotism, the kind which offered the sexual
+instinct its first gratifications. In the place of effecting a change
+in the outer world they set up a change in the body itself; that
+is, an internal action instead of an external one, an adaptation
+instead of an activity—from a phylogenetic point of view again
+a very significant regression. We shall understand this better
+when we consider it in connection with a new factor yet to be
+learnt from among those which analytic research has yielded
+in regard to symptom-formation. Further, we remember that
+in symptom-formation the same unconscious processes are at
+work as in dream-formation, namely, condensation and displacement.
+Like the dream, the symptom represents something as
+fulfilled, a satisfaction infantile in character; but by the utmost
+condensation this satisfaction can be compressed into a single
+sensation or innervation, or by farthest displacement can be
+whittled away to a tiny detail out of the entire libidinal complex.
+It is no wonder that we often find it difficult to recognize in
+the symptom the libidinal satisfaction which we suspect and
+can always verify in it.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I have indicated that we have still to learn of a new element;
+it is really something most surprising and bewildering. You
+know that from analysis of symptoms we arrive at a knowledge
+of the infantile experiences to which the Libido is fixated and
+out of which the symptoms are made up. Now the astonishing
+thing is that these scenes of infancy are not always true. Indeed,
+in the majority of cases they are untrue, and in some cases they
+are in direct opposition to historical truth. You will see that
+this discovery is more likely than any other to discredit
+either the analysis which leads to such results, or the patient,
+upon whose testimony the analysis and comprehension of the
+neuroses as a whole is built up. There is besides this still something
+utterly bewildering about it. If the infantile experiences
+brought to light by the analysis were in every case real we should
+have the feeling that we were on firm ground; if they were
+invariably falsified and found to be inventions and phantasies
+of the patient’s we should have to forsake this insecure foothold
+and save ourselves some other way. But it is neither one thing
+nor the other; for what we find is that the childhood-experiences
+reconstructed or recollected in analysis are on some occasions
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_308'>308</span>undeniably false, while others are just as certainly quite true,
+and that in most cases truth and falsehood are mixed up. So the
+symptoms are thus at one minute reproductions of experiences
+which actually took place and which one can credit with an
+influence on the fixation of the Libido; and at the next a reproduction
+of phantasies of the patient’s to which, of course, it is
+difficult to ascribe any ætiological significance. It is hard to
+find one’s way here. We may perhaps find our first clue in a
+discovery of a similar kind, namely, that the meagre childish
+recollections which people have always, long before analysis,
+consciously preserved can be falsified in the same way, or at
+least can contain a generous admixture of truth and falsehood;
+evidence of error in them is nearly always plainly visible, and
+so we have at least the reassurance that not the analysis, but
+the patient in some way, must bear the responsibility for this
+unexpected disappointment.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>After a little reflection we can easily understand what it
+is that is so bewildering in this matter. It is the depreciation
+of reality, the neglect of the difference between reality and
+phantasy; we are tempted to be offended with the patient for
+taking up our time with invented stories. According to our
+way of thinking heaven and earth are not farther apart than
+fiction from reality, and we value the two quite differently. The
+patient himself, incidentally, takes the same attitude when he
+is thinking normally. When he brings forward the material
+that leads us to the wished-for situations (which underlie the
+symptoms and are formed upon the childhood-experiences),
+we are certainly in doubt at first whether we have to deal with
+reality or with phantasies. Decision on this point becomes
+possible later by means of certain indications, and we are then
+confronted with the task of making this result known to the
+patient. This is never accomplished without difficulty. If we
+tell him at the outset that he is now about to bring to light the
+phantasies in which he has shrouded the history of his childhood,
+just as every race weaves myths about its forgotten early history,
+we observe to our dissatisfaction that his interest in pursuing the
+subject further suddenly declines—he also wishes to find out
+facts and despises what is called “imagination.” But if we
+leave him to believe until this part of the work has been carried
+through that we are investigating the real events of his early
+years, we run the risk of being charged with the mistake later
+and of being laughed at for our apparent gullibility. It takes
+him a long time to understand the proposal that phantasy and
+reality are to be treated alike and that it is to begin with of no
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_309'>309</span>account whether the childhood-experiences under consideration
+belong to the one class or to the other. And yet this is obviously
+the only correct attitude towards these products of his mind.
+They have indeed also a kind of reality; it is a fact that the
+patient has created these phantasies, and for the neurosis this
+fact is hardly less important than the other—if he had really
+experienced what they contain. In contrast to <em>material</em> reality
+these phantasies possess <em>psychical</em> reality, and we gradually come
+to understand that <em>in the world of neurosis</em> <span class='fss'>PSYCHICAL REALITY</span>
+<em>is the determining factor</em>.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Among the occurrences which continually recur in the story
+of a neurotic’s childhood, and seem hardly ever absent, are some
+of particular significance which I therefore consider worthy of
+special attention. As models of this type I will enumerate:
+observation of parental intercourse, seduction by an adult, and
+the threat of castration. It would be a great mistake to suppose
+that they never occur in reality; on the contrary, they are often
+confirmed beyond doubt by the testimony of older relatives.
+Thus, for example, it is not at all uncommon for a little boy,
+who is beginning to play with his penis and has not yet learnt
+that he must conceal such activities, to be threatened by parents
+or nurses that his member or his offending hand will be cut off.
+Parents will often admit the fact on being questioned, since
+they imagine that such intimidation was the right course to
+take; many people have a clear conscious recollection of this
+threat, especially if it took place in later childhood. If the
+mother or some other woman makes the threat she usually shifts
+the execution of it to someone else, indicating that the father
+or the doctor will perform the deed. In the famous <cite>Struwelpeter</cite>
+by the Frankfort physician for children, Hoffmann, which owes
+its popularity precisely to his understanding of the sexual and
+other complexes of children, you will find the castration idea
+modified and replaced by cutting off the thumbs as a punishment
+for stubborn sucking of them. It is, however, highly improbable
+that the threat of castration has been delivered as often as would
+appear from the analysis of a neurotic. We are content to
+understand that the child concocts a threat of this kind out of
+its knowledge that auto-erotic satisfactions are forbidden, on the
+basis of hints and allusions, and influenced by the impression
+received on discovering the female genital organ. Similarly, it
+is not at all impossible that a small child, credited as he is with
+no understanding and no memory, may be witness of the sexual
+act on the part of his parents or other adults in other families
+besides those of the proletariat; and there is reason to think
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_310'>310</span>that the child can <em>subsequently</em> understand the impression received
+and react to it. But when this act of intercourse is described
+with minute details which can hardly have been observed, or when
+it appears, as it most frequently does, to have been performed
+from behind, <i><span lang="la">more ferarum</span></i>, there can be little doubt that this
+phantasy has grown out of the observation of copulating animals
+(dogs) and that its motive force lies in the unsatisfied skoptophilia
+(gazing-impulse) of the child during puberty. The greatest feat
+achieved by this kind of phantasy is that of observing parental
+intercourse while still unborn in the mother’s womb.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The phantasy of seduction has special interest, because only
+too often it is no phantasy but a real remembrance; fortunately,
+however, it is still not as often real as it seemed at first from the
+results of analysis. Seduction by children of the same age or older
+is more frequent than by adults; and when girls who bring forward
+this event in the story of their childhood fairly regularly introduce
+the father as the seducer, neither the phantastic character
+of this accusation nor the motive actuating it can be doubted.
+When no seduction has occurred, the phantasy is usually employed
+to cover the childhood period of auto-erotic sexual activity; the
+child evades feelings of shame about onanism by retrospectively
+attributing in phantasy a desired object to the earliest period. Do
+not suppose, however, that sexual misuse of children by the nearest
+male relatives is entirely derived from the world of phantasy;
+most analysts will have treated cases in which such occurrences
+actually took place and could be established beyond doubt;
+only even then they belonged to later years of childhood and had
+been transposed to an earlier time.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>All this seems to lead to but one impression, that childhood
+experiences of this kind are in some way necessarily required by
+the neurosis, that they belong to its unvarying inventory. If
+they can be found in real events, well and good; but if reality
+has not supplied them they will be evolved out of hints and
+elaborated by phantasy. The effect is the same, and even to-day
+we have not succeeded in tracing any variation in the results
+according as phantasy or reality plays the greater part in these
+experiences. Here again is one of those complemental series so
+often referred to already; it is certainly the strangest of all
+those we have encountered. Whence comes the necessity for
+these phantasies, and the material for them? There can be
+no doubt about the instinctive sources; but how is it to be
+explained that the same phantasies are always formed with the
+same content? I have an answer to this which I know will seem
+to you very daring. I believe that these <em>primal phantasies</em> (as
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_311'>311</span>I should like to name these, and certainly some others also)
+are a phylogenetic possession. In them the individual, wherever
+his own experience has become insufficient, stretches out beyond
+it to the experience of past ages. It seems to me quite possible
+that all that to-day is narrated in analysis in the form of phantasy,
+seduction in childhood, stimulation of sexual excitement upon
+observation of parental coitus, the threat of castration—or rather,
+castration itself—was in prehistoric periods of the human family
+a reality; and that the child in its phantasy simply fills out the
+gaps in its true individual experiences with true prehistoric
+experiences. We have again and again been led to suspect
+that more knowledge of the primordial forms of human development
+is stored up for us in the psychology of the neuroses than
+in any other field we may explore.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now these things that we have been discussing require us to
+consider more closely the origin and meaning of that mental
+activity called “phantasy-making.” In general, as you know,
+it enjoys high esteem, although its place in mental life has not
+been clearly understood. I can tell you as much as this about it.
+You know that the Ego in man is gradually trained by the influence
+of external necessity to appreciate reality and to pursue the
+reality-principle, and that in so doing it must renounce temporarily
+or permanently various of the objects and aims—not only sexual—of
+its desire for pleasure. But renunciation of pleasure has always
+been very hard to man; he cannot accomplish it without some kind
+of compensation. Accordingly he has evolved for himself a mental
+activity in which all these relinquished sources of pleasure and
+abandoned paths of gratification are permitted to continue their
+existence, a form of existence in which they are free from the
+demands of reality and from what we call the exercise of ‘testing
+reality.’ Every longing is soon transformed into the idea of
+its fulfilment; there is no doubt that dwelling upon a wish-fulfilment
+in phantasy brings satisfaction, although the knowledge
+that it is not reality remains thereby unobscured. In
+phantasy, therefore, man can continue to enjoy a freedom from
+the grip of the external world, one which he has long relinquished
+in actuality. He has contrived to be alternately a pleasure-seeking
+animal and a reasonable being; for the meagre satisfaction
+that he can extract from reality leaves him starving. “There
+is no doing without accessory constructions,” said Fontane. The
+creation of the mental domain of phantasy has a complete counterpart
+in the establishment of “reservations” and “nature-parks”
+in places where the inroads of agriculture, traffic, or industry
+threaten to change the original face of the earth rapidly into
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_312'>312</span>something unrecognizable. The “reservation” is to maintain
+the old condition of things which has been regretfully sacrificed
+to necessity everywhere else; there everything may grow and
+spread as it pleases, including what is useless and even what is
+harmful. The mental realm of phantasy is also such a reservation
+reclaimed from the encroaches of the reality-principle.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The best-known productions of phantasy have already been
+met by us; they are called day-dreams, and are imaginary
+gratifications of ambitious, grandiose, erotic wishes, dilating the
+more extravagantly the more reality admonishes humility and
+patience. In them is shown unmistakably the essence of
+imaginary happiness, the return of gratification to a condition
+in which it is independent of reality’s sanction. We know
+that these day-dreams are the kernels and models of night-dreams;
+fundamentally the night-dream is nothing but a day-dream
+distorted by the nocturnal form of mental activity
+and made possible by the nocturnal freedom of instinctive
+excitations. We are already familiar with the idea that a
+day-dream is not necessarily conscious, that unconscious day-dreams
+also exist; such unconscious day-dreams are therefore
+just as much the source of night-dreams as of neurotic
+symptoms.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The significance of phantasy for symptom-formation will
+become clear to you in what follows. We said that under privation
+the Libido regressively invests the positions it had left, but to
+which nevertheless some portions of its energy had remained
+attached. We shall not retract or correct this statement, but
+we shall have to interpolate a connecting-link in it. How does
+the Libido find its way back to these fixation-points? Now
+the objects and channels which have been forsaken by the Libido
+have not been forsaken in every sense; they, or their derivatives,
+are still retained to some degree of intensity in the conceptions
+of phantasy. The Libido has only to withdraw on to the phantasies
+in order to find the way open to it back to all the repressed
+fixations. These phantasies had enjoyed a certain sort of toleration;
+no conflict between them and the Ego had developed,
+however sharp an opposition there was between them, as long
+as a certain condition was preserved—a condition of a <em>quantitative</em>
+nature, now disturbed by the return of the Libido-stream on to
+the phantasies. By this accession, the investment of the phantasies
+with energy becomes so much augmented that they become
+assertive and begin to press towards realization; then, however,
+conflict between them and the Ego becomes unavoidable.
+Although previously they were preconscious or conscious, now
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_313'>313</span>they are subject to repression from the side of the Ego and are
+exposed to the attraction exerted from the side of the Unconscious.
+The Libido travels from the phantasies, now unconscious, to their
+sources in the Unconscious—back to its own fixation-points again.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The return of the Libido on to phantasy is an intermediate
+step on the way to symptom-formation which well deserves a
+special designation. C. G. Jung has coined for it the very appropriate
+name of <span class='fss'>INTROVERSION</span>, but inappropriately he uses it
+also to describe other things. We will adhere to the position that
+<em>introversion</em> describes the deflection of the Libido away from the
+possibilities of real satisfaction and its excessive accumulation
+upon phantasies previously tolerated as harmless. An introverted
+person is not yet neurotic, but he is in an unstable condition;
+the next disturbance of the shifting forces will cause symptoms
+to develop, unless he can yet find other outlets for his pent-up
+Libido. The unreal character of neurotic satisfaction and the
+disregard of the difference between phantasy and reality are
+already determined by the delay at this stage of introversion.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>You will doubtless have noticed that in these last remarks
+I have introduced a new factor into the concatenation of the
+ætiological chain—namely, the <em>quantity</em>, the magnitude of the
+energies concerned; we must always take this factor into account
+as well. A purely qualitative analysis of the ætiological conditions
+does not suffice; or, to put it in another way, a purely <em>dynamic</em>
+conception of these processes is insufficient, the <em>economic</em> aspect
+is also required. We have to realize that the conflict between
+the two forces in opposition does not break out until a certain
+intensity in the degree of investment is reached, even though
+the substantive conditions have long been in existence. In the
+same way, the pathogenic significance of the constitutional factor
+is determined by the preponderance of one of the component-instincts
+in <em>excess</em> over another in the disposition; it is even
+possible to conceive disposition as qualitatively the same in all
+men and only differentiated by this quantitative factor. No less
+important is this quantitative factor for the capacity to withstand
+neurotic illness; it depends upon the <em>amount</em> of undischarged
+Libido that a person can hold freely suspended, and upon <em>how large</em>
+a portion of it he can deflect from the sexual to a non-sexual
+goal in sublimation. The final aim of mental activity, which can
+be qualitatively described as a striving towards pleasure and
+avoidance of pain, is represented economically in the task of
+mastering the distribution of the quantities of excitation
+(stimulus-masses) present in the mental apparatus, and in preventing
+the accumulation of them which gives rise to pain.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_314'>314</span>I set out to tell you as much as this about symptom-formation
+in the neuroses. Yes, but I must not neglect to mention once
+more that everything said to-day relates only to symptom-formation
+in hysteria. Even the obsessional neurosis shows great
+differences, although the essentials are the same. The ‘counter-charges’
+from the Ego against the demands made by instincts
+for satisfaction, mentioned already in connection with hysteria,
+are more strongly marked in the obsessional neurosis and govern
+the clinical picture in the form of what we call ‘reaction-formations.’
+Similar and more extensive deviations still are found in
+the other neuroses, in which field researches into the mechanisms
+of symptom-formation are not yet complete in any direction.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Before you leave to-day I should like to direct your attention
+for a moment to a side of phantasy-life of very general interest.
+There is, in fact, a path from phantasy back again to reality,
+and that is—art. The artist has also an introverted disposition
+and has not far to go to become neurotic. He is one who is
+urged on by instinctive needs which are too clamorous; he
+longs to attain to honour, power, riches, fame, and the love of
+women; but he lacks the means of achieving these gratifications.
+So, like any other with an unsatisfied longing, he turns away
+from reality and transfers all his interest, and all his Libido
+too, on to the creation of his wishes in the life of phantasy, from
+which the way might readily lead to neurosis. There must
+be many factors in combination to prevent this becoming the
+whole outcome of his development; it is well known how often
+artists in particular suffer from partial inhibition of their capacities
+through neurosis. Probably their constitution is endowed with
+a powerful capacity for sublimation and with a certain flexibility
+in the repressions determining the conflict. But the way back to
+reality is found by the artist thus: He is not the only one who has
+a life of phantasy; the intermediate world of phantasy is sanctioned
+by general human consent, and every hungry soul looks
+to it for comfort and consolation. But to those who are not
+artists the gratification that can be drawn from the springs of
+phantasy is very limited; their inexorable repressions prevent
+the enjoyment of all but the meagre day-dreams which can
+become conscious. A true artist has more at his disposal. First
+of all he understands how to elaborate his day-dreams, so that
+they lose that personal note which grates upon strange ears
+and become enjoyable to others; he knows too how to modify
+them sufficiently so that their origin in prohibited sources is not
+easily detected. Further, he possesses the mysterious ability
+to mould his particular material until it expresses the ideas of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_315'>315</span>his phantasy faithfully; and then he knows how to attach to
+this reflection of his phantasy-life so strong a stream of pleasure
+that, for a time at least, the repressions are out-balanced and
+dispelled by it. When he can do all this, he opens out to others the
+way back to the comfort and consolation of their own unconscious
+sources of pleasure, and so reaps their gratitude and admiration;
+then he has won—through his phantasy—what before he could
+only win in phantasy: honour, power, and the love of women.</p>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_316'>316</span>
+ <h3 class='c002'><span class='c014'>TWENTY-FOURTH LECTURE</span><br> ORDINARY NERVOUSNESS</h3>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c006'>After such a difficult piece of work as we got through in our
+last lecture I shall leave the subject for a time and turn to my
+audience.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>For I know that you are dissatisfied. You imagined that
+<cite>Introductory Lectures on Psycho-Analysis</cite> would be something
+quite different. You expected illustrations from life instead of
+theories; you will tell me that the story of the two children,
+on the ground-floor and in the mansion, revealed something of
+the causation of neurosis to you, except that it ought to have
+been an actual fact instead of an invention of my own. Or you
+will say that, when at the beginning I described two symptoms
+to you (not also imaginary, let us hope), and unfolded the solution
+of them and their connection with the lives of the patients, it
+threw some light on the meaning of symptoms, and you had hoped
+I would continue in the same way. Instead of doing so I gave
+you long-drawn-out and very obscure theories which were never
+complete, and to which I was constantly adding something;
+I dealt with conceptions which I had not yet introduced to you;
+I let go of descriptive explanation and took up the dynamic
+aspect and dropped this again for a so-called economic one;
+made it difficult for you to understand how many of these technical
+terms mean the same thing and are only exchanged for one
+another on account of euphony; I let vast conceptions, such as
+those of the pleasure and reality principles, and the inherited
+residue of phylogenetic development, appear, and then instead
+of explaining anything to you I let them drift away before
+your eyes out of sight.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Why did I not begin the introduction to the study of the
+neuroses with what you all know of nervousness, a thing that
+has long roused your interest, or with the peculiar nature of
+nervous persons, their incomprehensible reactions to human
+intercourse and external influences, their excitability, their
+unreliability, and their inability to do well in anything? Why
+not lead you step by step from an explanation of the simple
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_317'>317</span>everyday forms of nervousness to the problems of the enigmatic
+extreme manifestations?</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Indeed, I cannot deny any of this or say that you are wrong.
+I am not so much in love with my powers of presentation as
+to imagine that every blemish in it is a peculiar charm. I think
+myself that I might with advantage to you have proceeded
+differently, and, indeed, such was my intention. But one cannot
+always carry through a reasoned scheme; something in the
+material itself often intervenes and takes possession of one and
+turns one from one’s first intentions. Even such an ordinary
+task as the arrangement of familiar material is not entirely subject
+to the author’s will; it comes out in its own way and one can
+but wonder afterwards why it happened so and not otherwise.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>One of the reasons probably is that my theme, an introduction
+to psycho-analysis, no longer covers this section dealing
+with the subject of the neuroses. The introduction to psycho-analysis
+lies in the study of errors and of dreams; the theory
+of neurosis is psycho-analysis itself. I do not think that in
+such a short time I could have given you any knowledge of the
+material contained in the theory of the neuroses except in this
+very concentrated form. It was a matter of presenting to you
+in their proper context the sense and meaning of symptoms,
+together with the external and internal conditions and mechanisms
+of symptom-formation. This I attempted to do; it is more or
+less the core of what psycho-analysis is able to offer to-day. In
+conjunction with it there was much to be said about the Libido
+and its development, and something about that of the Ego. You
+were already prepared by the preliminary lectures for the main
+principles of our method and for the broad aspects involved in
+the conceptions of the Unconscious and of repression (resistance).
+In one of the following lectures you will learn at what point the
+work of psycho-analysis finds its organic continuation. So far
+I have not concealed from you that all our results proceed from
+the study of one single group only of nervous disorders—namely,
+the transference neuroses; and even so I have traced out the
+mechanism of symptom-formation only in the hysterical neurosis.
+Though you will probably have gained no very thorough knowledge
+and have not retained every detail, yet I hope that you have
+acquired a general idea of the means with which psycho-analysis
+works, the problems it has to deal with, and the results it has
+to offer.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I have ascribed to you a wish that I had begun the subject
+of the neuroses with a description of the neurotic’s behaviour,
+and of the ways in which he suffers from his disorder, protects
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_318'>318</span>himself against it, and adapts himself to it. This is certainly
+a very interesting subject, well worth studying, and not difficult
+to treat; nevertheless there are reasons against beginning with this
+aspect. The danger is that the Unconscious will be overlooked,
+the great importance of the Libido ignored, and that everything
+will be judged as it appears to the patient’s own Ego. Now it
+is obvious that his Ego is not a reliable and impartial authority.
+The Ego is after all the force which denies the existence of the
+Unconscious and has subjected it to repressions; how then can
+we trust its good faith where the Unconscious is concerned?
+That which has been repressed consists first and foremost of
+the repudiated claims of the sexuality; it is perfectly self-evident
+that we shall never learn their extent and their significance
+from the Ego’s view of the matter. As soon as the nature of repression
+begins to dawn upon us we are advised not to allow one
+of the two contending parties, and certainly not the victorious
+one, to be judge in the dispute. We are forewarned against
+being misled by what the Ego tells us. According to its evidence
+it would appear to have been the active force throughout, so
+that the symptoms arise by its will and agency; we know that to
+a large extent it has played a passive part, a fact which it then
+endeavours to conceal and to gloss over. It is true that it cannot
+always keep up this pretence—in the symptoms of the obsessional
+neurosis it has to confess to being confronted by something alien
+which it must strenuously resist.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It is certainly plain sailing enough for anyone who does not
+heed these warnings against taking the falsifications of the Ego
+at their face-value; he will escape all the opposition which
+psycho-analysis has to encounter in accentuating the Unconscious,
+sexuality, and the passivity of the Ego. He can agree with
+Alfred Adler that the “nervous character” is the cause of the
+neurosis, instead of the result; but he will not be in a position
+to account for a single detail of symptom-formation or a single
+dream.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>You will ask: May it not be possible to do justice to the
+part played by the Ego in nervousness and in symptom-formation
+without absolutely glaring neglect of the other factors discovered
+by psycho-analysis? I reply: Certainly it must be possible,
+and some time or other it will be done; but the work which
+lies at hand for psycho-analysis is not suited for a beginning at
+this end. One can, no doubt, predict the point at which this
+task also will be included. There are neuroses, called by us
+the <em>narcissistic</em> neuroses, in which the Ego is far more deeply
+involved than in those we have studied; analytic investigation
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_319'>319</span>of these disorders will enable us to estimate impartially and
+reliably the share taken by the Ego in neurotic disease.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>One of the relations the Ego bears to its neurosis is, however,
+so conspicuous that it was quite appreciable from the beginning.
+It never seems to be absent; but it is most clearly discernible
+in a form of disorder which we are far from understanding, the
+traumatic neurosis. You must know that in the causation
+and mechanism of all the various different forms of neurosis
+the same factors are found at work over and over again, only
+that in one type this factor and in another type that factor is
+of greatest significance in symptom-formation. It is just the
+same as with the personnel of a theatrical company, where every
+member plays a special type of part—hero, confidant, villain,
+etc; each of them will choose a different piece for his own benefit-performance.
+Hence, the phantasies which are transformed
+into the symptoms are nowhere so manifest as in hysteria; the
+‘counter-charges’ or reaction-formations of the Ego dominate
+the picture in the obsessional neurosis; the mechanism which
+in dreams we called ‘secondary elaboration’ is the prominent
+feature in the delusions of paranoia, and so on.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In the <em>traumatic neuroses</em>, especially in those arising from
+the terrors of war, we are particularly impressed by a self-seeking,
+egoistic motive, a straining towards protection and
+self-interest; this alone perhaps could not produce the disease,
+but it gives its support to the latter and maintains it once it
+has been formed. This tendency aims at protecting the Ego from
+the dangers which led by their imminence to the outbreak of
+illness; nor does it permit of recovery until a repetition of the
+dangers appear to be no longer possible, or until some gain in
+compensation for the danger undergone has been received.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The Ego takes a similar interest in the origin and maintenance
+of all the other forms of neurosis; we have said already that the
+symptom is supported by the Ego because one side of it offers
+a satisfaction to the repressing Ego-tendency. More than this,
+a solution of the conflict by a symptom-formation is the most
+convenient one, most in accordance with the pleasure-principle;
+for it undoubtedly spares the Ego a severe and painful piece
+of internal labour. There are indeed cases in which the physician
+himself must admit that the solution of a conflict by a neurosis
+is the one most harmless and most tolerable socially. Do not be
+astonished to hear then that the physician himself occasionally
+takes sides with the illness which he is attacking. It is not
+for him to confine himself in all situations in life to the part of
+fanatic about health; he knows that there is <em>other</em> misery in the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_320'>320</span>world besides neurotic misery—real unavoidable suffering—that
+necessity may even demand of a man that he sacrifice his health
+to it, and he learns that such suffering in one individual may often
+avert incalculable hardship for many others. Therefore, although
+it may be said of every neurotic that he has taken ‘<em>flight into
+illness</em>,’ it must be admitted that in many cases this flight is
+fully justified, and the physician who has perceived this state
+of things will silently and considerately retire.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But let us continue our discussion without regard to these
+exceptional cases. In the ordinary way it is apparent that by
+flight into neurosis the Ego gains a certain internal ‘<em>advantage
+through illness</em>,’ as we call it; under certain conditions a tangible
+external advantage, more or less valuable in reality, may be
+combined with this. To take the commonest case of this kind:
+a woman who is brutally treated and mercilessly exploited by
+her husband fairly regularly takes refuge in a neurosis, if her
+disposition admits of it. This will happen if she is too cowardly
+or too conventional to console herself secretly with another man,
+if she is not strong enough to defy all external reasons against
+it and separate from her husband, if she has no prospect of being
+able to maintain herself or of finding a better husband, and last
+of all, if she is still strongly attached sexually to this brutal man.
+Her illness becomes her weapon in the struggle against him,
+one that she can use for her protection, or misuse for purposes
+of revenge. She can complain of her illness, though she probably
+dare not complain of her marriage; her doctor is her ally; the
+husband who is otherwise so ruthless is required to spare her,
+to spend money on her, to grant her absence from home and thus
+some freedom from marital oppression. Whenever this external
+or ‘accidental’ advantage through illness is at all pronounced,
+and no substitute for it can be found in reality, you need not
+look forward very hopefully to influencing the neurosis by your
+therapy.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>You will now say that what I have just told you about the
+‘advantage through illness’ is all in favour of the view I have
+rejected, namely, that the Ego itself desires the neurosis and
+creates it. But just a moment! Perhaps it means merely
+this: that the Ego is pleased to accept the neurosis which it is
+in any case unable to prevent, and that if there is anything at
+all to be made out of it it makes the best of it. This is only
+one side of the matter. In so far as there is advantage in it
+the Ego is quite happy to be on good terms with a neurosis,
+but there are also disadvantages to be considered. As a rule
+it is soon apparent that by accepting a neurosis the Ego has
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_321'>321</span>made a bad bargain. It has paid too heavily for the solution
+of the conflict; the sufferings entailed by the symptoms are
+perhaps as bad as those of the conflict they replace, and they
+may quite probably be very much worse. The Ego wishes
+to be rid of the pain of the symptoms, but not to give up its
+advantage through illness; and that is just what it cannot
+succeed in doing. It appears therefore that the Ego was not
+quite so actively concerned in the matter throughout as it had
+thought, and we will keep this well in mind.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>If, as physicians, you have much to do with neurotics, you
+will soon cease to expect that those who complain most bitterly
+of their illness will be most ready to accept your help and make
+least difficulty—quite the contrary. You will at all events
+easily understand that everything which contributes to the
+advantage through illness reinforces the resistance arising from
+the repressions, and increases the therapeutic difficulties. And
+there is yet another kind of advantage through illness, one which
+supervenes later than that born with the symptom, so to speak.
+When such a mental organization as the disease has persisted
+for a considerable time it seems finally to acquire the character
+of an independent entity; it displays something like a self-preservative
+instinct; it forms a kind of pact, a <i><span lang="la">modus vivendi</span></i>,
+with the other forces in mental life, even with those fundamentally
+hostile to it, and opportunities can hardly fail to arise in which it
+once more manifests itself as useful and expedient, thus acquiring
+a <em>secondary function</em> which again strengthens its position. Instead
+of taking an example from pathology let us consider a striking
+illustration in everyday life. A capable working-man earning
+his living is crippled by an accident in the course of his employment;
+he can work no more, but he gets a small periodical dole
+in compensation and learns how to exploit his mutilation as
+a beggar. His new life, although so inferior, nevertheless is
+supported by the very thing which destroyed his old life; if you
+were to remove his disability you would deprive him for a time
+of his means of subsistence, for the question would arise whether
+he would still be capable of resuming his former work. When a
+secondary exploitation of the illness such as this is formed in
+a neurosis we can range it alongside the first and call it a ‘<em>secondary</em>
+advantage through illness.’</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I should like to advise you in a general way not to underestimate
+the practical importance of the advantage through illness,
+and yet not to be too much impressed by its theoretical significance.
+Apart from the exceptions previously recognized, this
+factor always reminds one of the illustrations of “Intelligence
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_322'>322</span>in Animals” by Oberländer in <i><span lang="de">Fliegende Blätter</span></i>. An Arab
+is riding a camel along a narrow path cut in the side of a
+steep mountain. At a turn in the path he suddenly finds himself
+confronted by a lion ready to spring at him. There is no escape;
+on one side the abyss, on the other the precipice; retreat and
+flight are impossible; he gives himself up for lost. Not so the
+camel. He takes one leap with his rider into the abyss—and
+the lion is left a spectator. The remedies provided by neurosis
+avail the patient no better as a rule; perhaps because the solution
+of the conflict by a symptom-formation is after all an automatic
+process which may show itself inadequate to meet the demands
+of life, and involves man in a renunciation of his best and highest
+powers. The more honourable choice, if there be a choice, is to
+go down in fair fight with destiny.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I still owe you a further explanation of my motive in not
+taking ordinary nervousness as my starting-point. Perhaps
+you think I avoided doing so because it would have been more
+difficult to bring in evidence of the sexual origin of the neuroses
+in that way; but in this you would be mistaken. In the transference
+neuroses the symptoms have to be submitted to interpretation
+before we arrive at this; but in the ordinary forms of
+what are called the <span class='fss'>ACTUAL NEUROSES</span> the ætiological significance
+of the sexual life is a crudely obvious fact which courts notice.
+I became aware of it more than twenty years ago, as one day
+I began to wonder why, when we examine nervous patients, we
+so invariably exclude from consideration all matters concerning
+their sexual life. Investigations on this point led to the sacrifice
+of my popularity with my patients, but in a very short time my
+efforts had brought me to this conclusion: that no neurosis—actual
+neurosis, I meant—is present where sexual life is normal.
+It is true that this statement ignores the individual differences
+in people rather too much, and it also suffers from the indefinite
+connotation inseparable from the word “normal”; but as
+a broad outline it has retained its value to this day. At that
+time I got so far as to be able to establish particular connections
+between certain forms of nervousness and certain injurious
+sexual conditions; I do not doubt that I could repeat these
+observations to-day if I still had similar material for investigation.
+I noticed often enough that a man who contented himself with
+some kind of incomplete sexual satisfaction, e.g. with manual
+masturbation, would suffer from a definite type of actual neurosis,
+and that this neurosis would promptly give way to another form
+if he adopted some other equally unsatisfactory form of sexual
+life. I was then in a position to infer the change in his mode
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_323'>323</span>of sexual life from the alteration in the patient’s condition;
+and I learnt to abide stubbornly by my conclusions until I had
+overcome the prevarications of my patients and had compelled
+them to give me confirmation. It is true that they then thought
+it advisable to seek other physicians who would not take so much
+interest in their sexual life.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It did not escape me at that time either that sexuality was
+not always indicated as the cause of a neurosis; one person
+certainly would fall ill because of some injurious sexual condition,
+but another because he had lost his fortune or recently sustained
+a severe organic illness. The explanation of these variations
+was revealed later, when insight was obtained into the interrelationships
+suspected between the Ego and the Libido; and
+the further this subject was explored the more satisfactory
+became our insight into it. A person only falls ill of a neurosis
+when the Ego loses its capacity to deal in some way or other
+with the Libido. The stronger the Ego the more easily can it
+accomplish this task; every weakening of the Ego, from whatever
+cause, must have the same effect as an increase in the demands
+of the Libido; that is, make a neurosis possible. There are
+yet other and more intimate relations between the Ego and the
+Libido, which I shall not go into now as we have not yet come
+to them in the course of our discussions. The most essential
+and most instructive point for us is that the fund of energy
+supporting the symptoms of a neurosis, in every case and regardless
+of the circumstances inducing their outbreak, is provided by the
+Libido, which is thus put to an abnormal use.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now I must point out to you the decisive difference between the
+symptoms of the <em>actual neuroses</em> and those of the <em>psychoneuroses</em>,
+with the first group of which (the transference neuroses) we
+have hitherto been so much occupied. In both the actual
+neuroses and the psychoneuroses the symptoms proceed from
+the Libido; that is, they are abnormal ways of using it, substitutes
+for satisfaction of it. But the symptoms of an actual neurosis—headache,
+sensation of pain, an irritable condition of some
+organ, the weakening or inhibition of some function—have
+no ‘meaning,’ no signification in the mind. Not merely are
+they manifested principally in the body, as also happens, for
+instance with hysterical symptoms, but they are in themselves
+purely and simply physical processes; they arise without any of
+the complicated mental mechanisms we have been learning
+about. They really are, therefore, what psychoneurotic symptoms
+were for so long held to be. But then, how can they be expressions
+of the Libido which we have come to know as a force at work
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_324'>324</span>in the mind? Now, really, the answer to that is very simple.
+Let me resurrect one of the very first objections ever made
+against psycho-analysis. It was said that the theories were
+an attempt to account for neurotic symptoms by psychology
+alone and that the outlook was consequently hopeless, since
+no illness could ever be accounted for by psychological theories.
+These critics were pleased to forget that the sexual function
+is not a purely mental thing, any more than it is merely a
+physical thing. It affects bodily life as well as mental life.
+Having learnt that the symptoms of the psychoneuroses express
+the mental consequences of some disturbance in this function,
+we shall not be surprised to find that the actual neuroses represent
+the direct somatic consequences of sexual disturbances.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Clinical medicine gives us a useful hint (recognized by many
+different investigators) towards comprehension of the actual
+neuroses. In the details of their symptomatology, and also
+in the peculiarity by which all the bodily systems and functions
+are affected together, they exhibit an unmistakable similarity
+with pathological conditions resulting from the chronic effect
+or the sudden removal of foreign toxins—i.e. with states of
+intoxication or of abstinence. The two groups of affections
+are brought still closer together by comparison with conditions
+like Basedow’s disease<a id='r49'></a><a href='#f49' class='c015'><sup>[49]</sup></a> that have also been found to result
+from poisoning, not, however, from poisons derived externally,
+but from such as arise in the internal metabolism. In my opinion
+these analogies necessitate our regarding the neuroses as the
+effects of disturbances in the sexual metabolism, due either to
+more of these sexual toxins being produced than the person
+can dispose of, or else to internal and even mental conditions
+which interfere with the proper disposal of these substances.
+Assumptions of this kind about the nature of sexual desire have
+found acceptance in the mind of the people since the beginning
+of time; love is called an “intoxication,” it can be induced by
+“potions”—in these ideas the agency at work is to some extent
+projected on to the outer world. We find occasion at this point
+to remember the erotogenic zones, and to reflect upon the proposition
+that sexual excitation may arise in the most various
+organs. Beyond this the subject of ‘sexual metabolism’ or
+the ‘chemistry of sexuality’ is an empty chapter: we know
+nothing about it, and cannot even determine whether to assume
+two kinds of sexual substances, to be called ‘male’ and ‘female,’
+or to content ourselves with <em>one</em> sexual toxin as the agent of all
+the stimuli effected by the Libido. The edifice of psycho-analytic
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_325'>325</span>doctrine which we have erected is in reality but a superstructure,
+which will have to be set on its organic foundation
+at some time or other; but this foundation is still unknown
+to us.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>As a science psycho-analysis is characterized by the methods
+with which it works, not by the subject-matter with which it
+deals. These methods can be applied without violating their
+essential nature to the history of civilization, to the science of
+religion, and to mythology as well as to the study of the neuroses.
+Psycho-Analysis aims at and achieves nothing more than the
+discovery of the unconscious in mental life. The problems of
+the actual neuroses, in which the symptoms probably arise through
+direct toxic injury, offer no point of attack for psycho-analysis;
+it can supply little towards elucidation of them and must leave
+this task to biological and medical research. Now perhaps
+you understand better why I chose this arrangement of my
+material. If I had intended an <cite>Introduction to the Study of the
+Neuroses</cite> it would undoubtedly have been correct to begin with
+the simple forms of (actual) neuroses and proceed from them
+to the more complicated psychical disorders resulting from
+disturbances of the Libido. I should have had to collect from
+various quarters what we know or think we know about the
+former, and about the latter psycho-analysis would have been
+introduced as the most important technical means of obtaining
+insight into these conditions. An <cite>Introduction to Psycho-Analysis</cite>
+was what I had undertaken and announced, however; I thought
+it more important to give you an idea of psycho-analysis than to
+teach you something about the neuroses; and therefore the
+actual neuroses which yield nothing towards the study of psycho-analysis
+could not suitably be put in the foreground. I think
+too that my choice was the wiser for you, since the radical axioms
+and far-reaching connections of psycho-analysis make it worthy
+of every educated person’s interest; the theory of the neuroses,
+however, is a chapter of medicine like any other.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>However, you are justified in expecting that we should take
+some interest in the actual neuroses; their close clinical connection
+with the psychoneuroses even necessitates this. I will tell you
+then that we distinguish three pure forms of actual neurosis:
+<em>neurasthenia</em>, <em>anxiety-neurosis</em> and <em>hypochondria</em>. Even this
+classification has been disputed; the terms are certainly all in
+use, but their connotation is vague and unsettled. There are
+some medical men who are opposed to all discrimination in the
+confusing world of neurotic manifestations, who object to any
+distinguishing of clinical entities or types of disease, and do not
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_326'>326</span>even recognize the difference between actual neuroses and psychoneuroses;
+in my opinion they go too far, and the direction they
+have chosen does not lead to progress. The three kinds of
+neurosis named above are occasionally found in a pure form;
+more frequently, it is true, they are combined with one another
+and with a psychoneurotic affection. This fact need not make us
+abandon the distinctions between them. Think of the difference
+between the science of minerals and that of ores in mineralogy:
+the minerals are classified individually, in part no doubt because
+they are frequently found as crystals, sharply differentiated
+from their surroundings; the ores consist of mixtures of minerals
+which have indeed coalesced, not accidentally, but according
+to the conditions at their formation. In the theory of the neuroses
+we still understand too little of the process of their development
+to formulate anything similar to our knowledge of ores; but
+we are certainly working in the right direction in first isolating
+from the mass the recognizable clinical elements, which are
+comparable to the individual minerals.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>A noteworthy connection between the symptoms of the actual
+neuroses and the psychoneuroses adds a valuable contribution
+to our knowledge of symptom-formation in the latter; the
+symptom of the actual neurosis is frequently the nucleus and
+incipient stage of the psychoneurotic symptom. A connection
+of this kind is most clearly observable between neurasthenia
+and the transference neurosis known as conversion-hysteria,
+between the anxiety-neurosis and anxiety-hysteria, but also
+between hypochondria and forms of a neurosis which we shall
+deal with later on, namely, paraphrenia (dementia præcox and
+paranoia). As an example, let us take an hysterical headache
+or backache. Analysis shows that by means of condensation
+and displacement it has become a substitutive satisfaction for
+a whole series of libidinal phantasies or memories; at one time,
+however, this pain was real, a direct symptom of a sexual toxin,
+the bodily expression of a sexual excitation. We do not by
+any means maintain that all hysterical symptoms have a nucleus
+of this kind, but it remains true that this very often is so, and
+that all effects (whether normal or pathological) of the libidinal
+excitation upon the body are specially adapted to serve the
+purposes of hysterical symptom-formation. They play the part
+of the grain of sand which the oyster envelopes in mother-of-pearl.
+The temporary signs of sexual excitation accompanying the
+sexual act serve the psychoneurosis in the same way, as the
+most suitable and convenient material for symptom-formation.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>There is a similar process of special diagnostic and therapeutic
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_327'>327</span>interest. In persons who are disposed to be neurotic without
+having yet developed a neurosis on a grand scale, some morbid
+organic condition—perhaps an inflammation, or an injury—very
+commonly sets the work of symptom-formation in motion;
+so that the latter process swiftly seizes upon the symptom supplied
+by reality, and uses it to represent those unconscious phantasies
+that have only been lying in wait for some means of expression.
+In such a case the physician will try first one therapy and then
+the other; will either endeavour to abolish the organic foundation
+on which the symptom rests, without troubling about the
+clamorous neurotic elaboration of it; or will attack the neurosis
+which this opportunity has brought to birth, while leaving on
+one side the organic stimulus which incited it. Sometimes one
+and sometimes the other procedure will be found justified by
+success; no general rules can be prescribed for mixed cases of
+this kind.</p>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_328'>328</span>
+ <h3 class='c002'><span class='c014'>TWENTY-FIFTH LECTURE</span><br> ANXIETY</h3>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c006'>You will certainly have judged the information that I gave
+you in the last lecture about ordinary nervousness as the most
+fragmentary and most inadequate of all my accounts. I know
+that it was; and I expect that nothing surprised you more than
+that I made no mention of the ‘anxiety’ which most nervous
+people complain of and themselves describe as their most terrible
+burden. Anxiety or dread can really develop tremendous intensity
+and in consequence be the cause of the maddest precautions.
+But in this matter at least I wished not to cut you short; on
+the contrary, I had determined to put the problem of nervous
+anxiety to you as clearly as possible and to discuss it at some
+length.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><em>Anxiety</em> (or <em>dread</em>)<a id='r50'></a><a href='#f50' class='c015'><sup>[50]</sup></a> itself needs no description; everyone has
+personally experienced this sensation, or to speak more correctly
+this affective condition, at some time or other. But in my opinion
+not enough serious consideration has been given to the question
+why nervous persons in particular suffer from anxiety so much
+more intensely, and so much more altogether, than others.
+Perhaps it has been taken for granted that they should; indeed,
+the words “nervous” and “anxious” are used interchangeably,
+as if they meant the same thing. This is not justifiable, however;
+there are anxious people who are otherwise not in any way
+nervous and there are, besides, neurotics with numerous symptoms
+who exhibit no tendency to dread.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>However this may be, one thing is certain, that the problem
+of anxiety is a nodal point, linking up all kinds of most important
+questions; a riddle, of which the solution must cast a flood of light
+upon our whole mental life. I do not claim that I can give you
+a complete solution; but you will certainly expect psycho-analysis
+to have attacked this problem too in a different manner
+from that adopted by academic medicine. Interest there centres
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_329'>329</span>upon the anatomical processes by which the anxiety condition
+comes about. We learn that the medulla oblongata is stimulated,
+and the patient is told that he is suffering from a neurosis in the
+vagal nerve. The medulla oblongata is a wondrous and beauteous
+object; I well remember how much time and labour I devoted
+to the study of it years ago. But to-day I must say I know of
+nothing less important for the psychological comprehension of
+anxiety than a knowledge of the nerve-paths by which the excitations
+travel.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>One may consider anxiety for a long time without giving a
+thought to nervousness. You will understand me at once
+when I describe this form of anxiety as <span class='sc'>Real Anxiety</span>,
+in contrast to neurotic anxiety. Now <em>real</em> anxiety or dread
+appears to us a very natural and rational thing; we should
+call it a reaction to the perception of an external danger,
+of an injury which is expected and foreseen; it is bound
+up with the reflex of flight, and may be regarded as an
+expression of the instinct of self-preservation. The occasions of
+it, i.e. the objects and situations about which anxiety is felt, will
+obviously depend to a great extent upon the state of the person’s
+knowledge and feeling of power regarding the outer world. It
+seems to us quite natural that a savage should be afraid of a
+cannon or of an eclipse of the sun, while a white man who can
+handle the weapon and foretell the phenomenon remains unafraid
+in the same situation. At other times it is knowledge
+itself which inspires fear, because it reveals the danger sooner;
+thus a savage will recoil with terror at the sight of a track in the
+jungle which conveys nothing to an ignorant white man, but
+means that some wild beast is near at hand; and an experienced
+sailor will perceive with dread a little cloud on the horizon
+because it means an approaching hurricane, while to a passenger
+it looks quite insignificant.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The view that real anxiety is rational and expedient, however,
+will on deeper consideration be admitted to need thorough
+revision. In face of imminent danger the only expedient behaviour,
+actually, would be first a cool appraisement of the forces
+at disposal as compared with the magnitude of the danger at hand,
+and then a decision whether flight or defence, or possibly attack,
+offered the best prospect of a successful outcome. Dread, however,
+has no place in this scheme; everything to be done will be
+accomplished as well and probably better if dread does not
+develop. You will see too that when dread is excessive it becomes
+in the highest degree inexpedient; it paralyses every action,
+even that of flight. The reaction to danger usually consists
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_330'>330</span>in a combination of the two things, the fear-affect and the
+defensive action; the frightened animal is afraid <em>and</em> flees, but
+the expedient element in this is the ‘flight,’ not the ‘being
+afraid.’</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>One is tempted therefore to assert that the development of
+anxiety is never expedient; perhaps a closer dissection of the
+situation in dread will give us a better insight into it. The
+first thing about it is the ‘readiness’ for danger, which expresses
+itself in heightened sensorial perception and in motor tension.
+This expectant readiness is obviously advantageous; indeed,
+absence of it may be responsible for grave results. It is then
+followed on the one hand by a motor action, taking the form
+primarily of flight and, on a higher level, of defensive action;
+and on the other hand by the condition we call a sensation of
+‘anxiety’ or dread. The more the development of dread is
+limited to a flash, to a mere signal, the less does it hinder
+the transition from the state of anxious readiness to that of
+action, and the more expediently does the whole course of events
+proceed. The <em>anxious readiness</em> therefore seems to me the expedient
+element, and the <em>development</em> of anxiety the inexpedient
+element, in what we call anxiety or dread.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I shall not enter upon a discussion whether the words anxiety,
+fear, fright, mean the same or different things in common usage.
+In my opinion, <em>anxiety</em> relates to the condition and ignores the
+object, whereas in the word <em>fear</em> attention is directed to the
+object; <em>fright</em> does actually seem to possess a special meaning—namely,
+it relates specifically to the condition induced when
+danger is unexpectedly encountered without previous anxious
+readiness. It might be said then that anxiety is a protection
+against fright.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It will not have escaped you that a certain ambiguity and
+indefiniteness exists in the use of the word ‘anxiety.’ It is
+generally understood to mean the subjective condition arising
+upon the perception of what we have called ‘developed’ anxiety;
+such a condition is called an affect. Now what is an affect, in
+a dynamic sense? It is certainly something very complex. An
+affect comprises first of all certain motor innervations or discharges;
+and, secondly, certain sensations, which moreover are of two
+kinds—namely, the perceptions of the motor actions which have
+been performed, and the directly pleasurable or painful sensations
+which give the affect what we call its dominant note. But I
+do not think that this description penetrates to the essence of an
+affect. With certain affects one seems to be able to see deeper,
+and to recognize that the core of it, binding the whole complex
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_331'>331</span>structure together, is of the nature of a <em>repetition</em> of some particular
+very significant previous experience. This experience could
+only have been an exceedingly early impression of a universal
+type, to be found in the previous history of the species rather than
+of the individual. In order to be better understood I might say
+that an affective state is constructed like an hysterical attack,
+i.e. is the precipitate of a reminiscence. An hysterical attack
+is therefore comparable to a newly-formed individual affect,
+and the normal affect to a universal hysteria which has become
+a heritage.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Do not imagine that what I am telling you now about affects
+is the common property of normal psychology. On the contrary,
+these conceptions have grown on the soil of psycho-analysis and
+are only indigenous there. What psychology has to say about
+affects—the James-Lange theory, for instance—is utterly incomprehensible
+to us psycho-analysts and impossible for us to
+discuss. We do not however regard what we know of affects as
+at all final; it is a first attempt to take our bearings in this obscure
+region. To continue, then: we believe we know what this
+early impression is which is reproduced as a repetition in the
+anxiety-affect. We think it is the experience of <em>birth</em>—an experience
+which involves just such a concatenation of painful
+feelings, of discharges of excitation, and of bodily sensations, as
+to have become a prototype for all occasions on which life is
+endangered, ever after to be reproduced again in us as the dread
+or ‘anxiety’ condition. The enormous increase in stimulation
+effected by the interruption of the renewal of blood (the internal
+respiration) was the cause of the anxiety experience at birth—the
+first anxiety was therefore toxically induced. The name
+<i><span lang="de">Angst</span></i> (anxiety)—<i><span lang="la">angustiæ</span></i>, <em>Enge</em>, a narrow place, a strait—accentuates
+the characteristic tightening in the breathing which
+was then the consequence of a real situation and is subsequently
+repeated almost invariably with an affect. It is very suggestive
+too that the first anxiety state arose on the occasion of the separation
+from the mother. We naturally believe that the disposition
+to reproduce this first anxiety condition has become so deeply
+ingrained in the organism, through countless generations, that no
+single individual can escape the anxiety affect; even though,
+like the legendary Macduff, he ‘was from his mother’s womb
+untimely ripped’ and so did not himself experience the act of
+birth. What the prototype of the anxiety condition may be
+for other animals than mammals we cannot say; neither do we
+know what the complex of sensations in them is which is equivalent
+to fear in us.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_332'>332</span>It may perhaps interest you to know how it was possible to
+arrive at such an idea as this—that birth is the source and prototype
+of the anxiety <em>affect</em>. Speculation had least of all to do
+with it; on the contrary, I borrowed a thought from the naïve
+intuitive mind of the people. Many years ago a number of
+young house-physicians, including myself, were sitting round
+a dinner-table, and one of the assistants at the obstetrical clinic
+was telling us all the funny stories of the last midwives’ examination.
+One of the candidates was asked what it meant when the
+meconium (child’s excreta) was present in the waters at birth,
+and promptly replied: “That the child is frightened.” She
+was ridiculed and failed. But I silently took her part and began
+to suspect that the poor unsophisticated woman’s unerring perception
+had revealed a very important connection.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now let us turn to neurotic anxiety; what are the special
+manifestations and conditions found in the anxiety of nervous
+persons? There is a great deal to be described here. First of
+all, we find a general apprehensiveness in them, a ‘free-floating’
+anxiety, as we call it, ready to attach itself to any thought which
+is at all appropriate, affecting judgements, inducing expectations,
+lying in wait for any opportunity to find a justification for itself.
+We call this condition ‘<em>expectant dread</em>’ or ‘anxious expectation.’
+People who are tormented with this kind of anxiety always
+anticipate the worst of all possible outcomes, interpret every
+chance happening as an evil omen, and exploit every uncertainty
+to mean the worst. The tendency to this kind of expectation
+of evil is found as a character-trait in many people who cannot
+be described as ill in any other way, and we call them ‘overanxious’
+or pessimistic; but a marked degree of expectant
+dread is an invariable accompaniment of the nervous disorder
+which I have called anxiety-neurosis and include among the
+actual neuroses.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In contrast to this type of anxiety, a second form of it is found
+to be much more circumscribed in the mind, and attached to
+definite objects and situations. This is the anxiety of the extraordinarily
+various and often very peculiar phobias. Stanley
+Hall, the distinguished American psychologist, has recently taken
+the trouble to designate a whole series of these phobias by gorgeous
+Greek titles; they sound like the ten plagues of Egypt, except
+that there are far more than ten of them. Just listen to the
+things that can become the object or content of a phobia: darkness,
+open air, open spaces, cats, spiders, caterpillars, snakes,
+mice, thunder, sharp points, blood, enclosed places, crowds,
+loneliness, crossing bridges, travelling by land or sea, and so
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_333'>333</span>on. As a first attempt to take one’s bearings in this chaos we
+may divide them into three groups. Many of the objects and situations
+feared are rather sinister, even to us normal people, they
+have some connection with danger; and these phobias are not
+entirely incomprehensible to us, although their intensity seems
+very much exaggerated. Most of us, for instance, have a feeling
+of repulsion upon encountering a snake. It may be said that
+the snake-phobia is universal in mankind. Charles Darwin
+has described most vividly how he could not control his dread
+of a snake that darted at him, although he knew that he was
+protected from it by a thick plate of glass. The second group
+consists of situations that still have some relation to danger,
+but to one that is usually belittled or not emphasized by us;
+most situation-phobias belong to this group. We know that
+there is more chance of meeting with a disaster in a railway train
+than at home—namely, a collision; we also know that a ship
+may sink, whereupon it is usual to be drowned; but we do not
+brood upon these dangers and we travel without anxiety by train
+and boat. Nor can it be denied that if a bridge were to break
+at the moment we were crossing it we should be hurled into
+the torrent, but that only happens so very occasionally that it
+is not a danger worth considering. Solitude too has its dangers,
+which in certain circumstances we avoid, but there is no question
+of never being able to endure it for a moment under any conditions.
+The same thing applies to crowds, enclosed spaces,
+thunderstorms, and so on. What is foreign to us in these phobias
+is not so much their content as their intensity. The anxiety
+accompanying a phobia is positively indescribable! And we
+sometimes get the impression that neurotics are not really at
+all fearful of those things which can, under certain conditions,
+arouse anxiety in us and which they call by the same
+names.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>There remains a third group which is entirely unintelligible to
+us. When a strong full-grown man is afraid to cross a street
+or square in his own so familiar town, or when a healthy well-developed
+woman becomes almost senseless with fear because
+a cat has brushed against her dress or a mouse has scurried through
+the room, how can we see the connection with danger which is
+obviously present to these people? With this kind of animal-phobia
+it is no question of an increased intensity of common
+human antipathies; to prove the contrary, there are numbers
+of people who, for instance, cannot pass a cat without attracting
+and petting it. A mouse is a thing that so many women are
+afraid of, and yet it is at the same time a very favourite pet
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_334'>334</span>name;<a id='r51'></a><a href='#f51' class='c015'><sup>[51]</sup></a> many a girl who is delighted to be called so by her lover
+will scream with terror at the sight of the dainty little creature
+itself. The behaviour of the man who is afraid to cross streets
+and squares only suggests one thing to us—that he behaves like
+a little child. A child is directly taught that such situations
+are dangerous, and the man’s anxiety too is allayed when he
+is led by someone across the open space.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The two forms of anxiety described, the ‘free-floating’
+expectant dread and that attached to phobias, are independent
+of each other. The one is not the other at a further stage; they
+are only rarely combined, and then as if fortuitously. The
+most intense general apprehensiveness does not necessarily
+lead to a phobia; people who have been hampered all their lives
+by agoraphobia may be quite free from pessimistic expectant
+dread. Many phobias, e.g. fear of open spaces, of railway travelling,
+are demonstrably acquired first in later life; others, such
+as fear of darkness, thunder, animals, seem to have existed from
+the beginning. The former signify serious illness, the latter are
+more of the nature of idiosyncrasies, peculiarities; anyone exhibiting
+one of these latter may be suspected of harbouring
+others similar to it. I must add that we group all these phobias
+under <em>anxiety-hysteria</em>, that is, we regard them as closely allied
+to the well-known disorder called conversion-hysteria.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The third form taken by neurotic anxiety brings us to an
+enigma; there is no visible connection at all between the anxiety
+and the danger dreaded. This anxiety occurs in hysteria, for
+instance, accompanying the hysterical symptoms; or under
+various conditions of excitement in which, it is true, we should
+expect some affect to be displayed, but least of all an anxiety-affect;
+or without reference to any conditions, incomprehensible
+both to us and to the patient, an unrelated anxiety-attack. We
+may look far and wide without discovering a danger or an occasion
+which could even be exaggerated to account for it. These
+spontaneous attacks show therefore that the complex condition
+which we describe as anxiety can be split up into components.
+The whole attack can be represented (as a substitute) by a single
+intensively developed symptom—shuddering, faintness, palpitation
+of the heart, inability to breathe—and the general feeling
+which we recognize as anxiety may be absent or may have become
+unnoticeable. And yet these states which are termed ‘anxiety-equivalents’ have the same clinical and ætiological validity as
+anxiety itself.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_335'>335</span>Two questions arise now: Is it possible to bring neurotic
+anxiety, in which such a small part or none at all is played by
+danger, into relation with ‘real anxiety,’ which is essentially
+a reaction to danger? And, how is neurotic anxiety to be understood?
+We will at present hold fast to the expectation that
+where there is anxiety there must be something of which one is
+afraid.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Clinical observation yields various clues to the comprehension
+of neurotic anxiety, and I will now discuss their significance with
+you.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>(<em>a</em>) It is not difficult to see that expectant dread or general
+apprehensiveness stands in intimate relation to certain processes
+in the sexual life—let us say, to certain modes of Libido-utilization.
+The simplest and most instructive case of this kind arises in people
+who expose themselves to what is called frustrated excitation,
+i.e. when a powerful sexual excitation experiences insufficient
+discharge and is not carried on to a satisfying termination.
+This occurs, for instance, in men during the time of an engagement
+to marry, and in women whose husbands are not sufficiently
+potent, or who perform the sexual act too rapidly or incompletely
+with a view to preventing conception. Under these conditions
+the libidinal excitation disappears and anxiety appears in place
+of it, both in the form of expectant dread and in that of attacks
+and anxiety-equivalents. The precautionary measure of <em>coitus
+interruptus</em>, when practised as a customary sexual régime, is so
+regularly the cause of anxiety-neurosis in men, and even more so
+in women, that medical practitioners would be wise to enquire
+first of all into the possibility of such an ætiology in all such
+cases. Innumerable examples show that the anxiety-neurosis
+vanishes when the sexual malpractice is given up.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>So far as I know, the fact that a connection exists between
+sexual restraint and anxiety conditions is no longer disputed,
+even by physicians who hold aloof from psycho-analysis. Nevertheless
+I can well imagine that they do not neglect to invert
+the connection, and to put forward the view that such persons
+are predisposed to apprehensiveness and consequently practise
+caution in sexual matters. Against this, however, decisive
+evidence is found in the reactions in women, in whom the sexual
+function is essentially passive, so that its course is determined
+by the treatment accorded by the man. The more ‘temperament,’
+i.e. the more inclination for sexual intercourse and capacity
+for satisfaction, a woman has, the more certainly will she react
+with anxiety manifestations to the man’s impotence or to <em>coitus
+interruptus</em>; whereas such abuse entails far less serious results
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_336'>336</span>with anæsthetic women or those in whom the sexual hunger
+is less strong.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Sexual abstinence, which is nowadays so warmly recommended
+by physicians, of course only has the same significance for
+anxiety conditions when the Libido which is denied a satisfactory
+outlet is correspondingly insistent, and is not being utilized to a
+large extent in sublimation. Whether or not illness will ensue
+is indeed always a matter of the quantitative factor. Even
+apart from illness, it is easy to see in the sphere of character-formation
+that sexual restraint goes hand in hand with a certain
+anxiousness and cautiousness, whereas fearlessness and a boldly
+adventurous spirit bring with them a free tolerance of sexual
+needs. However these relations may be altered and complicated
+by the manifold influences of civilization, it remains incontestible
+that for the average human being anxiety is closely connected
+with sexual limitation.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I have by no means told you all the observations which point
+to this genetic connection between Libido and anxiety. There
+is, for instance, the effect upon anxiety states of certain periods
+of life, such as puberty and the menopause, in which the production
+of Libido is considerably augmented. In many states
+of excitement too, the mingling of sexual excitation with anxiety
+may be directly observed, as well as the final replacement of the
+libidinal excitation by anxiety. The impression received from
+all this is a double one; first, that it is a matter of an accumulation
+of Libido, debarred from its normal utilization; and secondly,
+that the question is one of somatic processes only. How anxiety
+develops out of sexual desire is at present obscure; we can only
+ascertain that desire is lacking and anxiety is found in its place.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>(<em>b</em>) A second clue is obtained from analysis of the psychoneuroses,
+in particular, of hysteria. We have heard that anxiety
+frequently accompanies the symptoms in this disease, and that
+unattached anxiety may also be chronically present or come to
+expression in attacks. The patients cannot say what it is they
+fear; they link it up by unmistakable secondary elaboration to
+the most convenient phobias: of dying, of going mad, of having
+a stroke, etc. When we subject to analysis the situation in
+which the anxiety, or the symptom accompanied by anxiety,
+arose, we can as a rule discover what normal mental process has
+been checked in its course and replaced by a manifestation of
+anxiety. To express it differently: we construe the unconscious
+process as though it had not undergone repression and had gone
+through unhindered into consciousness. This process would
+have been accompanied by a particular affect and now we discover,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_337'>337</span>to our astonishment, that this affect, which would normally
+accompany the mental process through into consciousness, is in
+every case replaced by anxiety, no matter what particular type it
+had previously been. So that when we have a hysterical anxiety
+condition before us, its unconscious correlative may be an excitation
+of a similar character, such as apprehension, shame, embarrassment;
+or quite as possibly a ‘positive’ libidinal excitation;
+or an antagonistic, aggressive one, such as rage or anger. Anxiety
+is thus general current coin for which all the affects are exchanged,
+or can be exchanged, when the corresponding ideational content
+is under repression.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>(<em>c</em>) A third observation is provided by patients whose symptoms
+take the form of obsessive acts, and who seem to be remarkably
+immune from anxiety. When we restrain them from
+carrying out their obsessive performances, their washing, their
+ceremonies, etc., or when they themselves venture an attempt
+to abandon one of their compulsions, they are forced by an
+appalling dread to yield to the compulsion and to carry out the
+act. We perceive that the anxiety was concealed under the
+obsessive act and that this is only performed to escape the feeling
+of dread. In the obsessional neurosis, therefore, the anxiety
+which would otherwise ensue is replaced by the symptom-formation;
+and when we turn to hysteria we find a similar relation
+existing—as a consequence of the process of repression either
+a pure developed anxiety, or anxiety with symptom-formation,
+or, symptom-formation without anxiety. In an abstract sense,
+therefore, it seems correct to say that symptoms altogether are
+formed purely for the purpose of escaping the otherwise inevitable
+development of anxiety. Thus anxiety comes to the forefront
+of our interest in the problems of the neuroses.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>We concluded from our observations on the anxiety-neurosis
+that the diversion of the Libido away from its normal form of
+utilization, a diversion which releases anxiety, took place on
+the basis of somatic processes. The analyses of hysterical and
+obsessional neuroses furnish the additional conclusion that a
+similar diversion with a similar result can follow from opposition
+on the part of psychical agents (<i><span lang="de">Instanzen</span></i>). We know as much
+as this, therefore, about the origin of neurotic anxiety; it still
+sounds rather indefinite. But for the moment I know of no
+path which will take us further. The second task we undertook,
+that of establishing a connection between neurotic anxiety
+(abnormally utilized Libido) and ‘real anxiety’ (which corresponds
+with the reaction to danger), seems even more difficult to
+accomplish. One would think there could be no comparison
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_338'>338</span>between the two things, and yet there are no means by which
+the sensations of neurotic anxiety can be distinguished from
+those of real anxiety.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The desired connection may be found with the help of the
+antithesis, so often put forward, between the Ego and the Libido.
+As we know, the development of anxiety is the reaction of the
+Ego to danger and the signal preparatory to flight; it is then
+not a great step to imagine that in neurotic anxiety also the
+Ego is attempting a flight, from the demands of its Libido, and
+is treating this internal danger as if it were an external one.
+Then our expectation, that where anxiety is present there must be
+something of which one is afraid, would be fulfilled. The analogy
+goes further than this, however. Just as the tension prompting
+the attempt to flee from external danger is resolved into holding
+one’s ground and taking appropriate defensive measures, so
+the development of neurotic anxiety yields to a symptom-formation,
+which enables the anxiety to be ‘bound.’</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Our difficulty in comprehension now lies elsewhere. The
+anxiety which signifies the flight of the Ego from its Libido is
+nevertheless supposed to have had its source in that Libido.
+This is obscure, and we are warned not to forget that the Libido
+of a given person is fundamentally part of that person and cannot
+be contrasted with him as if it were something external. It is
+the question of the topographical dynamics of anxiety-development
+that is still obscure to us—what kind of mental energies
+are being expended and to what systems do they belong? I
+cannot promise you to answer this question also; but we will
+not neglect to follow up two other clues, and in so doing will
+again summon direct observation and analytic investigation
+to aid our speculation. We will turn to the sources of anxiety
+in children, and to the origin of the neurotic anxiety which is
+attached to phobias.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Apprehensiveness is very common among children, and it
+is difficult enough to decide whether it is real or neurotic anxiety.
+Indeed the very value of this distinction is called in question
+by the attitude of children themselves. For on the one hand
+we are not surprised that children are afraid of strangers, of
+strange objects and situations, and we account for this reaction
+to ourselves very easily by reflecting on their weakness and
+ignorance. Thus we ascribe to the child a strong tendency to
+real anxiety and should regard it as only practical if this apprehensiveness
+had been transmitted by inheritance. The child
+would only be repeating the behaviour of prehistoric man and of
+primitive man to-day who, in consequence of his ignorance and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_339'>339</span>helplessness, experiences a dread of anything new and strange,
+and of much that is familiar to him, none of which any longer
+inspires fear in us. It would also correspond to our expectations
+if the phobias of children were at least in part such as might be
+attributed to those primeval periods of human development.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>On the other hand, it cannot be overlooked that children are
+not all equally apprehensive, and that the very children who
+are more than usually timid in the face of all kinds of objects
+and situations are just those who later on become neurotic.
+The neurotic disposition is therefore betrayed, amongst other
+signs, by a marked tendency to real anxiety; apprehensiveness
+rather than nervousness appears to be primary; and we arrive
+at the conclusion that the child, and later the adult, experiences
+a dread of the strength of his Libido, simply because he is afraid
+of everything. The derivation of anxiety from the Libido itself
+would then be discarded; and investigation of the conditions of
+real anxiety would logically lead to the view that the consciousness
+of personal weakness and helplessness—inferiority, as
+A. Adler calls it—when it is able to maintain itself into later
+life is the final cause of neurosis.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This sounds so simple and plausible that it has a claim on
+our attention. It is true that it would involve shifting the
+point of view from which we regard the problem of nervousness.
+That such feelings of inferiority do persist into later life—together
+with a disposition to anxiety and symptom-formation—seems
+so well established that much more explanation is
+required when, in an exceptional case, what we call ‘health’
+is the outcome. But what can be learnt from the close observation
+of apprehensiveness in children? The small child is first
+of all afraid of strange people; situations become important
+only on account of the people concerned in them, and objects
+always much later. But the child is not afraid of these strange
+people because he attributes evil intentions to them, comparing
+their strength with his weakness, and thus recognizing in them
+a danger to his existence, his safety, and his freedom from pain.
+Such a conception of a child, so suspicious and terrified of an
+overpowering aggressivity in the world, is a very poor sort of
+theoretical construction. On the contrary, the child starts back
+in fright from a strange figure because he is used to—and therefore
+expects—a beloved and familiar figure, primarily his mother.
+It is his disappointment and longing which are transformed into
+dread—his Libido, unable to be expended, and at that time
+not to be held suspended, is discharged through being converted
+into dread. It can hardly be a coincidence too that in
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_340'>340</span>this situation, which is the prototype of childish anxiety, the
+condition of the primary anxiety state during birth, a separation
+from the mother, is again reproduced.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The first phobias of situations in children concern darkness
+and loneliness; the former is often retained throughout life;
+common to both is the desire for the absent attendant, for the
+mother, therefore. I once heard a child who was afraid of the
+darkness call out: “Auntie, talk to me, I’m frightened.” “But
+what good will that do? You can’t see me;” to which the
+child replied: “If someone talks, it gets lighter.” The longing
+felt <em>in</em> the darkness is thus transformed into fear <em>of</em> the darkness.
+Far from finding that neurotic anxiety is only secondary and a
+special case of real anxiety, we see on the contrary that there
+is something in the small child which behaves like real anxiety
+and has an essential feature in common with neurotic anxiety—namely,
+origin in undischarged Libido. Of genuine ‘real anxiety’
+the child seems to bring very little into the world. In all those
+situations which can become the conditions of phobias later,
+on heights, on narrow bridges over water, in trains and boats,
+the small child shows no fear—the less it knows the less it fears.
+It is much to be wished that it had inherited more of these life-preserving
+instincts; the task of looking after it and preventing
+it from exposing itself to one danger after another would have been
+very much lightened. Actually, you see, a child overestimates
+his powers, to begin with, and behaves without fear because he
+does not recognize dangers. He will run along the edge of the
+water, climb upon the window-sill, play with sharp things and
+with fire, in short, do anything that injures him and alarms
+his attendants. Since he cannot be allowed to learn it himself
+through bitter experience, it is entirely due to training that real
+anxiety does eventually awake in him.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now if some children embrace this training in apprehensiveness
+very readily, and then find for themselves dangers which they
+have not been warned against, it is explicable on the ground
+that these children have inherently a greater amount of libidinal
+need in their constitution than others, or else that they have been
+spoiled early with libidinal gratifications. It is no wonder if
+those who later become nervous also belong to this type as children;
+we know that the most favourable circumstance for the development
+of a neurosis lies in the inability to tolerate a considerable
+degree of pent-up Libido for any length of time. You will observe
+now that here the constitutional factor, which we have never
+denied, comes into its own. We protest only when others emphasize
+it to the exclusion of all other claims, and when they
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_341'>341</span>introduce the constitutional factor even where according to the
+unanimous findings both of observation and of analysis, it does
+not belong, or only plays a minor part.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Let us sum up the conclusions drawn from the observation of
+apprehensiveness in children: Infantile dread has very little
+to do with real anxiety (dread of real danger), but is, on the other
+hand, closely allied to the neurotic anxiety of adults. It is derived
+like the latter from undischarged Libido, and it substitutes some
+other external object or some situation for the love-object which
+it misses.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now you will be glad to hear that the analysis of phobias has
+little more to teach us than we have learnt already. The same
+thing happens in them as in the anxiety of children; Libido
+that cannot be discharged is continuously being converted into
+an apparently ‘real’ anxiety, and so an insignificant external
+danger is taken as a representative of what the Libido desires.
+The agreement between the two forms of anxiety is not surprising;
+for infantile phobias are not merely prototypes of those which
+appear later in anxiety-hysteria, but they are a direct preliminary
+condition and prelude of them. Every hysterical phobia can
+be traced back to a childish dread, of which it is a continuation,
+even if it has a different content and must be called by a different
+name. The difference between the two conditions lies in their
+mechanism. In order that the Libido should be converted into
+anxiety in the adult it is no longer sufficient that the Libido should
+be momentarily unable to be utilized. The adult has long since
+learned to maintain such Libido suspended, or to apply it in
+different ways. But, when the Libido is attached to a mental
+excitation which has undergone repression, conditions similar
+to those in the child, in whom there is not yet any distinction
+between conscious and unconscious, are re-established; and by
+a regression to the infantile phobia a bridge, so to speak, is provided
+by which the conversion of Libido into anxiety can be
+conveniently effected. As you will remember, we have treated
+repression at some length, but in so doing we have been concerned
+exclusively with the fate of the <em>idea</em> to be repressed; naturally,
+because this was easier to recognize and to present. But we have
+so far ignored the question of what happened to the <em>affect</em> attached
+to this idea, and now we learn for the first time that it is the
+immediate fate of the affect to be converted into anxiety, no
+matter what quality of affect it would otherwise have been had
+it run a normal course. This transformation of affect is, moreover,
+by far the more important effect of the process of repression.
+It is not so easy to present to you; for we cannot maintain the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_342'>342</span>existence of unconscious affects in the same sense as that of
+unconscious ideas. An idea remains up to a point the same,
+whether it is conscious or unconscious; we can indicate something
+that corresponds to an unconscious idea. But an affect is a process
+involving a discharge of energy, and it is to be regarded quite
+differently from an idea; without searching examination and
+clarification of our hypotheses concerning mental processes,
+we cannot tell what corresponds with it in the Unconscious—and
+that cannot be undertaken here. However, we will preserve
+the impression we have gained, that the development of anxiety
+is closely connected with the unconscious system.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I said that conversion into anxiety, or better, discharge in
+the form of anxiety, was the immediate fate of Libido which
+encounters repression; I must add that it is not the only or the
+final fate of it. In the neuroses, processes take place which are
+intended to prevent the development of anxiety, and which succeed
+in so doing by various means. In the phobias, for instance, two
+stages in the neurotic process are clearly discernible. The first
+effects the repressions and conversion of the Libido into anxiety,
+which is then attached to some external danger. The second
+consists in building up all those precautions and safeguards by
+which all contact with this externalized danger shall be avoided.
+Repression is an attempt at flight on the part of the Ego from
+the Libido which it feels to be dangerous; the phobia may be
+compared to a fortification against the outer danger which now
+stands for the dreaded Libido. The weakness of this defensive
+system in the phobias is of course that the fortress which is so well
+guarded from without remains exposed to danger from within;
+projection externally of danger from Libido can never be a very
+successful measure. In the other neuroses, therefore, other
+defensive systems are employed against the possibility of the
+development of anxiety; this is a very interesting part of the
+psychology of the neuroses. Unfortunately it would take us
+too far afield and also it would require a thorough grounding
+in special knowledge of the subject. I will merely add this. I
+have already spoken of the ‘counter-charges’ that are instituted
+by the Ego upon repression, which must be maintained so that the
+repression can persist. It is the task of this counter-charge to
+carry out the various forms of defence against the development
+of anxiety after repression.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>To return to the phobias: I may now hope that you realize
+how inadequate it is to attempt merely to explain their content,
+and to take no interest in them apart from their derivation—this
+or that object or situation which has been made into a phobia.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_343'>343</span>The content of the phobia has an importance comparable to that
+of the manifest dream—it is a façade. With all due modifications,
+it is to be admitted that among the contents of the various phobias
+many are found which, as Stanley Hall points out, are specially
+suited by phylogenetic inheritance to become objects of dread.
+It is even in agreement with this that many of these dreaded
+things have no connection with danger, except through a
+<em>symbolic</em> relation to it.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Thus we are convinced of the quite central position which the
+problem of anxiety fills in the psychology of the neuroses. We
+have received a strong impression of how the development of
+anxiety is bound up with the fate of the Libido and with the
+unconscious system. There is only one unconnected thread,
+only one gap in our structure, the fact, which after all can hardly
+be disputed, that ‘real anxiety’ must be regarded as an expression
+of the Ego’s instinct for self-preservation.</p>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_344'>344</span>
+ <h3 class='c002'><span class='c014'>TWENTY-SIXTH LECTURE</span><br> THE THEORY OF THE LIBIDO: NARCISSISM</h3>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c006'>We have repeatedly, and again quite recently, referred to the
+distinction between the sexual and the Ego-instincts. First
+of all, repression showed how they can oppose each other, how
+the sexual instincts are then apparently brought to submission,
+and required to procure their satisfaction by circuitous regressive
+paths, where in their impregnability they obtain compensation
+for their defeat. Then it appeared that from the outset they
+each have a different relation to the task-mistress Necessity,
+so that their developments are different and they acquire different
+attitudes to the reality-principle. Finally we believe we can
+observe that the sexual instincts are connected by much closer
+ties with the affective state of anxiety than are the Ego-instincts—a
+conclusion which in one important point only still seems
+incomplete. In support of it we may bring forward the further
+remarkable fact that want of satisfaction of hunger or thirst,
+the two most elemental of the self-preservative instincts, never
+results in conversion of them into anxiety, whereas the conversion
+of unsatisfied Libido into anxiety is, as we have heard, a very
+well-known and frequently-observed phenomenon.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Our justification for distinguishing between sexual and Ego-instincts
+can surely not be contested; it is indeed assumed by
+the existence of the sexual instinct as a special activity in the
+individual. The only question is what significance is to be
+attached to this distinction, how radical and decisive we intend
+to consider it. The answer to this depends upon what we can
+ascertain about the extent to which the sexual instincts, both
+in their bodily and their mental manifestations, conduct themselves
+differently from the other instincts which we set against
+them; and how important the results arising from these differences
+are found to be. We have of course no motive for maintaining
+any difference in the fundamental nature of the two groups of
+instincts, and, by the way, it would be difficult to apprehend
+any. They both present themselves to us merely as descriptions
+of the sources of energy in the individual, and the discussion
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_345'>345</span>whether fundamentally they are one, or essentially different,
+and if one, when they became separated from each other, cannot
+be carried through on the basis of these concepts alone, but must
+be grounded on the biological facts underlying them. At present
+we know too little about this, and even if we knew more it would
+not be relevant to the task of psycho-analysis.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>We should clearly also profit very little by emphasizing the
+primordial unity of all the instincts, as Jung has done, and describing
+all the energies which flow from them as ‘Libido.’ We
+should then be compelled to speak of sexual and asexual Libido,
+since the sexual function is not to be eliminated from the field
+of mental life by any such device. The name Libido, however,
+remains properly reserved for the instinctive forces of the sexual
+life, as we have hitherto employed it.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In my opinion, therefore, the question how far the quite
+justifiable distinction between sexual and self-preservative
+instincts is to be carried has not much importance for psycho-analysis,
+nor is psycho-analysis competent to deal with it. From
+the biological point of view there are certainly various indications
+that the distinction is important. For the sexual function is
+the only function of a living organism which extends beyond the
+individual and secures its connection with its species. It is
+undeniable that the exercise of this function does not always
+bring advantage to the individual, as do his other activities, but
+that for the sake of an exceptionally high degree of pleasure he
+is involved by this function in dangers which jeopardize his life
+and often enough exact it. Quite peculiar metabolic processes,
+different from all others, are probably required in order to preserve
+a portion of the individual’s life as a disposition for posterity.
+And finally, the individual organism that regards itself as first
+in importance and its sexuality as a means like any other to its
+own satisfaction is from a biological point of view only an episode
+in a series of generations, a short-lived appendage to a germplasm
+which is endowed with virtual immortality, comparable
+to the temporary holder of an entail that will survive his death.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>We are not concerned with such far-reaching considerations,
+however, in the psycho-analytic elucidation of the neuroses.
+By means of following up the distinction between the sexual
+and the Ego-instincts we have gained the key to comprehension
+of the group of transference neuroses. We were able to trace
+back their origin to a fundamental situation in which the sexual
+instincts had come into conflict with the self-preservative instincts,
+or—to express it biologically, though at the same time less exactly—in
+which the Ego in its capacity of independent individual
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_346'>346</span>organism had entered into opposition with itself in its other
+capacity as a member of a series of generations. Such a dissociation
+perhaps only exists in man, so that, taken all in all, his
+superiority over the other animals may come down to his capacity
+for neurosis. The excessive development of his Libido and the
+rich elaboration of his mental life (perhaps directly made possible
+by it) seem to constitute the conditions which give rise to a
+conflict of this kind. It is at any rate clear that these are the
+conditions under which man has progressed so greatly beyond
+what he has in common with the animals, so that his capacity
+for neurosis would merely be the obverse of his capacity for
+cultural development. However, these again are but speculations
+which distract us from the task in hand.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Our work so far has been conducted on the assumption that
+the manifestations of the sexual and the Ego-instincts can be
+distinguished from one another. In the transference neuroses
+this is possible without any difficulty. We called the investments
+of energy directed by the Ego towards the object of its sexual
+desires ‘Libido,’ and all the other investments proceeding from
+the self-preservative instincts its ‘interest’; and by following
+up the investments with Libido, their transformations, and their
+final fates, we were able to acquire our first insight into the
+workings of the forces in mental life. The transference neuroses
+offered the best material for this exploration. The Ego, however,—its
+composition out of various organizations with their structure
+and mode of functioning—remained undiscovered; we were led
+to believe that analysis of other neurotic disturbances would be
+required before light could be gained on these matters.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The extension of psycho-analytic conceptions on to these
+other affections was begun in early days. Already in 1908
+K. Abraham expressed the view after a discussion with me that
+the main characteristic of dementia præcox (reckoned as one of
+the psychoses) is that in this disease <em>the investment of objects with
+Libido is lacking</em>. (<cite>The Psycho-Sexual Differences between
+Hysteria and Dementia Præcox</cite>). But then the question arose:
+what happens to the Libido of dementia patients when it is diverted
+from its objects? Abraham did not hesitate to answer that
+it is turned back upon the Ego, and that <em>this reflex reversion
+of it is the origin of the delusions of grandeur in dementia præcox</em>.
+The delusion of grandeur is in every way comparable to the well-known
+overestimation of the object in a love-relationship. Thus
+we came for the first time to understand a feature of a psychotic
+affection by bringing it into relation to the normal mode of
+loving in life.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_347'>347</span>I will tell you at once that these early views of Abraham’s
+have been retained in psycho-analysis and have become the
+basis of our position regarding the psychoses. We became slowly
+accustomed to the conception that the Libido, which we find
+attached to certain objects and which is the expression of a
+desire to gain some satisfaction in these objects, can also
+abandon these objects and set the Ego itself in their place; and
+gradually this view developed itself more and more consistently.
+The name for this utilization of the Libido—<span class='sc'>Narcissism</span>—we
+borrowed from a perversion described by P. Näcke, in which
+an adult individual lavishes upon his own body all the
+caresses usually expended only upon a sexual object other than
+himself.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Reflection then at once disclosed that if a fixation of this
+kind to the subject’s own body and his own person can occur
+it cannot be an entirely exceptional or meaningless phenomenon.
+On the contrary, it is probable that this <em>narcissism</em> is the universal
+original condition, out of which <em>object-love</em> develops later without
+thereby necessarily effecting a disappearance of the narcissism.
+One also had to remember the evolution of object-Libido, in which
+to begin with many of the sexual impulses are gratified on the
+child’s own body—as we say, auto-erotically—and that this
+capacity for auto-erotism accounts for the backwardness of
+sexuality in learning to conform to the reality-principle. Thus
+it appeared that auto-erotism was the sexual activity of the
+narcissistic phase of direction of the Libido.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>To put it briefly, we formed an idea of the relation between
+the Ego-Libido and the object-Libido which I can illustrate to
+you by a comparison taken from zoology. Think of the simplest
+forms of life consisting of a little mass of only slightly differentiated
+protoplasmic substances. They extend protrusions which are
+called pseudopodia into which the protoplasm overflows. They
+can, however, again withdraw these extensions of themselves and
+reform themselves into a mass. We compare this extending of
+protrusions to the radiation of Libido on to the objects, while
+the greatest volume of Libido may yet remain within the Ego;
+we infer that under normal conditions Ego-Libido can transform
+itself into object-Libido without difficulty and that this can
+again subsequently be absorbed into the Ego.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>With the help of these conceptions it is now possible to explain
+a whole series of mental states, or, to express it more modestly,
+to describe in terms of the Libido-theory conditions that belong
+to normal life; for instance, the mental attitude pertaining to
+the conditions of “being in love,” of organic illness, and of sleep.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_348'>348</span>Of the condition of sleep we assumed that it is founded upon a
+withdrawal from the outer world and a concentration upon the
+wish to sleep. We found that the nocturnal mental activity
+which is expressed in dreams served the purpose of the wish to
+sleep, and, moreover, that it was governed exclusively by egoistic
+motives. In the light of the Libido-theory we may carry this
+further and say that sleep is a condition in which all investments
+of objects, the libidinal as well as the egoistic, are abandoned and
+withdrawn again into the Ego. Does not this shed a new light
+upon the recuperation afforded by sleep and upon the nature
+of fatigue in general? The likeness we see in the condition which
+the sleeper conjures up again every night to the blissful isolation
+of the intra-uterine existence is thus confirmed and amplified
+in its mental aspects. In the sleeper the primal state of the
+Libido-distribution is again reproduced, that of absolute narcissism,
+in which Libido and Ego-interests dwell together still, united
+and indistinguishable in the self-sufficient Self.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Two observations are in place here. First, how is the concept
+‘narcissism’ distinguished from ‘egoism’? In my opinion,
+narcissism is the libidinal complement of egoism. When one
+speaks of egoism one is thinking only of the <em>interests</em> of the person
+concerned, narcissism relates also to the satisfaction of his
+libidinal needs. It is possible to follow up the two separately for
+a considerable distance as practical motives in life. A man may
+be absolutely egoistic and yet have strong libidinal attachments
+to objects, in so far as libidinal satisfaction in an object is a need
+of his Ego: his egoism will then see to it that his desires towards
+the object involve no injury to his Ego. A man may be egoistic
+and at the same time strongly narcissistic (i.e. feel very little
+need for objects), and this again either in the form taken by the
+need for direct sexual satisfaction, or in those higher forms of
+feeling derived from the sexual needs which are commonly called
+“love,” and as such are contrasted with “sensuality.” In all
+these situations egoism is the self-evident, the constant element,
+and narcissism the variable one. The antithesis of egoism,
+“altruism,” is not an alternative term for the investment of an
+object with Libido; it is distinct from the latter in its lack of
+the desire for sexual satisfaction in the object. But when the
+condition of love is developed to its fullest intensity altruism
+coincides with the investment of an object with Libido. As a
+rule the sexual object draws to itself a portion of the Ego’s
+narcissism, which becomes apparent in what is called the ‘sexual
+overestimation’ of the object. If to this is added an altruism
+directed towards the object and derived from the egoism of the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_349'>349</span>lover, the sexual object becomes supreme; it has entirely swallowed
+up the Ego.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I think you will find it a relief if, after these scientific phantasies,
+which are after all very dry, I submit to you a poetic description
+of the ‘economic’ contrast between the condition of narcissism
+and that of love in full intensity. I take it from a dialogue between
+Zuleika and her lover in Goethe’s <cite>Westöstliche Divan</cite>:—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c016'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line in16'><span class='sc'>Zuleika</span>:</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>The slave, the lord of victories,</div>
+ <div class='line'>The crowd, with single voice, confess</div>
+ <div class='line'>In sense of personal being lies</div>
+ <div class='line'>A child of earth’s true happiness.</div>
+ <div class='line'>There’s not a life he need refuse</div>
+ <div class='line'>If his true self he does not miss:</div>
+ <div class='line'>There’s not a thing he cannot lose</div>
+ <div class='line'>If he remains the man he is.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line in16'><span class='sc'>Hâtem</span>:</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>So it is held! so well may be!</div>
+ <div class='line'>But down a different track I come</div>
+ <div class='line'>Of all the bliss earth holds for me</div>
+ <div class='line'>I in Zuleika find the sum.</div>
+ <div class='line'>Does she expend her being on me,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Myself grows to myself of cost;</div>
+ <div class='line'>Turns she away, then instantly</div>
+ <div class='line'>I to my very self am lost.</div>
+ <div class='line'>And then with Hâtem all were over;</div>
+ <div class='line'>Though yet I should but change my state;</div>
+ <div class='line'>Swift, should she grace some happy lover,</div>
+ <div class='line'>In him I were incorporate.<a id='r52'></a><a href='#f52' class='c015'><sup>[52]</sup></a></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c007'>The second observation is an amplification of the theory of
+dreams. The way in which a dream originates is not explicable
+unless we assume that what is repressed in the Unconscious has
+acquired a certain independence of the Ego, so that it does not
+subordinate itself to the wish for sleep and maintains its investments,
+although all the object-investments proceeding from the
+Ego have been withdrawn for the purpose of sleep. Only this
+makes it possible to understand how it is that this unconscious
+material can make use of the abrogation or diminution in the
+activities of the censorship which takes place at night, and that
+it knows how to mould the day’s residue so as to form a forbidden
+dream-wish from the material to hand in that residue. On the
+other hand, some of the resistance against the wish to sleep and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_350'>350</span>the withdrawal of Libido thereby induced may have its origin
+in an association already in existence between this residue and
+the repressed unconscious material. This important dynamic
+factor must therefore now be incorporated into the conception
+of dream-formation which we formed in our earlier discussions.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Certain conditions—organic illness, painful accesses of stimulation,
+an inflammatory condition of an organ—have clearly
+the effect of loosening the Libido from its attachment to its
+objects. The Libido which has thus been withdrawn attaches
+itself again to the Ego in the form of a stronger investment of
+the diseased region of the body. Indeed, one may venture the
+assertion that in such conditions the withdrawal of the Libido
+from its objects is more striking than the withdrawal of egoistic
+interests from their concerns in the outer world. This seems to
+lead to a possibility of understanding hypochondria, in which
+some organ, without being perceptibly diseased, becomes in a
+very similar way the subject of a solicitude on the part of
+the Ego. I shall, however, resist the temptation to follow this
+up, or to discuss other situations which become explicable or
+capable of exposition on this assumption of a return of the object-Libido
+into the Ego; for I feel bound to meet two objections
+which I know have all your attention at the moment. First of
+all, you want to know why when I discuss sleep, illness, and similar
+conditions, I insist upon distinguishing between Libido and
+‘interests,’ sexual instincts and Ego-instincts, while the observations
+are satisfactorily explained by assuming a single uniform
+energy which is freely mobile, can invest either object or Ego,
+and can serve the purposes of the one as well as of the other.
+Secondly, you will want to know how I can be so bold as to
+treat the detachment of the Libido from its objects as the origin
+of a pathological condition, if such a transformation of object-Libido
+into Ego-Libido—or into Ego-energy in general—is a
+normal mental process repeated every day and every night.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The answer is: Your first objection sounds a good one.
+Examination of the conditions of sleep, illness, and falling in
+love would probably never have led to a distinction between
+Ego-Libido and object-Libido, or between Libido and ‘interests.’
+But in this you omit to take into account the investigations with
+which we started, in the light of which we now regard the mental
+situations under discussion. The necessity of distinguishing
+between Libido and ‘interests,’ between sexual and self-preservative
+instincts, has been forced upon us by our insight into the
+conflict from which the transference neuroses arise. We have
+to reckon with this distinction henceforward. The assumption
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_351'>351</span>that object-Libido can transform itself into Ego-Libido, in other
+words, that we shall also have to reckon with an Ego-Libido,
+appears to be the only one capable of solving the riddle
+of what are called the narcissistic neuroses, e.g. dementia
+præcox, or of giving any satisfactory explanation of their likeness
+to hysteria and obsessions and differences from them. We
+then apply what we have found undeniably proved in these cases
+to illness, sleep, and the condition of intense love. We are at
+liberty to apply them in any direction and see where they will
+take us. The single conclusion which is not directly based on
+analytical experience is that Libido is Libido and remains so,
+whether it is attached to objects or to the Ego itself, and is never
+transformed into egoistic ‘interests’ and vice versa. This
+statement, however, is another way of expressing the distinction
+between sexual instincts and Ego-instincts which we have already
+critically examined, and which we shall hold to from heuristic
+motives until such time as it may prove valueless.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Your second objection too raises a justifiable question, but
+it is directed to a false issue. The withdrawal of object-Libido
+into the Ego is certainly not pathogenic; it is true that it occurs
+every night before sleep can ensue, and that the process is reversed
+upon awakening. The protoplasmic animalcule draws in its
+protrusions and sends them out again at the next opportunity.
+But it is quite a different matter when a definite, very forcible
+process compels the withdrawal of the Libido from its objects.
+The Libido that has then become narcissistic can no longer find
+its way back to its objects, and this obstruction in the way of
+the free movement of the Libido certainly does prove pathogenic.
+It seems that an accumulation of narcissistic Libido over and
+above a certain level becomes intolerable. We might well imagine
+that it was this that first led to the investment of objects, that
+the Ego was obliged to send forth its Libido in order not to fall
+ill of an excessive accumulation of it. If it were part of our
+scheme to go more particularly into the disorder of dementia
+præcox I would show you that the process which detaches the
+Libido from its objects and blocks the way back to them again
+is closely allied to the process of repression, and is to be regarded
+as a counterpart of it. In any case you would recognize familiar
+ground under your feet when you found that the preliminary
+conditions giving rise to these processes are almost identical,
+so far as we know at present, with those of repression. The
+conflict seems to be the same and to be conducted between the
+same forces. Since the outcome is so different from that of
+hysteria, for instance, the reason can only lie in some difference
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_352'>352</span>in the disposition. The weak point in the Libido-development
+in these patients is found at a different phase of the development;
+the decisive fixation which, as you will remember, enables the
+process of symptom-formation to break out is at another point,
+probably at the stage of primary narcissism, to which dementia
+præcox finally returns. It is most remarkable that for all the
+narcissistic neuroses we have to assume fixation-points of
+the Libido at very much earlier phases of development than
+those found in hysteria or the obsessional neurosis. You have
+heard, however, that the concepts we have elicited from the study
+of the transference neuroses also suffice to show us our bearings
+in the narcissistic neuroses, which are in practice so much more
+severe. There is a very wide community between them; fundamentally
+they are phenomena of a single class. You may
+imagine how hopeless a task it is for anyone to attempt to explain
+these disorders (which properly belong to psychiatry) without
+being first equipped with the analytic knowledge of the transference
+neuroses.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The picture formed by the symptoms of dementia præcox,
+incidentally a very variable one, is not determined exclusively
+by the symptoms arising from the forcing of the Libido back
+from the objects and the accumulation of it as narcissism in the
+Ego. Other phenomena occupy a large part of the field, and
+may be traced to the efforts made by the Libido to reach its
+objects again, which correspond therefore to attempts at
+restitution and recovery. These are in fact the conspicuous,
+clamorous symptoms; they exhibit a marked similarity to those
+of hysteria, or more rarely of the obsessional neurosis; they are
+nevertheless different in every respect. It seems that in dementia
+præcox the efforts of the Libido to get back to its objects, that
+is, to the mental idea of its objects, do really succeed in conjuring
+up something of them, something that at the same time is only
+the shadow of them—namely, the verbal images, the words,
+attached to them. This is not the place to discuss this matter
+further, but in my opinion this reversed procedure on the part
+of the Libido gives us an insight into what constitutes the real
+difference between a conscious and an unconscious idea.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This has now brought us into the field where the next advances
+in analytic work are to be expected. Since the time when
+we resolved upon our formulation of the conception of Ego-Libido,
+the narcissistic neuroses have become accessible to
+us; the task before us was to find the dynamic factors in these
+disorders, and at the same time to amplify our knowledge of
+mental life by a comprehension of the Ego. The psychology
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_353'>353</span>of the Ego, at which we are aiming, cannot be founded upon
+data provided by our own self-perceptions; it must be based,
+as is that of the Libido, upon analysis of the disturbances and
+disintegrations of the Ego. We shall probably think very
+little of our present knowledge of the fate of the Libido, gained
+from the study of the transference neuroses, when that further,
+greater work has been achieved. But as yet we have not got
+very far towards it. The narcissistic neuroses can hardly be
+approached at all by the method which has availed for the
+transference neuroses; you shall soon hear why this is. With
+these patients it always happens that after one has penetrated
+a little way one comes up against a stone wall which cannot be
+surmounted. You know that in the transference neuroses,
+too, barriers of resistance of this kind are met with, but that
+it is possible bit by bit to pull them down. In the narcissistic
+neuroses the resistance is insuperable; at the most we can
+satisfy our curiosity by craning our necks for a glimpse or two
+at what is going on over the wall. Our technique will therefore
+have to be replaced by other methods; at present we do not
+know whether we shall succeed in finding a substitute. There
+is no lack of material with these patients; they bring forward
+a great deal, although not in answer to our questions; at
+present all we can do is to interpret what they say in the light
+of the understanding gained from the study of the transference
+neuroses. The agreement between the two forms of disease
+goes far enough to ensure us a satisfactory start with them. How
+much we shall be able to achieve by this method remains to
+be seen.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>There are other difficulties, besides this, in the way of our
+progress. The narcissistic disorders and the psychoses related
+to them can only be unriddled by observers trained in the
+analytic study of the transference neuroses. But our psychiatrists
+do not study psycho-analysis and we psycho-analysts
+see too little of psychiatric cases. We shall have to develop
+a breed of psychiatrists who have gone through the training of
+psycho-analysis as a preparatory science. A beginning in this
+direction is being made in America, where several of the leading
+psychiatrists lecture on psycho-analytic doctrines to their
+students, and where medical superintendents of institutions
+and asylums endeavour to observe their patients in the light
+of this theory. But all the same it has sometimes been possible
+for us here to take a peep over the wall of narcissism, so I will
+now proceed to tell you what we think we have discovered in this
+way.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_354'>354</span>The disease of paranoia, a chronic form of systematic insanity,
+has a very uncertain position in the attempts at classification
+made by present-day psychiatry. There is no doubt, however,
+that it is closely related to dementia præcox; I have in fact
+proposed that they should both be included under the common
+designation of <em>paraphrenia</em>. The forms taken by paranoia
+are described according to the content of the delusion, e.g.
+delusions of grandeur, of persecution, of jealousy, of being
+loved (erotomania), etc. We do not expect attempts at explanation
+from psychiatry; as an example, an antiquated and not
+very fair example, I grant, I will tell you the attempt which
+was made to derive one of these symptoms from another, by
+means of a piece of intellectual rationalization: The patient
+who has a primary tendency to believe himself persecuted
+draws from this the conclusion that he must necessarily be a
+very important person and therefore develops a delusion of
+grandeur. According to our analytic conception, the delusion
+of grandeur is the direct consequence of the inflation of the
+Ego by the Libido withdrawn from the investment of objects,
+a secondary narcissism ensuing as a return of the original early
+infantile form. In the case of delusions of persecution, however,
+we observed things which led us to follow up a certain clue.
+In the first place we noticed that in the great majority of cases
+the persecuting person was of the same sex as the persecuted
+one; this was capable of a harmless explanation, it is true,
+but in certain cases which were closely studied it appeared
+that the person of the same sex who had been most beloved
+while the patient was normal became the persecutor after the
+disease broke out. A further development of this becomes
+possible through the well-known paths of association by which a
+loved person may be replaced by someone else, e.g. the father
+by masters or persons in authority. From these observations,
+which were continually corroborated, we drew the conclusion that
+persecutory paranoia is the means by which a person defends
+himself against a homosexual impulse which has become too
+powerful. The conversion of the affectionate feeling into the
+hate which, as is well-known, can seriously endanger the life
+of the loved and hated object then corresponds to the conversion
+of libidinal impulses into anxiety, which is a regular result of
+the process of repression. As an illustration I will quote the last
+case I had of this type. A young doctor had to be sent away
+from the place where he lived because he had threatened the
+life of the son of a university professor there who had previously
+been his greatest friend. He imputed superhuman power and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_355'>355</span>the most devilish intentions to this friend; he was to blame for
+all the misfortunes which had occurred in recent years to the
+family of the patient and for all his ill-luck in public and in
+private. This was not enough, however; the wicked friend
+and his father, the professor, had caused the war and brought
+the Russians over the border; he had ruined his life in a thousand
+ways; our patient was convinced that the death of this criminal
+would be the end of all evil in the world. And yet his old love
+for him was still so strong that it had paralysed his hand when
+he had an opportunity of shooting his enemy at sight. In
+the short conversation which I had with the patient it came
+to light that this intimate friendship between the two men went
+right back to their school-days; on at least one occasion it
+had passed beyond the boundaries of friendship, a night spent
+together had been the occasion of complete sexual intercourse.
+The patient had never developed any of the feeling towards
+women that would have been natural at his age with his
+attractive personality. He had been engaged to a handsome,
+well-connected girl, but she had broken off the engagement
+because her lover was so cold. Years after, his disease broke
+out at the very moment when he had for the first time succeeded
+in giving full sexual gratification to a woman; as she encircled
+him in her arms in gratitude and devotion he suddenly felt a
+mysterious stab of pain running like a sharp knife round the
+crown of his head. Afterwards he described the sensation as
+being like that of the incision made at a post-mortem to bare
+the brain; and as his friend was a pathological anatomist he
+slowly came to the conclusion that he alone could have sent
+him this woman as a temptation. Then his eyes began to
+be opened about the other persecutions of which he had been
+the victim by the machinations of his former friend.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But how about those cases in which the persecutor is of a
+different sex from that of the persecuted one, and which appear
+therefore to contradict our explanation of this disease as a
+defence against homosexual Libido? Some time ago I had
+an opportunity of examining a case of the kind, and behind
+the apparent contradiction I was able to elicit a confirmation.
+A young girl imagined herself persecuted by a man with whom
+she had twice had intimate relations; actually she had first of
+all cherished the delusion against a woman who could be
+recognized to be a mother-substitute. Not until after the
+second meeting with him did she make the advance of transferring
+the delusional idea from the woman to the man; so that in this
+case also the condition that the sex of the persecutor is the same
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_356'>356</span>as that of the victim originally held good also. In her complaint
+to the lawyer and the doctor the patient had not mentioned
+the previous phase of her delusion and this gave rise to an
+apparent contradiction of our theory of paranoia.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The homosexual choice of object is originally more closely
+related to narcissism than the heterosexual; hence, when a
+strong unwelcome homosexual excitation suffers repudiation,
+the way back to narcissism is especially easy to find. I have so
+far had very little opportunity in these lectures of speaking about
+the fundamental plan on which the course of the love-impulse
+during life is based, so far as we know it; nor can I supplement it
+now. I will only select this to tell you: that the choice of
+object, the step forward in the development of the Libido which
+comes after the narcissistic stage, can proceed according to two
+types. These are: either <em>the narcissistic type</em>, according to which,
+in place of the Ego itself, someone as nearly as possible resembling
+it is adopted as an object; or <em>the anaclitic type</em> (<i><span lang="de">Anlehnungstypus</span></i>)<a id='r53'></a><a href='#f53' class='c015'><sup>[53]</sup></a>
+in which those persons who became prized on account of the
+satisfactions they rendered to the primal needs in life are chosen
+as objects by the Libido also. A strong Libido-fixation on the
+narcissistic type of object-choice is also found as a trait in the
+disposition of manifest homosexuals.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>You will remember that in the first lecture given this session
+I described to you a case of delusional jealousy in a woman.
+Now that we have so nearly reached the end you will certainly
+want to know how we account for a delusion psycho-analytically.
+I have less to say about it than you would expect, however.
+The inaccessibility of delusions to logical arguments and to
+actual experience is to be explained, as it is with obsessions, by
+the connection they bear to the unconscious material which is
+both expressed by, and held in check by, the delusion or the
+obsession. The differences between the two are based on the
+topographical and dynamic differences in the two affections.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>As with paranoia, so also with melancholia (under which, by
+the way, very different clinical types are classified), it has been
+possible to obtain a glimpse into the inner structure of the disorder.
+We have perceived that the self-reproaches with which these
+sufferers torment themselves so mercilessly actually relate to
+another person, to the sexual object they have lost or whom they
+have ceased to value on account of some fault. From this
+we concluded that the melancholic has indeed withdrawn his
+Libido from the object, but that by a process which we must
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_357'>357</span>call ‘narcissistic identification’ he has set up the object within
+the Ego itself, projected it on to the Ego. I can only give you a
+descriptive representation of this process, and not one expressed
+in terms of topography and dynamics. The Ego itself is then
+treated as though it were the abandoned object; it suffers all
+the revengeful and aggressive treatment which is designed for
+the object. The suicidal impulses of melancholics also become
+more intelligible on the supposition that the bitterness felt by
+the diseased mind concerns the Ego itself at the same time as,
+and equally with, the loved and hated object. In melancholia,
+as in the other narcissistic disorders, a feature of the emotional
+life which, after Bleuler, we are accustomed to call <em>ambivalence</em>
+comes markedly to the fore; by this we mean a directing of
+antithetical feelings (affectionate and hostile) towards the same
+person. It is unfortunate that I have not been able to say
+more about ambivalence in these lectures.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>There is also, besides the narcissistic, an hysterical form of
+identification which has long been known to us. I wish it were
+possible to make the differences between them clear to you in
+a few definite statements. I can tell you something of the
+periodic and cyclic forms of melancholia which will interest you.
+It is possible in favourable circumstances—I have twice achieved
+it—to prevent the recurrence of the condition, or of its antithesis,
+by analytic treatment during the lucid intervals between the
+attacks. One learns from this that in melancholia and mania
+as well as other conditions a special kind of solution of a conflict
+is going on, which in all its pre-requisites agrees with those of
+the other neuroses. You may imagine how much there remains
+for psycho-analysis to do in this field.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I also told you that by analysis of the narcissistic disorders
+we hoped to gain some knowledge of the composition of the Ego
+and of its structure out of various faculties and elements. We
+have made a beginning towards this at one point. From analysis
+of the delusion of observation we have come to the conclusion
+that in the Ego there exists a faculty that incessantly watches,
+criticizes, and compares, and in this way is set against the other
+part of the Ego. In our opinion, therefore, the patient reveals
+a truth which has not been appreciated as such when he complains
+that at every step he is spied upon and observed, that his every
+thought is known and examined. He has erred only in attributing
+this disagreeable power to something outside himself and foreign
+to him; he perceives within his Ego the rule of a faculty which
+measures his actual Ego and all his activities by an <em>Ego-ideal</em>,
+which he has created for himself in the course of his development.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_358'>358</span>We also infer that he created this ideal for the purpose of recovering
+thereby the self-satisfaction bound up with the primary infantile
+narcissism, which since those days has suffered so many shocks
+and mortifications. We recognize in this self-criticizing faculty
+the Ego-censorship, the ‘conscience’; it is the same censorship
+as that exercised at night upon dreams, from which the repressions
+against inadmissible wish-excitations proceed. When this
+faculty disintegrates in the delusion of being observed, we are able
+to detect its origin and that it arose out of the influence of parents
+and those who trained the child, together with his social surroundings,
+by a process of identification with certain of these
+persons who were taken as a model.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>These are some of the results yielded by the application of
+psycho-analysis to the narcissistic disorders. They are still
+not very numerous, and many of them still lack that sharpness
+of outline which cannot be achieved in a new field until some
+degree of familiarity has been attained. All of them have been
+made possible by employing the conception of Ego-Libido, or
+narcissistic Libido, by means of which we can extend the conclusions
+established for the transference neuroses on to the
+narcissistic neuroses. But now you will put the question whether
+it is possible for us to bring all the disorders of the narcissistic
+neuroses and of the psychoses into the range of the Libido-theory,
+for us to find the libidinal factor in mental life always and everywhere
+responsible for the development of disease, and for us never
+to have to attribute any part in the causation to the same alteration
+in the functions of the self-preservative instincts. Well
+now, it seems to me that decision on this point is not very urgent,
+and above all that the time is not yet ripe for us to make it; we
+may leave it calmly to be decided by advance in the work of
+science. I should not be astonished if it should prove that the
+capacity to induce a pathogenic effect were actually a prerogative
+of the libidinal impulses, so that the theory of the Libido would
+triumph all along the line from the actual neuroses to the severest
+psychotic form of individual derangement. For we know it to
+be characteristic of the Libido that it refuses to subordinate
+itself to reality in life, to Necessity. But I consider it extremely
+probable that the Ego-instincts are involved secondarily and that
+disturbances in their functions may be necessitated by the
+pathogenic affections of the Libido. Nor can I see that the
+direction taken by our investigations will be invalidated if we
+should have to recognize that in severe psychosis the Ego-instincts
+themselves are primarily deranged; the future will decide—for
+you, at least.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_359'>359</span>Let me return for a moment to anxiety, in order to throw
+light upon the one obscure point we left there. We said that
+the relation between anxiety and Libido, otherwise so well defined,
+is with difficulty harmonized with the almost indisputable assumption
+that real anxiety in the face of danger is the expression of
+the self-preservative instincts. But how if the anxiety-affect
+is provided, not by self-interest on the part of the Ego-instincts,
+but by the Ego-Libido? The condition of anxiety is after all
+invariably detrimental; its disadvantage becomes conspicuous
+when it reaches an intense degree. It then interferes with the
+action that alone would be expedient and would serve the purposes
+of self-preservation, whether it be flight or self-defence. Therefore
+if we ascribe the affective component of real anxiety to the Ego-Libido,
+and the action undertaken to the Ego-preservative instincts,
+every theoretical difficulty will be overcome. You will hardly
+maintain seriously that we run away <em>because</em> we perceive fear?
+No, we perceive fear <em>and</em> we take to flight, out of the common
+impulse that is roused by the perception of danger. Men who
+have survived experiences of imminent danger to life tell us that
+they did not perceive any fear, that they simply acted—for
+instance, pointed their gun at the oncoming beast—which was
+undoubtedly the best thing they could do.</p>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_360'>360</span>
+ <h3 class='c002'><span class='c014'>TWENTY-SEVENTH LECTURE</span><br> TRANSFERENCE</h3>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c006'>Now that we are coming to the end of our discussions you will
+feel a certain expectation which must not be allowed to mislead
+you. You are probably thinking that I surely have not led
+you through all these complicated mazes of psycho-analysis
+only to dismiss you at the end without a word about the therapy,
+upon which after all the possibility of undertaking psycho-analytic
+work depends. As a matter of fact I could not possibly leave
+out this aspect of it; for some of the phenomena belonging
+to it will teach you a new fact, without knowledge of which you
+would be quite unable to assimilate properly your understanding
+of the diseases we have been studying.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I know you do not expect directions in the technique of
+practising analysis for therapeutic purposes; you only want
+to know in a general way by what means the psycho-analytic
+therapy works and to gain a general idea of what it accomplishes.
+And you have an undeniable right to learn this; nevertheless
+I am not going to tell you—I am going to insist upon your finding
+it out for yourselves.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Think for a moment! You have already learnt everything
+essential, from the conditions by which illness is provoked to all
+the factors which take effect within the diseased mind. Where
+is the opening in all this for therapeutic influence? First of all
+there is the hereditary disposition,—we do not often mention it
+because it is so strongly emphasized in other quarters and we
+have nothing new to say about it. But do not suppose that we
+underestimate it; as practitioners we are well aware of its power.
+In any event we can do nothing to change it; for us also it is
+a fixed datum in the problem, which sets a limit to our efforts.
+Next, there is the influence of the experiences of early childhood,
+which we are accustomed in analysis to rank as very important;
+they belong to the past, we cannot undo them. Then there is
+all that unhappiness in life which we have included under ‘privation
+in reality,’ from which all the absence of love in life proceeds—namely,
+poverty, family strife, mistaken choice in marriage,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_361'>361</span>unfavourable social conditions, and the severity of the demands
+by which moral convention oppresses the individual. There is
+indeed a wide opening for a very effective treatment in all this;
+but it would have to follow the course of the dispensations of
+Kaiser Joseph in the Viennese legend—the benevolent despotism
+of a potentate before whose will men bow and difficulties disappear!
+But who are we that we can exert such beneficence as a therapeutic
+measure? Poor as we are and without influence socially, with
+our living to earn by our medical practice, we are not even in a
+position to extend our efforts to penniless folk, as other physicians
+with other methods can do; our treatment takes too much time
+and labour for that. But perhaps you are still clinging on to
+one of the factors put forward, and believe you see an opening
+for our influence there. If the conventional restrictions imposed
+by society have had a part in the privations forced upon the
+patient, the treatment could give him the courage and even
+directly advise him to defy these obstacles, and to seize satisfactions
+and health for himself at the cost of failing to achieve an ideal
+which, though highly esteemed, is after all often set at naught
+by the world. Health is to be won by “free living,” then. There
+would be this blot upon analysis, to be sure, that it would not be
+serving general morality; what it gave to the individual it would
+take from the rest of the world.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But now, who has given you such a false impression of analysis?
+It is out of the question that part of the analytic treatment should
+consist of advice to “live freely”—if for no other reason because
+we ourselves tell you that a stubborn conflict is going on in the
+patient between libidinal desires and sexual repression, between
+sensual and ascetic tendencies. This conflict is not resolved by
+helping one side to win a victory over the other. It is true we
+see that in neurotics asceticism has gained the day; the result
+of which is that the suppressed sexual impulses have found a
+vent for themselves in the symptoms. If we were to make
+victory possible to the sensual side instead, the disregarded forces
+repressing sexuality would have to indemnify themselves by
+symptoms. Neither of these measures will succeed in ending
+the inner conflict; one side in either event will remain unsatisfied.
+There are but few cases in which the conflict is so unstable that
+a factor like medical advice can have any effect upon it, and these
+cases do not really require analytic treatment. People who can
+be so easily influenced by physicians would have found their
+own way to that solution without this influence. After all, you
+know that a young man living in abstinence who makes up his
+mind to illicit sexual intercourse, or an unsatisfied wife who seeks
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_362'>362</span>compensation with a lover, does not as a rule wait for the permission
+of a physician, still less of an analyst, to do so.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In considering this question people usually overlook the
+essential point of the whole difficulty—namely, that the pathogenic
+conflict in a neurotic must not be confounded with a normal
+struggle between conflicting impulses all of which are in the same
+mental field. It is a battle between two forces of which one
+has succeeded in coming to the level of the preconscious and
+conscious part of the mind, while the other has been confined on
+the unconscious level. That is why the conflict can never have
+a final outcome one way or the other; the antagonists meet each
+other as little as the whale and the polar bear in the well-known
+story. An effective decision can be reached only when they
+confront each other on the same ground. And, in my opinion,
+to accomplish this is the sole task of the treatment.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Besides this, I can assure you that you are quite misinformed
+if you imagine that advice and guidance concerning conduct in
+life forms an integral part of the analytic method. On the contrary,
+so far as possible we refrain from playing the part of mentor;
+we want nothing better than that the patient should find his own
+solutions for himself. To this end we expect him to postpone all
+vital decisions affecting his life, such as choice of career, business
+enterprises, marriage or divorce, during treatment and to execute
+them only after it has been completed. Now confess that you
+had imagined something very different. Only with certain very
+young or quite helpless and defenceless persons is it impossible
+to keep within such strict limitations as we should wish. With
+them we have to combine the positions of physician and educator;
+we are then well aware of our responsibility and act with the
+necessary caution.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>You must not be led away by my eagerness to defend myself
+against the accusation that in analytic treatment neurotics are
+encouraged to “live a free life” and conclude from it that we
+influence them in favour of conventional morality. That is at
+least as far removed from our purpose as the other. We are
+not reformers, it is true; we are merely observers; but we cannot
+avoid observing with critical eyes, and we have found it impossible
+to give our support to conventional sexual morality or to
+approve highly of the means by which society attempts to arrange
+the practical problems of sexuality in life. We can demonstrate
+with ease that what the world calls its code of morals demands
+more sacrifices than it is worth, and that its behaviour is neither
+dictated by honesty nor instituted with wisdom. We do not
+absolve our patients from listening to these criticisms; we accustom
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_363'>363</span>them to an unprejudiced consideration of sexual matters
+like all other matters; and if after they have become independent
+by the effect of the treatment they choose some intermediate
+course between unrestrained sexual licence and unconditional
+asceticism, our conscience is not burdened whatever the outcome.
+We say to ourselves that anyone who has successfully undergone
+the training of learning and recognizing the truth about himself
+is henceforth strengthened against the dangers of immorality,
+even if his standard of morality should in some respect deviate
+from the common one. Incidentally, we must beware of overestimating
+the importance of abstinence in affecting neurosis;
+only a minority of pathogenic situations due to privation and
+the subsequent accumulation of Libido thereby induced can be
+relieved by the kind of sexual intercourse that is procurable
+without any difficulty.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>So you cannot explain the therapeutic effect of psycho-analysis
+by supposing that it permits patients free sexual indulgence;
+you must look round for something else. I think that one of
+the remarks I made while I was disposing of this conjecture on
+your part will have put you on the right track. Probably it is
+the substitution of something conscious for something unconscious,
+the transformation of the unconscious thoughts into conscious
+thoughts, that makes our work effective. You are right; that is
+exactly what it is. By extending the unconscious into consciousness
+the repressions are raised, the conditions of symptom-formation
+are abolished, and the pathogenic conflict exchanged for a
+normal one which must be decided one way or the other. We
+do nothing for our patients but enable this one mental change to
+take place in them; the extent to which it is achieved is the
+extent of the benefit we do them. Where there is no repression
+or mental process analogous to it to be undone there is nothing
+for our therapy to do.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The aim of our efforts may be expressed in various formulas—making
+conscious the unconscious, removing the repressions,
+filling in the gaps in memory; they all amount to the same thing.
+But perhaps you are dissatisfied with this declaration; you
+imagined the recovery of a nervous person rather differently,
+that after he had been subjected to the laborious process of psycho-analysis
+he would emerge a different person altogether, and then
+you hear that the whole thing only amounts to his having a little
+less that is unconscious and a little more that is conscious in him
+than before. Well, you probably do not appreciate the importance
+of an inner change of this kind. A neurotic who has been cured
+has really become a different person, although at bottom of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_364'>364</span>course he remains the same—that is, he has become his best
+self, what he would have been under the most favourable conditions.
+That, however, is a great deal. Then when you hear of
+all that has to be done, of the tremendous exertion required to
+carry out this apparently trifling change in his mental life, the
+significance attached to these differences between the various
+mental levels will appear more comprehensible to you.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I will digress a moment to enquire whether you know what
+‘a causal therapy’ means? This name is given to a procedure
+which puts aside the manifestations of a disease and looks for
+a point of attack in order to eradicate the cause of the illness.
+Now is psycho-analysis a causal therapy or not? The answer
+is not a simple one, but it may give us an opportunity to convince
+ourselves of the futility of such questions. In so far as psycho-analytic
+therapy does not aim immediately at removing the
+symptoms it is conducted like a causal therapy. In other respects
+you may say it is not, for we have followed the causal chain back
+far beyond the repressions to the instinctive predispositions,
+their relative intensity in the constitution, and the aberrations
+in the course of their development. Now suppose that it were
+possible by some chemical means to affect this mental machinery,
+to increase or decrease the amount of Libido available at any
+given moment, or to reinforce the strength of one impulse at the
+expense of another—that would be a causal therapy in the literal
+sense, and our analysis would be the indispensable preliminary
+work of reconnoitring the ground. As you know, there is at
+present no question of any such influence upon the processes
+of the Libido; our mental therapy makes its attack at another
+point in the concatenation, not quite at the place where we
+perceive the manifestations to be rooted, but yet comparatively
+far behind the symptoms themselves, at a place which becomes
+accessible to us in very remarkable circumstances.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>What then have we to do in order to bring what is unconscious
+in the patient into consciousness? At one time we thought
+that would be very simple; all we need do would be to identify
+this unconscious matter and then tell the patient what it was.
+However, we know already that that was a short-sighted mistake.
+Our knowledge of what is unconscious in him is not equivalent
+to his knowledge of it; when we tell him what we know he does
+not assimilate it <em>in place of</em> his own unconscious thoughts, but
+<em>alongside</em> of them, and very little has been changed. We have rather
+to regard this unconscious material topographically; we have to
+look for it in his memory at the actual spot where the repression
+of it originally ensued. This repression must be removed, and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_365'>365</span>then the substitution of conscious thought for unconscious
+thought can be effected straightaway. How is a repression such
+as this to be removed? Our work enters upon a second phase
+here; first, the discovery of the repression, and then the removal
+of the resistance which maintains this repression.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>How can this resistance be got rid of? In the same way:
+by finding it out and telling the patient about it. The resistance
+too arises in a repression, either from the very one which we are
+endeavouring to dispel, or in one that occurred earlier. It is
+set up by the counter-charge which rose up to repress the repellent
+impulse. So that we now do just the same as we were trying to
+do before; we interpret, identify, and inform the patient; but
+this time we are doing it at the right spot. The counter-charge
+or the resistance is not part of the Unconscious, but of the Ego
+which co-operates with us, and this is so, even if it is not actually
+conscious. We know that a difficulty arises here in the ambiguity
+of the word ‘unconscious,’ on the one hand, as a phenomenon,
+on the other hand, as a system. That sounds very obscure and
+difficult; but after all it is only a repetition of what we have
+said before, is it not? We have come to this point already long
+ago.—Well then, we expect that this resistance will be abandoned,
+and the counter-charge withdrawn, when we have made the
+recognition of them possible by our work of interpretation. What
+are the instinctive propelling forces at our disposal to make this
+possible? First, the patient’s desire for recovery, which impelled
+him to submit himself to the work in co-operation with us, and
+secondly, the aid of his intelligence which we reinforce by our
+interpretation. There is no doubt that it is easier for the patient
+to recognize the resistance with his intelligence, and to identify
+the idea in his Unconscious which corresponds to it, if we have
+first given him an idea which rouses his expectations in regard
+to it. If I say to you: “Look up at the sky and you will see a
+balloon,” you will find it much more quickly than if I merely
+tell you to look up and see whether you can see anything; a
+student who looks through a microscope for the first time is told
+by the instructor what he is to see; otherwise he sees nothing,
+although it is there and quite visible.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>And now for the fact! In quite a number of the various forms
+of nervous illness, in the hysterias, anxiety conditions, obsessional
+neuroses, our hypothesis proves sound. By seeking out
+the repression in this way, discovering the resistances, indicating
+the repressed, it is actually possible to accomplish the task, to
+overcome the resistances, to break down the repression, and
+to change something unconscious into something conscious.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_366'>366</span>As we do this we get a vivid impression of how, as each individual
+resistance is being mastered, a violent battle goes on in the soul
+of the patient—a normal mental struggle between two tendencies
+on the same ground, between the motives striving to maintain
+the counter-charge and those which are ready to abolish it. The
+first of these are the old motives which originally erected the
+repression; among the second are found new ones more recently
+acquired, which it is hoped will decide the conflict in our favour.
+We have succeeded in revivifying the old battle of the repression
+again, in bringing the issue, so long ago decided, up for revision
+again. The new contribution we make to it lies, first of all,
+in demonstrating that the original solution led to illness and in
+promising that a different one would pave the way to health, and
+secondly, in pointing out that the circumstances have all changed
+immensely since the time of that original repudiation of these
+impulses. Then, the Ego was weak, infantile, and perhaps had
+reason to shrink with horror from the claims of the Libido as
+being dangerous to it. To-day it is strong and experienced and
+moreover has a helper at hand in the physician. So we may
+expect to lead the revived conflict through to a better outcome
+than repression; and, as has been said, in hysteria, anxiety-neurosis,
+and the obsessional neurosis success in the main justifies
+our claims.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>There are other forms of illness, however, with which our
+therapeutic treatment never is successful, in spite of the similarity
+of the conditions. In them also there was originally a conflict
+between Ego and Libido, leading to repression—although this
+conflict may be characterized by topographical differences from
+the conflict of the transference neuroses; in them too it is
+possible to trace out the point in the patient’s life at which the
+repressions occurred; we apply the same method, are ready to
+make the same assurances, offer the same assistance by telling
+the patient what to look out for; and here also the interval in
+time between the present and the point at which the repressions
+were established is all in favour of a better outcome of the conflict.
+And yet we cannot succeed in overcoming one resistance or in
+removing one of the repressions. These patients, paranoiacs,
+melancholics, and those suffering from dementia præcox, remain
+on the whole unaffected, proof against psycho-analytic treatment.
+What can be the cause of this? It is not due to lack of intelligence;
+a certain degree of intellectual capacity must naturally be stipulated
+for analysis, but there is no deficiency in this respect in, for
+instance, the very quick-witted deductive paranoiac. Nor are
+any of the other propelling forces regularly absent: melancholics,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_367'>367</span>for instance, in contrast to paranoiacs, experience a very high
+degree of realization that they are ill and that their sufferings are
+due to this; but they are not on that account any more accessible
+to influence. In this we are confronted with a fact that we do not
+understand, and are therefore called upon to doubt whether we
+have really understood all the conditions of the success possible
+with the other neuroses.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>When we keep to consideration of hysterical and obsessional
+neurotics we are very soon confronted with a second fact, for
+which we were quite unprepared. After the treatment has
+proceeded for a while we notice that these patients behave in a
+quite peculiar manner towards ourselves. We thought indeed
+that we had taken into account all the motive forces affecting the
+treatment and had reasoned out the situation between ourselves
+and the patient fully, so that it balanced like a sum in arithmetic;
+and then after all something seems to slip in which was quite
+left out of our calculation. This new and unexpected feature is
+in itself many-sided and complex; I will first of all describe some
+of its more frequent and simpler forms to you.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>We observe then that the patient, who ought to be thinking
+of nothing but the solution of his own distressing conflicts, begins
+to develop a particular interest in the person of the physician.
+Everything connected with this person seems to him more important
+than his own affairs and to distract him from his illness.
+Relations with the patient then become for a time very agreeable;
+he is particularly docile, endeavours to show his gratitude wherever
+he can, exhibits a fineness of character and other good qualities
+which we had perhaps not anticipated in him. The analyst
+thus forms a very good opinion of the patient and values his
+luck in being able to render assistance to such an admirable
+personality. If the physician has occasion to see the patient’s
+relatives he hears with satisfaction that this esteem is mutual.
+The patient at home is never tired of praising the analyst and
+attributing new virtues to him. “He has quite lost his head
+over you; he puts implicit trust in you; everything you say
+is like a revelation to him,” say the relatives. Here and there
+one among this chorus having sharper eyes will say: “It is
+positively boring the way he never speaks of anything but you:
+he quotes you all the time.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>We will hope that the physician is modest enough to ascribe
+the patient’s estimate of his value to the hopes of recovery which
+he has been able to offer to him, and to the widening in the
+patient’s intellectual horizon consequent upon the surprising
+revelations entailed by the treatment and their liberating influence.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_368'>368</span>The analysis too makes splendid progress under these
+conditions, the patient understands the suggestions offered to
+him, concentrates upon the tasks appointed by the treatment,
+the material needed—his recollections and associations—is abundantly
+available; he astonishes the analyst by the sureness and
+accuracy of his interpretations, and the latter has only to observe
+with satisfaction how readily and willingly a sick man will
+accept all the new psychological ideas that are so hotly contested
+by the healthy in the world outside. A general improvement
+in the patient’s condition, objectively confirmed on all sides,
+also accompanies this harmonious relationship in the analysis.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But such fair weather cannot last for ever. There comes a
+day when it clouds over. There begin to be difficulties in the
+analysis; the patient says he cannot think of anything more to
+say. One has an unmistakable impression that he is no longer
+interested in the work, and that he is casually ignoring the
+injunction given him to say everything that comes into his mind
+and to yield to none of the critical objections that occur to him.
+His behaviour is not dictated by the situation of the treatment;
+it is as if he had not made an agreement to that effect with
+the physician; he is obviously preoccupied with something
+which at the same time he wishes to reserve to himself. This
+is a situation in which the treatment is in danger. Plainly a
+very powerful resistance has risen up. What can have happened?</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>If it is possible to clear up this state of things, the cause of
+the disturbance is found to consist in certain intense feelings
+of affection which the patient has transferred on to the physician,
+not accounted for by the latter’s behaviour nor by the relationship
+involved by the treatment. The form in which this affectionate
+feeling is expressed and the goal it seeks naturally depend upon
+the circumstances of the situation between the two persons.
+If one of them is a young girl and the other still a fairly young
+man, the impression received is that of normal love; it seems
+natural that a girl should fall in love with a man with whom she
+is much alone and can speak of very intimate things, and who
+is in the position of an adviser with authority—we shall probably
+overlook the fact that in a neurotic girl some disturbance of
+the capacity for love is rather to be expected. The farther
+removed the situation between the two persons is from this
+supposed example, the more unaccountable it is to find that
+nevertheless the same kind of feeling comes to light in other
+cases. It may be still comprehensible when a young woman
+who is unhappily married seems to be overwhelmed by a serious
+passion for her physician, if he is still unattached, and that she
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_369'>369</span>should be ready to seek a divorce and give herself to him, or,
+where circumstances would prevent this, to enter into a secret
+love-affair with him. That sort of thing, indeed, is known to
+occur outside psycho-analysis. But in this situation girls and
+women make the most astonishing confessions which reveal a
+quite peculiar attitude on their part to the therapeutic problem:
+they had always known that nothing but love would cure them,
+and from the beginning of the treatment they had expected
+that this relationship would at last yield them what life had
+so far denied them. It was only with this hope that they had
+taken such pains over the analysis and had conquered all their
+difficulties in disclosing their thoughts. We ourselves can add:
+‘and had understood so easily all that is usually so hard to
+accept.’ But a confession of this kind astounds us; all our
+calculations are blown to the winds. Could it be that we have
+omitted the most important element in the whole problem?</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>And actually it is so; the more experience we gain the less
+possible does it become for us to contest this new factor, which
+alters the whole problem and puts our scientific calculations
+to shame. The first few times one might perhaps think that
+the analytic treatment had stumbled upon an obstruction in
+the shape of an accidental occurrence, extraneous to its purpose
+and unconnected with it in origin. But when it happens that
+this kind of attachment to the physician regularly evinces itself
+in every fresh case, under the most unfavourable conditions,
+and always appears in circumstances of a positively grotesque
+incongruity—in elderly women, in relation to grey-bearded men,
+even on occasions when our judgement assures us that no temptations
+exist—then we are compelled to give up the idea of a disturbing
+accident and to admit that we have to deal with a phenomenon
+in itself essentially bound up with the nature of the disease.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The new fact which we are thus unwillingly compelled to
+recognize we call <span class='sc'>Transference</span>. By this we mean a transference
+of feelings on to the person of the physician, because
+we do not believe that the situation in the treatment can account
+for the origin of such feelings. We are much more disposed
+to suspect that the whole of this readiness to develop feeling
+originates in another source; that it was previously formed
+in the patient, and has seized the opportunity provided by the
+treatment to transfer itself on to the person of the physician.
+The transference can express itself as a passionate petitioning
+for love, or it can take less extreme forms; where a young
+girl and an elderly man are concerned, instead of the wish to
+be wife or mistress, a wish to be adopted as a favourite daughter
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_370'>370</span>may come to light, the libidinous desire can modify itself and
+propose itself as a wish for an everlasting, but ideally platonic
+friendship. Many women understand how to sublimate the
+transference and to mould it until it acquires a sort of justification
+for its existence; others have to express it in its crude, original,
+almost impossible form. But at bottom it is always the same,
+and its origin in the same source can never be mistaken.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Before we enquire where we are to range this new fact, we
+will amplify the description of it a little. How is it with our
+male patients? There at least we might hope to be spared
+the troublesome element of sex difference and sex attraction.
+Well, the answer is very much the same as with women. The
+same attachment to the physician, the same overestimation
+of his qualities, the same adoption of his interests, the same
+jealousy against all those connected with him. The sublimated
+kinds of transference are the forms more frequently met with
+between man and man, and the directly sexual declaration more
+rarely, in the same degree to which the manifest homosexuality
+of the patient is subordinated to the other ways by which this
+component-instinct can express itself. Also, it is in male patients
+that the analyst more frequently observes a manifestation of
+the transference which at the first glance seems to controvert
+the description of it just given—that is, the hostile or <em>negative</em>
+transference.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>First of all, let us realize at once that the transference exists
+in the patient from the beginning of the treatment, and is for
+a time the strongest impetus in the work. Nothing is seen of
+it and one does not need to trouble about it as long as its effect
+is favourable to the work in which the two persons are co-operating.
+When it becomes transformed into a resistance, attention must
+be paid to it; and then it appears that two different and contrasting
+states of mind have supervened in it and have altered
+its attitude to the treatment: first, when the affectionate attraction
+has become so strong and betrays signs of its origin in
+sexual desire so clearly that it was bound to arouse an inner
+opposition against itself; and secondly, when it consists in
+antagonistic instead of affectionate feeling. The hostile feelings
+as a rule appear later than the affectionate and under cover of
+them; when both occur simultaneously they provide a very
+good exemplification of that ambivalence in feeling which governs
+most of our intimate relationships with other human beings.
+The hostile feelings therefore indicate an attachment of feeling
+quite similar to the affectionate, just as defiance indicates a
+similar dependence upon the other person to that belonging
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_371'>371</span>to obedience, though with a reversed prefix. There can be no
+doubt that the hostile feelings against the analyst deserve the
+name of ‘transference,’ for the situation in the treatment certainly
+gives no adequate occasion for them; the necessity for
+regarding the negative transference in this light is a confirmation
+of our previous similar view of the positive or affectionate
+variety.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Where the transference springs from, what difficulties it
+provides for us, how we can overcome them, and what advantage
+we can finally derive from it, are questions which can only be
+adequately dealt with in a technical exposition of the analytic
+method; I can merely touch upon them here. It is out of the
+question that we should yield to the demands made by the
+patient under the influence of his transference; it would be
+nonsensical to reject them unkindly, and still more so, indignantly.
+The transference is overcome by showing the patient that his
+feelings do not originate in the current situation, and do not
+really concern the person of the physician, but that he is reproducing
+something that had happened to him long ago. In this
+way we require him to transform his <em>repetition</em> into <em>recollection</em>.
+Then the transference which, whether affectionate or hostile,
+every time seemed the greatest menace to the cure becomes its
+best instrument, so that with its help we can unlock the closed
+doors in the soul. I should like, however, to say a few words
+to dispel the unpleasant effects of the shock that this unexpected
+phenomenon must have been to you. After all, we must not
+forget that this illness of the patient’s which we undertake to
+analyse is not a finally accomplished, and as it were consolidated
+thing; but that it is growing and continuing its development
+all the time like a living thing. The beginning of the treatment
+puts no stop to this development; but, as soon as the treatment
+has taken a hold upon the patient, it appears that the entire
+productivity of the illness henceforward becomes concentrated
+in one direction—namely, upon the relationship to the physician.
+The transference then becomes comparable to the cambium
+layer between the wood and the bark of a tree, from which proceeds
+the formation of new tissue and the growth of the trunk
+in diameter. As soon as the transference has taken on this
+significance the work upon the patient’s recollections recedes
+far into the background. It is then not incorrect to say that
+we no longer have to do with the previous illness, but with a
+newly-created and transformed neurosis which has replaced the
+earlier one. This new edition of the old disease has been followed
+from its inception, one sees it come to light and grow, and is
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_372'>372</span>particularly familiar with it since one is oneself its central object.
+All the patient’s symptoms have abandoned their original significance
+and have adapted themselves to a new meaning, which
+is contained in their relationship to the transference; or else
+only those symptoms remain which were capable of being adapted
+in this way. The conquest of this new artificially-acquired
+neurosis coincides with the removal of the illness which existed
+prior to the treatment, that is, with accomplishing the therapeutic
+task. The person who has become normal and free from the
+influence of repressed instinctive tendencies in his relationship
+to the physician remains so in his own life when the physician
+has again been removed from it.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The transference has this all-important, absolutely central
+significance for the cure in hysteria, anxiety-hysteria, and the
+obsessional neurosis, which are in consequence rightly grouped
+together as the ‘transference neuroses.’ Anyone who has grasped
+from analytic experience a true impression of the fact of transference
+can never again doubt the nature of the suppressed
+impulses which have manufactured an outlet for themselves
+in the symptoms; and he will require no stronger proof of their
+libidinal character. We may say that our conviction of the
+significance of the symptoms as a substitutive gratification of
+the Libido was only finally and definitely established by evaluating
+the phenomenon of transference.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now, however, we are called upon to correct our former
+dynamic conception of the process of cure and to bring it into
+agreement with the new discovery. When the patient has to
+fight out the normal conflict with the resistances which we have
+discovered in him by analysis, he requires a powerful propelling
+force to influence him towards the decision we aim at, leading
+to recovery. Otherwise it might happen that he would decide
+for a repetition of the previous outcome, and allow that which
+had been raised into consciousness to slip back again under
+repression. The outcome in this struggle is not decided by his
+intellectual insight—it is neither strong enough nor free enough
+to accomplish such a thing—but solely by his relationship to
+the physician. In so far as his transference bears the positive
+sign, it clothes the physician with authority, transforms itself
+into faith in his findings and in his views. Without this kind
+of transference or with a negative one, the physician and his
+arguments would never even be listened to. Faith repeats
+the history of its own origin; it is a derivative of love and at
+first it needed no arguments. Not until later does it admit
+them so far as to take them into critical consideration if they
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_373'>373</span>have been offered by someone who is loved. Without this
+support arguments have no weight with the patient, never do
+have any with most people in life. A human being is therefore
+on the whole only accessible to influence, even on the intellectual
+side, in so far as he is capable of investing objects with Libido;
+and we have good cause to recognize, and to fear, in the measure
+of his narcissism a barrier to his susceptibility to influence, even
+by the best analytic technique.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The capacity for the radiation of Libido towards other persons
+in object investment must, of course, be ascribed to all normal
+people; the tendency to transference in neurotics, so-called, is
+only an exceptional intensification of a universal characteristic.
+Now it would be very remarkable if a human character-trait
+of this importance and universality had never been observed
+and made use of. And this has really been done. Bernheim,
+with unerring perspicacity, based the theory of hypnotic manifestations
+upon the proposition that all human beings are more
+or less open to suggestion, are ‘suggestible.’ What he called
+suggestibility is nothing else but the tendency to transference,
+rather too narrowly circumscribed so that the negative transference
+did not come within its scope. But Bernheim could
+never say what suggestion actually was nor how it arises; it
+was an axiomatic fact to him and he could give no explanation
+of its origin. He did not recognize the dependence of ‘suggestibility’
+on sexuality, on the functioning of the Libido. And we
+have to admit that we have only abandoned hypnosis in our
+methods in order to discover suggestion again in the shape of
+transference.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>But now I will pause and let you take up the thread. I
+observe that an objection is invading your thoughts with such
+violence that it would deprive you of all power of attention if
+it were not given expression. “So now at last you have confessed
+that you too work with the aid of suggestion like the
+hypnotists. We have been thinking so all along. But then,
+what is the use of all these roundabout routes by way of past
+experiences, discovering the unconscious material, interpreting
+and retranslating the distortions, and the enormous expenditure
+of time, trouble, and money, when after all the only effective
+agent is suggestion? Why do you not suggest directly against
+the symptoms, as others do who are honest hypnotists? And
+besides, if you are going to make out that by these roundabout
+routes you have made numerous important psychological discoveries,
+which are concealed in direct suggestion, who is to
+vouch for their validity? Are not they too the result of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_374'>374</span>suggestion, of unintentional suggestion, that is? Cannot you
+impress upon the patient what you please and whatever seems
+good to you in this direction also?”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>What you charge me with in this way is exceedingly interesting
+and must be answered. But I cannot do that to-day; our time
+is up. Till next time, then. You will see that I shall be answerable
+to you. To-day I must finish what I began. I promised
+to explain to you through the factor of the transference why
+it is that our therapeutic efforts have no success in the narcissistic
+neuroses.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I can do it in a few words, and you will see how simply the
+riddle is solved, and how well everything fits together. Experience
+shows that persons suffering from the narcissistic
+neuroses have no capacity for transference, or only insufficient
+remnants of it. They turn from the physician, not in hostility,
+but in indifference. Therefore they are not to be influenced
+by him; what he says leaves them cold, makes no impression
+on them, and therefore the process of cure which can be carried
+through with others, the revivification of the pathogenic conflict
+and the overcoming of the resistance due to the repressions,
+cannot be effected with them. They remain as they are. They
+have often enough undertaken attempts at recovery on their
+own account which have led to pathological results; we can do
+nothing to alter this.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>On the basis of our clinical observations of these patients
+we stated that they must have abandoned the investment of
+objects with Libido and transformed object-Libido into Ego-Libido.
+By this we differentiated them from the first group
+of neurotics (hysteria, anxiety, and obsessional neurosis). Their
+behaviour during the attempt to cure them confirms this suspicion.
+They produce no transference, and are, therefore, inaccessible
+to our efforts, not to be cured by us.</p>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_375'>375</span>
+ <h3 class='c002'><span class='c014'>TWENTY-EIGHTH LECTURE</span><br> THE ANALYTIC THERAPY</h3>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c006'>You know what we are going to discuss to-day. When I admitted
+that the influence of the psycho-analytic therapy is
+essentially founded upon transference, i.e. upon suggestion,
+you asked me why we do not make use of direct suggestion,
+and you linked this up with a doubt whether, in view of the
+fact that suggestion plays such a large part, we can still vouch
+for the objectivity of our psychological discoveries. I promised
+to give you a comprehensive answer.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Direct suggestion is suggestion delivered directly against
+the forms taken by the symptoms, a struggle between your
+authority and the motives underlying the disease. In this struggle
+you do not trouble yourself about these motives, you only require
+the patient to suppress the manifestation of them in the form
+of symptoms. In the main it makes no difference whether
+you place the patient under hypnosis or not. Bernheim, with
+his characteristic acuteness, repeatedly stated that suggestion
+was the essence of the manifestations of hypnotism, and that
+hypnosis itself was already a result of suggestion, a suggested
+condition; he preferred to use suggestion in the waking state,
+which can achieve the same results as suggestion in hypnosis.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now which shall I take first, the results of experience or
+theoretical considerations?</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Let us begin with experience. I sought out Bernheim in
+Nancy in 1889 and became a pupil of his; I translated his book
+on suggestion into German. For years I made use of hypnotic
+treatment, first with prohibitory suggestions and later combined
+with Breuer’s system of the fullest enquiry into the patient’s
+life; I can therefore speak from wide experience about the results
+of the hypnotic or suggestive therapy. According to an old
+medical saying an ideal therapy should be rapid, reliable and
+not disagreeable to the patient; Bernheim’s method certainly
+fulfilled two of these requirements. It was much more rapid,
+that is, incomparably more rapid in its course than the analytic,
+and it involved the patient in no trouble or discomfort. For
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_376'>376</span>the physician it eventually became monotonous; it meant
+treating every case in the same way, always employing the same
+ritual to prohibit the existence of the most diverse symptoms,
+without being able to grasp anything of their meaning or significance.
+It was a sort of mechanical drudgery—hodman’s work—not
+scientific work; it was reminiscent of magic, conjuring,
+and hocus-pocus, yet in the patient’s interests one had to ignore
+that. In the third desideratum, however, it failed; it was not
+reliable in any respect. It could be employed in certain cases
+only and not in others; with some much could be achieved by
+it, and with others very little, one never knew why. But worse
+than its capricious nature was the lack of permanence in the
+results; after a time, if one heard from the patient again, the
+old malady had reappeared or had been replaced by another.
+Then one could begin to hypnotize again. In the background
+there was the warning of experienced men against robbing the
+patient of his independence by frequent repetitions of hypnosis,
+and against accustoming him to this treatment as though it were
+a narcotic. It is true, on the other hand, that at times everything
+fell out just as one could wish; one obtained complete and lasting
+success with little difficulty; but the conditions of this satisfactory
+outcome remained hidden. In one case, when I had completely
+removed a severe condition by a short hypnotic treatment,
+it recurred unchanged after the patient (a woman) had developed
+ill feeling against me without just cause; then after a reconciliation
+I was able to effect its disappearance again and this
+time far more thoroughly; but it reappeared again when she
+had a second time become hostile to me. Another time I had
+the following experience; during the treatment of an especially
+obstinate attack in a patient whom I had several times relieved
+of nervous symptoms, she suddenly threw her arms round my
+neck. Whether one wished to do so or not, this kind of thing
+finally made it imperative to enquire into the problem of the
+nature and source of one’s suggestive authority.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>So much for experience; it shows that in abandoning direct
+suggestion we have given up nothing irreplaceable. Now let us
+link on to the facts a few comments. The exercise of the hypnotic
+method makes as little demand for effort on the part of the
+patient as it does on the physician. The method is in complete
+harmony with the view of the neuroses generally accepted by
+the majority of medical men. The practitioner says to the
+nervous person: “There is nothing the matter with you; it
+is merely nervousness, therefore a few words from me will scatter
+all your troubles to the winds in five minutes.” But it is contrary
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_377'>377</span>to all our beliefs about energy in general that a minimal exertion
+should be able to remove a heavy load by approaching it directly
+without the assistance of any suitably-devised appliance. In
+so far as the circumstances are at all comparable, experience
+shows that this trick cannot be performed successfully with the
+neuroses. I know, however, that this argument is not unassailable;
+there are such things as explosions.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In the light of the knowledge we have obtained through
+psycho-analysis, the difference between hypnotic and psycho-analytic
+suggestion may be described as follows: The hypnotic
+therapy endeavours to cover up and as it were to whitewash
+something going on in the mind, the analytic to lay bare and
+to remove something. The first works cosmetically, the second
+surgically. The first employs suggestion to interdict the symptoms;
+it reinforces the repressions, but otherwise it leaves unchanged
+all the processes that have led to symptom-formation.
+Analytic therapy takes hold deeper down nearer the roots of the
+disease, among the conflicts from which the symptoms proceed; it
+employs suggestion to change the outcome of these conflicts.
+Hypnotic therapy allows the patient to remain inactive and
+unchanged, consequently also helpless in the face of every new
+incitement to illness. Analytic treatment makes as great demands
+for efforts on the part of the patient as on the physician, efforts
+to abolish the inner resistances. The patient’s mental life is permanently
+changed by overcoming these resistances, is lifted to
+a higher level of development, and remains proof against fresh
+possibilities of illness. The labour of overcoming the resistances
+is the essential achievement of the analytic treatment; the
+patient has to accomplish it and the physician makes it possible
+for him to do this by suggestions which are in the nature of an
+<em>education</em>. It has been truly said therefore, that psycho-analytic
+treatment is a kind of <em>re-education</em>.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I hope I have now made clear to you the difference between
+our method of employing suggestion therapeutically and the
+method which is the only possible one in hypnotic therapy.
+Since we have traced the influence of suggestion back to the
+transference, you also understand the striking capriciousness of
+the effect in hypnotic therapy, and why analytic therapy is within
+its limits dependable. In employing hypnosis we are entirely
+dependent upon the condition of the patient’s transference
+and yet we are unable to exercise any influence upon this condition
+itself. The transference of a patient being hypnotized may be
+negative, or, as most commonly, ambivalent, or he may have
+guarded himself against his transference by adopting special
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_378'>378</span>attitudes; we gather nothing about all this. In psycho-analysis
+we work upon the transference itself, dissipate whatever stands
+in the way of it, and manipulate the instrument which is to do
+the work. Thus it becomes possible for us to derive entirely
+new benefits from the power of suggestion; we are able to control
+it; the patient alone no longer manages his suggestibility according
+to his own liking, but in so far as he is amenable to its influence
+at all, we guide his suggestibility.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Now you will say that, regardless of whether the driving
+force behind the analysis is called transference or suggestion,
+the danger still remains that our influence upon the patient
+may bring the objective certainty of our discoveries into doubt;
+and that what is an advantage in therapy is harmful in research.
+This is the objection that has most frequently been raised against
+psycho-analysis; and it must be admitted that, even though
+it is unjustified, it cannot be ignored as unreasonable. If it
+were justified, psycho-analysis after all would be nothing else
+but a specially well-disguised and particularly effective kind of
+suggestive treatment; and all its conclusions about the experiences
+of the patient’s past life, mental dynamics, the Unconscious,
+and so on, could be taken very lightly. So our opponents
+think; the significance of sexual experiences in particular,
+if not the experiences themselves, we are supposed to have
+“put into the patient’s mind,” after having first concocted these
+conglomerations in our own corrupt minds. These accusations
+are more satisfactorily refuted by the evidence of experience
+than by the aid of theory. Anyone who has himself conducted
+psycho-analyses has been able to convince himself numberless
+times that it is impossible to suggest things to a patient in this
+way. There is no difficulty, of course, in making him a disciple
+of a particular theory, and thus making it possible for him to
+share some mistaken belief possibly harboured by the physician.
+He behaves like anyone else in this, like a pupil; but by this
+one has only influenced his intellect, not his illness. The solving
+of his conflicts and the overcoming of his resistances succeeds
+only when what he is told to look for in himself corresponds
+with what actually does exist in him. Anything that has been
+inferred wrongly by the physician will disappear in the course
+of the analysis; it must be withdrawn and replaced by something
+more correct. One’s aim is, by a very careful technique, to
+prevent temporary successes arising through suggestion; but if
+they do arise no great harm is done, for we are not content with
+the first result. We do not consider the analysis completed
+unless all obscurities in the case are explained, the gaps in
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_379'>379</span>memory filled out, and the original occasions of the repressions
+discovered. When results appear prematurely, one regards
+them as obstacles rather than as furtherances of the analytic
+work, and one destroys them again by continually exposing
+the transference on which they are founded. Fundamentally
+it is this last feature which distinguishes analytic treatment
+from that of pure suggestion, and which clears the results of
+analysis from the suspicion of being the results of suggestion.
+In every other suggestive treatment the transference is carefully
+preserved and left intact; in analysis it is itself the object of
+the treatment and is continually being dissected in all its various
+forms. At the conclusion of the analysis the transference itself
+must be dissolved; if success then supervenes and is maintained
+it is not founded on suggestion, but on the overcoming of the
+inner resistances effected by the help of suggestion, on the inner
+change achieved within the patient.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>That which probably prevents single effects of suggestion
+from arising during the treatment is the struggle that is incessantly
+being waged against the resistances, which know how to
+transform themselves into a negative (hostile) transference.
+Nor will we neglect to point to the evidence that a great many
+of the detailed findings of analysis, which would otherwise be
+suspected of being produced by suggestion, are confirmed from
+other, irreproachable sources. We have unimpeachable witnesses
+on these points, namely, dements and paranoiacs, who
+are of course quite above any suspicion of being influenced by
+suggestion. All that these patients relate in the way of phantasies
+and translations of symbols, which have penetrated through
+into their consciousness, corresponds faithfully with the results
+of our investigations into the Unconscious of transference neurotics,
+thus confirming the objective truth of the interpretations
+made by us which are so often doubted. I do not think you
+will find yourselves mistaken if you choose to trust analysis in
+these respects.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>We now need to complete our description of the process of
+recovery by expressing it in terms of the Libido-theory. The
+neurotic is incapable of enjoyment or of achievement—the first
+because his Libido is attached to no real object, the last because
+so much of the energy which would otherwise be at his disposal
+is expended in maintaining the Libido under repression, and in
+warding off its attempts to assert itself. He would be well if
+the conflict between his Ego and his Libido came to an end,
+and if his Ego again had the Libido at its disposal. The task of
+the treatment, therefore, consists in the task of loosening the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_380'>380</span>Libido from its previous attachments, which are beyond the
+reach of the Ego, and in making it again serviceable to the Ego.
+Now where is the Libido of a neurotic? Easily found: it is
+attached to the symptoms, which offer it the substitutive satisfaction
+that is all it can obtain as things are. We must master
+the symptoms then, dissolve them—just what the patient asks
+of us. In order to dissolve the symptoms it is necessary to go
+back to the point at which they originated, to review the conflict
+from which they proceeded, and with the help of propelling
+forces which at that time were not available to guide it towards
+a new solution. This revision of the process of repression can
+only partially be effected by means of the memory-traces of
+the processes which led up to repression. The decisive part of the
+work is carried through by creating—in the relationship to the
+physician, in “the transference”—new editions of those early
+conflicts, in which the patient strives to behave as he originally
+behaved, while one calls upon all the available forces in his soul
+to bring him to another decision. The transference is thus the
+battlefield where all the contending forces must meet.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>All the Libido and the full strength of the opposition against
+it are concentrated upon the one thing, upon the relationship
+to the physician; thus it becomes inevitable that the symptoms
+should be deprived of their Libido; in place of the patient’s
+original illness appears the artificially-acquired transference, the
+transference-disorder; in place of a variety of unreal objects
+of his Libido appears the one object, also ‘phantastic,’ of the
+person of the physician. This new struggle which arises concerning
+this object is by means of the analyst’s suggestions
+lifted to the surface, to the higher mental levels, and is there
+worked out as a normal mental conflict. Since a new repression
+is thus avoided, the opposition between the Ego and the Libido
+comes to an end; unity is restored within the patient’s mind.
+When the Libido has been detached from its temporary object
+in the person of the physician it cannot return to its earlier
+objects, but is now at the disposal of the Ego. The forces
+opposing us in this struggle during the therapeutic treatment
+are on the one hand the Ego’s aversion against certain tendencies
+on the part of the Libido, which had expressed itself in repressing
+tendencies; and on the other hand the tenacity or ‘adhesiveness’
+of the Libido, which does not readily detach itself from objects
+it has once invested.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The therapeutic work thus falls into two phases; in the
+first all the Libido is forced away from the symptoms into the
+transference and there concentrated, in the second the battle
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_381'>381</span>rages round this new object and the Libido is made free from
+it. The change that is decisive for a successful outcome of
+this renewed conflict lies in the preclusion of repression, so that
+the Libido cannot again withdraw itself from the Ego by a flight
+into the Unconscious. It is made possible by changes in the
+Ego ensuing as a consequence of the analyst’s suggestions. At
+the expense of the Unconscious the Ego becomes wider by the
+work of interpretation which brings the unconscious material
+into consciousness; through education it becomes reconciled
+to the Libido and is made willing to grant it a certain degree
+of satisfaction; and its horror of the claims of its Libido is
+lessened by the new capacity it acquires to expend a certain
+amount of the Libido in sublimation. The more nearly the
+course of the treatment corresponds with this ideal description
+the greater will be the success of the psycho-analytic therapy.
+Its barriers are found in the lack of mobility in the Libido,
+which resists being released from its objects, and in the rigidity
+of the patient’s narcissism, which will not allow more than a
+certain degree of object-transference to develop. Perhaps the
+dynamics of the process of recovery will become still clearer if
+we describe it by saying that, in attracting a part of it to ourselves
+through transference, we gather in the whole amount of the
+Libido which has been withdrawn from the Ego’s control.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It is as well here to make clear that the distributions of the
+Libido which ensue during and by means of the analysis afford
+no direct inference of the nature of its disposition during the
+previous illness. Given that a case can be successfully cured
+by establishing and then resolving a powerful father-transference
+to the person of the physician, it would not follow that the
+patient had previously suffered in this way from an unconscious
+attachment of the Libido to his father. The father-transference
+is only the battlefield on which we conquer and take the Libido
+prisoner; the patient’s Libido has been drawn hither away
+from other ‘positions.’ The battlefield does not necessarily
+constitute one of the enemy’s most important strongholds;
+the defence of the enemy’s capital city need not be conducted
+immediately before its gates. Not until after the transference
+has been again resolved can one begin to reconstruct in imagination
+the dispositions of the Libido that were represented by
+the illness.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In the light of the Libido-theory there is a final word to be
+said about dreams. The dreams of a neurotic, like his “errors”
+and his free associations, enable us to find the meaning of the
+symptoms and to discover the dispositions of the Libido. The
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_382'>382</span>forms taken by the wish-fulfilment in them show us what are
+the wish-impulses that have undergone repression, and what
+are the objects to which the Libido has attached itself after
+withdrawal from the Ego. The interpretation of dreams therefore
+plays a great part in psycho-analytic treatment, and in
+many cases it is for lengthy periods the most important instrument
+at work. We already know that the condition of sleep
+in itself produces a certain relaxation of the repressions. By
+this diminution in the heavy pressure upon it the repressed
+desire is able to create for itself a far clearer expression in a
+dream than can be permitted to it by day in the symptoms.
+Hence the study of dreams becomes the easiest approach to
+a knowledge of the repressed Unconscious, which is where the
+Libido which has withdrawn from the Ego belongs.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The dreams of neurotics, however, differ in no essential
+from those of normal people; they are indeed perhaps not in
+any way distinguishable from them. It would be illogical to
+account for the dreams of neurotics in a way that would not
+also hold good of the dreams of normal people. We have to
+conclude therefore that the difference between neurosis and
+health prevails only by day; it is not sustained in dream-life.
+It thus becomes necessary to transfer to healthy persons
+a number of conclusions arrived at as a result of the connections
+between the dreams and the symptoms of neurotics. We have
+to recognize that the healthy man as well possesses those factors
+in mental life which alone can bring about the formation of
+a dream or of a symptom, and we must conclude further that
+the healthy also have instituted repressions and have to expend
+a certain amount of energy to maintain them; that their unconscious
+minds too harbour repressed impulses which are still
+suffused with energy, and that <em>a part of the Libido is in them
+also withdrawn from the disposal of the Ego</em>. The healthy man
+too is therefore virtually a neurotic, but the only symptom
+that he <em>seems</em> capable of developing is a dream. To be sure
+when you subject his waking life also to a critical investigation
+you discover something that contradicts this specious conclusion;
+for this apparently healthy life is pervaded by innumerable
+trivial and practically unimportant symptom-formations.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The difference between nervous health and nervous illness
+(neurosis) is narrowed down therefore to a practical distinction,
+and is determined by the practical result—how far the person
+concerned remains capable of a sufficient degree of capacity
+for enjoyment and active achievement in life. The difference
+can probably be traced back to the proportion of the energy
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_383'>383</span>which has remained free relative to that of the energy which
+has been bound by repression, i.e. it is a quantitative and not
+a qualitative difference. I do not need to remind you that this
+view provides a theoretical basis for our conviction that the
+neuroses are essentially amenable to cure, in spite of their being
+based on a constitutional disposition.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>So much, therefore, in the way of knowledge of the characteristics
+of health may be inferred from the identity of the
+dreams dreamt by neurotic and by healthy persons. Of dreams
+themselves, however, a further inference must be drawn—namely,
+that it is not possible to detach them from their connection
+with neurotic symptoms; that we are not at liberty
+to believe that their essential nature is exhausted by compressing
+them into the formula of ‘a translation of thoughts into archaic
+forms of expression’; and that we are bound to conclude that
+they disclose dispositions of the Libido and objects of desire
+which are actually in operation and valid at the moment.</p>
+
+<p class='c006'>We have now come very nearly to the end. Perhaps you
+are disappointed that under the heading of psycho-analytic
+therapy I have limited myself to theory, and have told you
+nothing of the conditions under which the cure is undertaken,
+or of the results it achieves. I omit both, however: the first,
+because in fact I never intended to give you a practical training
+in the exercise of the analytic method; and the last, because
+I have several motives against it. At the beginning of these
+discussions I said emphatically that under favourable conditions
+we achieve cures that are in no way inferior to the most brilliant
+in other fields of medical therapy; I may perhaps add that
+these results could be achieved by no other method. If I said
+more I should be suspected of wishing to drown the depreciatory
+voices of our opponents by self-advertisement. Medical
+“colleagues” have, even at public congresses, repeatedly held
+out a threat to psycho-analysts that by publishing a collection
+of the failures and harmful effects of analysis they will open
+the eyes of the injured public to the worthlessness of this method
+of treatment. Apart from the malicious, denunciatory character
+of such a measure, however, a collection of that kind would
+not even be valid evidence upon which a correct estimate of
+the therapeutic results of analysis might be formed. Analytic
+therapy, as you know, is still young; it needed many years
+to elaborate the technique, which could only be done in the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_384'>384</span>course of the work under the influence of increasing experience.
+On account of the difficulties of imparting instruction in the
+methods the beginner is thrown much more upon his own
+resources for development of his capacity than any other kind
+of specialist, and the results of his early years can never be
+taken as indicating the full possible achievements of analytic
+therapy.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Many attempts at treatment made in the beginning of psycho-analysis
+were failures because they were undertaken with cases
+altogether unsuited to the procedure, which nowadays we should
+exclude by following certain indications. These indications,
+however, could only be discovered by trying. In the beginning
+we did not know that paranoia and dementia præcox, when
+fully developed, are not amenable to analysis; we were still
+justified in trying the method on all kinds of disorders. Most
+of the failures of those early years, however, were not due to
+the fault of the physician, or to the unsuitability in the choice
+of subject, but to unpropitious external conditions. I have
+spoken only of the inner resistances, those on the part of the
+patient, which are inevitable and can be overcome. The external
+resistances which the patient’s circumstances and surroundings
+set up against analysis have little theoretic interest but the
+greatest practical importance. Psycho-Analytic treatment is
+comparable to a surgical operation and, like that, for its success
+it has the right to expect to be carried out under the most
+favourable conditions. You know the preliminary arrangements
+a surgeon is accustomed to make—a suitable room, a
+good light, expert assistance, exclusion of the relatives, and
+so on. Now ask yourselves how many surgical operations would
+be successful if they had to be conducted in the presence of the
+patient’s entire family poking their noses into the scene of the
+operation and shrieking aloud at every cut. In psycho-analytic
+treatment the intervention of the relatives is a positive danger
+and, moreover, one which we do not know how to deal with.
+We are armed against the inner resistances of the patient, which
+we recognize as necessary, but how can we protect ourselves
+against these outer resistances? It is impossible to get round
+the relatives by any sort of explanation, nor can one induce
+them to hold aloof from the whole affair; one can never take
+them into one’s confidence because then we run the danger of
+losing the patient’s trust in us, for he—quite rightly, of course—demands
+that the man he confides in should take his part.
+Anyone who knows anything of the dissensions commonly
+splitting up family life will not be astonished in his capacity
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_385'>385</span>of analyst to find that those nearest to the patient frequently
+show less interest in his recovery than in keeping him as he is.
+When as so often occurs the neurosis is connected with conflicts
+between different members of a family, the healthy person does
+not make much of putting his own interest before the patient’s
+recovery. After all, it is not surprising that the husband does
+not favour a treatment in which, as he correctly supposes, his
+sins will all come to light; nor do we wonder at this, but then
+we cannot blame ourselves when our efforts remain fruitless
+and are prematurely broken off because the husband’s resistance
+is added to that of the sick wife. We had simply undertaken
+something which, under the existing conditions, it was impossible
+to carry out.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Instead of describing many cases to you I will tell you of
+one only, in which I had to suffer for the sake of professional
+conscientiousness. I took a young girl—many years ago—for
+analytic treatment; for a considerable time previously she
+had been unable to go out of doors on account of a dread, nor
+could she stay at home alone. After much hesitation the patient
+confessed that her thoughts had been a good deal occupied by
+some signs of affection that she had noticed by chance between
+her mother and a well-to-do friend of the family. Very tactlessly—or
+else very cleverly—she then gave the mother a hint
+of what had been discussed during the analysis; she did this
+by altering her behaviour to her mother, by insisting that no
+one but her mother could protect her against the dread of being
+alone, and by holding the door against her when she attempted
+to leave the house. The mother herself had formerly been
+very nervous, but had been cured years before by a visit to a
+hydropathic establishment—or, putting it otherwise, we may
+say she had there made the acquaintance of the man with whom
+she had established a relationship that had proved satisfying
+in more than one respect. Made suspicious by her daughter’s
+passionate demands the mother suddenly <em>understood</em> what the
+girl’s dread signified. She had become ill in order to make
+her mother a prisoner and rob her of the freedom necessary
+for her to maintain her relations with her lover. The mother’s
+decision was instantly taken; she put an end to the harmful
+treatment. The girl was sent to a home for nervous patients,
+and for many years was there pointed out as an “unhappy
+victim of psycho-analysis”; for just as long I was pursued by
+damaging rumours about the unfortunate results of the treatment.
+I maintained silence because I supposed myself bound
+by the rules of professional secrecy. Years later I learned from
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_386'>386</span>a colleague who had visited the home and there seen the girl
+with agoraphobia that the intimacy between the mother and
+the wealthy man was common knowledge, and that in all
+probability it was connived at by the husband and father. To
+this “secret” the girl’s cure had been sacrificed.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>In the years before the war, when the influx of patients
+from many countries made me independent of the goodwill or
+disfavour of my native city, I made it a rule never to take for
+treatment anyone who was not <i><span lang="la">sui juris</span></i>, independent of others
+in all the essential relations of life. Every psycho-analyst
+cannot make these stipulations. Perhaps you will conclude
+from my warnings about relatives that one should take the
+patient out of his family circle in the interests of analysis, and
+restrict this therapy to those living in private institutions. I
+could not support this suggestion, however; it is far more
+advantageous for the patients—those who are not in a condition
+of severe prostration, at least—to remain during the treatment
+in those circumstances in which they have to struggle with the
+demands that their ordinary life makes on them. But the
+relatives ought not to counteract this advantage by their
+behaviour, and above all should not oppose their hostility to
+one’s professional efforts. But how are you going to induce
+people who are inaccessible to you to take up this attitude?
+You will naturally also conclude that the social atmosphere
+and degree of cultivation of the patient’s immediate surroundings
+have considerable influence upon the prospects of the
+treatment.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>This is a gloomy outlook for the efficacy of psycho-analysis
+as a therapy, even if we may explain the overwhelming majority
+of our failures by taking into account these disturbing external
+factors! Friends of analysis have advised us to counterbalance
+a collection of failures by drawing up a statistical
+enumeration of our successes. I have not taken up this
+suggestion either. I brought forward the argument that
+statistics would be valueless if the units collated were not alike,
+and the cases which had been treated were in fact not equivalent
+in many respects. Further, the period of time that could be
+reviewed was too short for one to be able to judge of the permanence
+of the cures; and of many cases it would be impossible
+to give any account. They were persons who had kept both
+their illness and their treatment secret, and whose recovery
+in consequence had similarly to be kept secret. The strongest
+reason against it, however, lay in the recognition of the fact
+that in matters of therapy humanity is in the highest degree
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_387'>387</span>irrational, so that there is no prospect of influencing it by
+reasonable arguments. A novelty in therapeutics is either
+taken up with frenzied enthusiasm, as for instance when Koch
+first published his results with tuberculin; or else it is regarded
+with abysmal distrust, as happened for instance with Jenner’s
+vaccination, actually a heaven-sent blessing, but one which
+still has its implacable opponents. A very evident prejudice
+against psycho-analysis made itself apparent. When one had
+cured a very difficult case one would hear: “That is no proof
+of anything; he would have got well of himself after all this
+time.” And when a patient who had already gone through
+four cycles of depression and mania came to me in an interval
+after the melancholia and three weeks later again began to
+develop an attack of mania, all the members of the family, and
+also all the high medical authorities who were called in, were
+convinced that the fresh attack could be nothing but a consequence
+of the attempted analysis. Against prejudice one can
+do nothing, as you can now see once more in the prejudices
+that each group of the nations at war has developed against
+the other. The most sensible thing to do is to wait and allow
+them to wear off with the passage of time. A day comes when
+the same people regard the same things in quite a different light
+from what they did before; why they thought differently before
+remains a dark secret.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>It is possible that the prejudice against the analytic therapy
+has already begun to relax. The continual spread of analytic
+doctrine and the numbers of medical men taking up analytic
+treatment in many countries seem to point in that direction.
+As a young man I was caught in just such a storm of indignation
+roused in the medical profession by the hypnotic suggestion-treatment,
+which nowadays is held up in opposition to psycho-analysis
+by the “sober-minded.” As a therapeutic instrument,
+however, hypnotism did not bear out the hopes placed in it;
+we psycho-analysts may claim to be its rightful heirs and should
+not forget how much encouragement and theoretic enlightenment
+we owe to it. The harmful effects reported of psycho-analysis
+are essentially confined to transitory manifestations
+of an exacerbation of the conflict, which may occur when the
+analysis is clumsily handled, or when it is broken off suddenly.
+You have heard an account of what we do with our patients,
+and you can form your own judgement whether our efforts are
+likely to lead to lasting injury. Misuse of analysis is possible
+in various ways: the transference especially, in the hands of
+an unscrupulous physician, is a dangerous instrument. But
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_388'>388</span>no medical remedy is proof against misuse; if a knife will not
+cut, neither will it serve a surgeon.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>I have now reached the end. It is more than a conventional
+formality when I say that I myself am heavily oppressed by
+the many defects of the lectures I have delivered before you.
+I regret most of all that I have so often promised to return again
+in another place to a subject that I had just touched upon
+shortly, and that then the context in which I could keep my
+word did not offer itself. I undertook to give you an account
+of a thing that is still unfinished, still developing, and now my
+short summary itself has become an incomplete one. In many
+places I laid everything ready for drawing a conclusion, and
+then I did not draw it. But I could not aim at making you
+experts in psycho-analysis; I only wished to put you in the
+way of some understanding of it, and to arouse your interest
+in it.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_389'>389</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>INDEX</h2>
+</div>
+
+<ul class='index c004'>
+ <li class='c021'><span class='sc'>Abel, C.</span>, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a>, <a href='#Page_194'>194</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'><span class='sc'>Abraham, K.</span>, <a href='#Page_275'>275</a>, <a href='#Page_346'>346</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Act:
+ <ul>
+ <li>accidental, <a href='#Page_48'>48</a></li>
+ <li>sexual, <a href='#Page_271'>271</a>, <a href='#Page_297'>297</a>, <a href='#Page_326'>326</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>introductory, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>, <a href='#Page_260'>260</a>, <a href='#Page_271'>271</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li>symptomatic, <a href='#Page_48'>48</a>, <a href='#Page_209'>209</a>, <a href='#Page_215'>215</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'>Actions, erroneous performance of, <a href='#Page_62'>62</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Actual neuroses, <a href='#Page_322'>322</a>–7</li>
+ <li class='c021'><span class='sc'>Adler, A.</span>, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a>, <a href='#Page_318'>318</a>, <a href='#Page_339'>339</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>‘Advantage through illness,’ <a href='#Page_320'>320</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Ætiology of neuroses, <a href='#Page_216'>216</a>, <a href='#Page_287'>287</a>–93, <a href='#Page_295'>295</a>, <a href='#Page_303'>303</a>–5, <a href='#Page_308'>308</a>, <a href='#Page_313'>313</a>, <a href='#Page_322'>322</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Affects:
+ <ul>
+ <li>anxiety and, <a href='#Page_330'>330</a>, <a href='#Page_337'>337</a></li>
+ <li>in dreams, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a>–2</li>
+ <li>James-Lange theory of, <a href='#Page_331'>331</a></li>
+ <li>repression and, <a href='#Page_336'>336</a>, <a href='#Page_341'>341</a>–2</li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'>Agoraphobia, <a href='#Page_224'>224</a>, <a href='#Page_229'>229</a>, <a href='#Page_334'>334</a>, <a href='#Page_386'>386</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'><span class='sc'>Alexander</span>, the Great, <a href='#Page_14'>14</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>dream of, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a>, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'>Altruism, <a href='#Page_348'>348</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Ambivalence, <a href='#Page_279'>279</a>, <a href='#Page_357'>357</a>, <a href='#Page_370'>370</a>, <a href='#Page_377'>377</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Amnesia:
+ <ul>
+ <li>of childhood, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a>, <a href='#Page_239'>239</a>, <a href='#Page_263'>263</a>, <a href='#Page_274'>274</a></li>
+ <li>of neuroses, <a href='#Page_239'>239</a>, <a href='#Page_240'>240</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'>Anal-erotism, <a href='#Page_265'>265</a>, <a href='#Page_268'>268</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Anal-sadistic stage of libido-development, <a href='#Page_275'>275</a>–6, <a href='#Page_289'>289</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'><span class='sc'>Andreas, Lou</span>, <a href='#Page_265'>265</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'><em>Anthropophyteia</em>, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a>–8</li>
+ <li class='c021'>Antithetical sense of primal words, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a>, <a href='#Page_194'>194</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Anus, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>, <a href='#Page_265'>265</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Anxiety, <a href='#Page_225'>225</a>, <a href='#Page_328'>328</a>–44, <a href='#Page_359'>359</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>development of, <a href='#Page_330'>330</a>, <a href='#Page_338'>338</a>, <a href='#Page_342'>342</a></li>
+ <li>‘free-floating,’ <a href='#Page_332'>332</a>, <a href='#Page_334'>334</a></li>
+ <li>in children, <a href='#Page_338'>338</a></li>
+ <li>in dreams, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a>–3, <a href='#Page_230'>230</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'>Anxiety-equivalents, <a href='#Page_334'>334</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Anxiety-hysteria, <a href='#Page_229'>229</a>, <a href='#Page_244'>244</a>, <a href='#Page_252'>252</a>, <a href='#Page_304'>304</a>, <a href='#Page_334'>334</a>, <a href='#Page_372'>372</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Anxiety-neurosis, <a href='#Page_325'>325</a>, <a href='#Page_332'>332</a>, <a href='#Page_335'>335</a>, <a href='#Page_337'>337</a>, <a href='#Page_365'>365</a>–6, <a href='#Page_374'>374</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Anxious readiness, <a href='#Page_330'>330</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'><em>Apotropaea</em>, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Apprehensiveness, <a href='#Page_338'>338</a>–40</li>
+ <li class='c021'><span class='sc'>Aristotle</span>, <a href='#Page_71'>71</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Art, and phantasy, <a href='#Page_314'>314</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Association-experiment, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Associations:
+ <ul>
+ <li>resistance against, <a href='#Page_96'>96</a>, <a href='#Page_243'>243</a></li>
+ <li>to dreams, <a href='#Page_87'>87</a>, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a>, <a href='#Page_94'>94</a>–102, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a>, <a href='#Page_198'>198</a></li>
+ <li>to names, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a></li>
+ <li>to numbers, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'>Attention theory, <a href='#Page_22'>22</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Auto-erotism, <a href='#Page_199'>199</a>, <a href='#Page_265'>265</a>, <a href='#Page_276'>276</a>, <a href='#Page_298'>298</a>, <a href='#Page_307'>307</a>–10</li>
+ <li class='c004'><span class='sc'>Bernheim</span>, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>, <a href='#Page_234'>234</a>, <a href='#Page_373'>373</a>, <a href='#Page_375'>375</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'><span class='sc'>Binet</span>, <a href='#Page_292'>292</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'><span class='sc'>Binz</span>, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Birth:
+ <ul>
+ <li>experience of, <a href='#Page_331'>331</a></li>
+ <li>infantile theories of, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a>, <a href='#Page_268'>268</a></li>
+ <li>symbolism of, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'><span class='sc'>Bleuler</span>, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a>, <a href='#Page_357'>357</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'><span class='sc'>Bloch, I.</span>, <a href='#Page_258'>258</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'><span class='sc'>Boecklin</span>, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'><span class='sc'>Bölsche, W.</span>, <a href='#Page_297'>297</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Breasts, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a>, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'><span class='sc'>Breuer, J.</span>, <a href='#Page_218'>218</a>, <a href='#Page_228'>228</a>, <a href='#Page_232'>232</a>, <a href='#Page_247'>247</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li><span class='sc'>Freud</span> and, <a href='#Page_233'>233</a>, <a href='#Page_236'>236</a>, <a href='#Page_246'>246</a>, <a href='#Page_375'>375</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'><span class='sc'>Breughel, P.</span>, <a href='#Page_256'>256</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Brothers and sisters, <a href='#Page_172'>172</a>, <a href='#Page_280'>280</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>symbols of, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'><span class='sc'>Brücke</span>, von, <a href='#Page_286'>286</a></li>
+ <li class='c004'>Castration, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a>, <a href='#Page_267'>267</a>, <a href='#Page_309'>309</a>–11
+ <ul>
+ <li>circumcision and, <a href='#Page_139'>139</a></li>
+ <li>symbolism of, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a>, <a href='#Page_139'>139</a>, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a>, <a href='#Page_227'>227</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'><span class='sc'>Charcot</span>, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>‘Charge of energy,’ <a href='#Page_301'>301</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Childhood-experiences, <a href='#Page_169'>169</a>, <a href='#Page_302'>302</a>–11, <a href='#Page_360'>360</a>, <a href='#Page_378'>378</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Childhood-memories, <a href='#Page_169'>169</a>, <a href='#Page_281'>281</a>, <a href='#Page_308'>308</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Children:
+ <ul>
+ <li>anxiety in, <a href='#Page_338'>338</a></li>
+ <li>birth-phantasies of, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a>, <a href='#Page_268'>268</a></li>
+ <li>dreams of, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a>–13, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a></li>
+ <li>egoism in, <a href='#Page_172'>172</a>, <a href='#Page_279'>279</a></li>
+ <li>intimidation of, <a href='#Page_266'>266</a>, <a href='#Page_309'>309</a></li>
+ <li>neurosis in, <a href='#Page_304'>304</a></li>
+ <li>phobias in, <a href='#Page_340'>340</a></li>
+ <li>purity of, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a>, <a href='#Page_263'>263</a>, <a href='#Page_273'>273</a></li>
+ <li>sexual curiosity of, <a href='#Page_176'>176</a>, <a href='#Page_186'>186</a>, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>, <a href='#Page_267'>267</a>, <a href='#Page_274'>274</a>, <a href='#Page_280'>280</a></li>
+ <li>sexual life of, <a href='#Page_176'>176</a>, <a href='#Page_261'>261</a>–84, <a href='#Page_296'>296</a>, <a href='#Page_302'>302</a>–11</li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'><span class='pageno' id='Page_390'>390</span>Clitoris, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a>, <a href='#Page_226'>226</a>, <a href='#Page_267'>267</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'><em>Coitus interruptus</em>, <a href='#Page_335'>335</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Complex, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>the castration, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a>, <a href='#Page_267'>267</a></li>
+ <li>the Oedipus, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a>, <a href='#Page_277'>277</a>–84</li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'>Component-instincts (component-impulses), <a href='#Page_266'>266</a>, <a href='#Page_271'>271</a>–2, <a href='#Page_275'>275</a>–6, <a href='#Page_288'>288</a>–90, <a href='#Page_302'>302</a>–3, <a href='#Page_313'>313</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Compromise-formations, <a href='#Page_52'>52</a>, <a href='#Page_108'>108</a>, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>, <a href='#Page_300'>300</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Compulsions, <a href='#Page_220'>220</a>, <a href='#Page_337'>337</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Condensation, <a href='#Page_301'>301</a>, <a href='#Page_307'>307</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>in dreams, <a href='#Page_144'>144</a>, <a href='#Page_160'>160</a>, <a href='#Page_199'>199</a>, <a href='#Page_250'>250</a>, <a href='#Page_307'>307</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'>Conflict, mental, <a href='#Page_260'>260</a>, <a href='#Page_293'>293</a>–5, <a href='#Page_300'>300</a>–2, <a href='#Page_306'>306</a>, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a>–13, <a href='#Page_319'>319</a>, <a href='#Page_345'>345</a>, <a href='#Page_351'>351</a>, <a href='#Page_361'>361</a>–3, <a href='#Page_366'>366</a>, <a href='#Page_372'>372</a>, <a href='#Page_379'>379</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Conscience, <a href='#Page_358'>358</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Conscious, <em>see</em> Mental Processes</li>
+ <li class='c021'>Consciousness, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a>, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a>, <a href='#Page_239'>239</a>, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>–50, <a href='#Page_301'>301</a>–2, <a href='#Page_336'>336</a>, <a href='#Page_363'>363</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>psychology of, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a>, <a href='#Page_235'>235</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'>Conversion-hysteria, <a href='#Page_252'>252</a>, <a href='#Page_326'>326</a>, <a href='#Page_334'>334</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Convictions, <a href='#Page_207'>207</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'><span class='sc'>Copernicus</span>, <a href='#Page_241'>241</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>‘Countercharge,’ <a href='#Page_301'>301</a>, <a href='#Page_314'>314</a>, <a href='#Page_342'>342</a>, <a href='#Page_365'>365</a></li>
+ <li class='c004'><span class='sc'>Darwin, C.</span>, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a>, <a href='#Page_241'>241</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Day-dreams, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>, <a href='#Page_109'>109</a>, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a>, <a href='#Page_314'>314</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Death, symbols of, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Death-wishes, <a href='#Page_282'>282</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>in dreams, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a>, <a href='#Page_159'>159</a>, <a href='#Page_166'>166</a>, <a href='#Page_170'>170</a>–4</li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'>‘Degeneration,’ <a href='#Page_221'>221</a>, <a href='#Page_235'>235</a>, <a href='#Page_258'>258</a>, <a href='#Page_269'>269</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Delusions, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a>, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a>–17, <a href='#Page_346'>346</a>, <a href='#Page_354'>354</a>–7</li>
+ <li class='c021'>Dementia præcox, <a href='#Page_228'>228</a>, <a href='#Page_326'>326</a>, <a href='#Page_346'>346</a>, <a href='#Page_351'>351</a>–2, <a href='#Page_366'>366</a>, <a href='#Page_384'>384</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Determinism, <a href='#Page_21'>21</a>, <a href='#Page_87'>87</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'><span class='sc'>Diderot</span>, <a href='#Page_283'>283</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Displacement, <a href='#Page_220'>220</a>, <a href='#Page_290'>290</a>, <a href='#Page_301'>301</a>, <a href='#Page_307'>307</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>in dreams, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a>, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a>, <a href='#Page_198'>198</a>, <a href='#Page_250'>250</a>, <a href='#Page_307'>307</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'>Disposition, hereditary, <a href='#Page_213'>213</a>, <a href='#Page_297'>297</a>, <a href='#Page_302'>302</a>–4, <a href='#Page_313'>313</a>, <a href='#Page_352'>352</a>, <a href='#Page_360'>360</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Dream:
+ <ul>
+ <li>of Alexander the Great, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a>, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a></li>
+ <li>of an obsessional neurotic, <a href='#Page_166'>166</a></li>
+ <li>of “love service,” <a href='#Page_115'>115</a>, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a>, <a href='#Page_178'>178</a></li>
+ <li>of “three bad theatre tickets,” <a href='#Page_102'>102</a>, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a>, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a>, <a href='#Page_186'>186</a>, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'><cite>Dream, The Prisoner’s</cite>, <a href='#Page_113'>113</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Dreams:
+ <ul>
+ <li>affects in, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a>–2</li>
+ <li>anxiety in, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a>–3, <a href='#Page_230'>230</a></li>
+ <li>archaic features in, <a href='#Page_152'>152</a>, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a>–79</li>
+ <li>compared with hieroglyphics, <a href='#Page_147'>147</a>, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a>, <a href='#Page_194'>194</a></li>
+ <li>condensation in, <a href='#Page_144'>144</a>, <a href='#Page_160'>160</a>, <a href='#Page_199'>199</a>, <a href='#Page_250'>250</a>, <a href='#Page_307'>307</a></li>
+ <li>confounded with latent thoughts, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a>, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a>–2</li>
+ <li>death-wishes in, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a>, <a href='#Page_159'>159</a>, <a href='#Page_166'>166</a>, <a href='#Page_170'>170</a>–4</li>
+ <li>displacement in, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a>, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a>, <a href='#Page_198'>198</a>, <a href='#Page_250'>250</a>, <a href='#Page_307'>307</a></li>
+ <li>distortion in, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a>, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a>, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a>–8, <a href='#Page_113'>113</a>–20, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a>, <a href='#Page_142'>142</a>–4, <a href='#Page_152'>152</a>, <a href='#Page_178'>178</a>, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a>–4</li>
+ <li>examples of, <a href='#Page_98'>98</a>–102, <a href='#Page_106'>106</a>, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a>, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a>, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>–67, <a href='#Page_199'>199</a></li>
+ <li>experimentally produced, <a href='#Page_74'>74</a>, <a href='#Page_202'>202</a></li>
+ <li>form of, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a>, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a></li>
+ <li>hallucinatory experience in, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>, <a href='#Page_108'>108</a>, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a></li>
+ <li>indefiniteness of, <a href='#Page_68'>68</a>, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a>, <a href='#Page_194'>194</a>, <a href='#Page_195'>195</a></li>
+ <li>incestuous desires in, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a>, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a>, <a href='#Page_278'>278</a>, <a href='#Page_284'>284</a></li>
+ <li>infantile features in, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a>–80</li>
+ <li>inversion in, <a href='#Page_164'>164</a>, <a href='#Page_193'>193</a></li>
+ <li>manifest and latent content of, <a href='#Page_94'>94</a>–104, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a>, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a>, <a href='#Page_143'>143</a>, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a>, <a href='#Page_152'>152</a></li>
+ <li>mathematical calculations in, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a></li>
+ <li>medical view of, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a>, <a href='#Page_106'>106</a>, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a></li>
+ <li>neurotic symptoms and, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>, <a href='#Page_202'>202</a>, <a href='#Page_250'>250</a>, <a href='#Page_383'>383</a></li>
+ <li>no associations to, <a href='#Page_87'>87</a>, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a></li>
+ <li>objectionable tendencies in, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a>, <a href='#Page_170'>170</a>, <a href='#Page_178'>178</a>, <a href='#Page_284'>284</a></li>
+ <li>occasioned by physical needs, <a href='#Page_77'>77</a>, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a>, <a href='#Page_182'>182</a></li>
+ <li>of animals, <a href='#Page_109'>109</a></li>
+ <li>of children, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a>–13, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a></li>
+ <li>opposites in, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a>, <a href='#Page_164'>164</a>, <a href='#Page_182'>182</a></li>
+ <li>preserving sleep, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a>, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a>, <a href='#Page_184'>184</a></li>
+ <li>problems, resolves, etc., in, <a href='#Page_187'>187</a></li>
+ <li>reactions to stimuli, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a>–9, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a>, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a>, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a>, <a href='#Page_250'>250</a></li>
+ <li>regression in, <a href='#Page_152'>152</a>, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a>–9, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a></li>
+ <li>residue from previous day, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a>, <a href='#Page_191'>191</a>, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a>, <a href='#Page_250'>250</a>, <a href='#Page_349'>349</a></li>
+ <li>secondary elaboration in, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a></li>
+ <li>sexual need and, <a href='#Page_77'>77</a>, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a></li>
+ <li>symbolism in, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a>–42, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a>–6</li>
+ <li>theory of, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a>, <a href='#Page_349'>349</a>, <a href='#Page_381'>381</a>–3</li>
+ <li>thought-relations in, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a></li>
+ <li>two possible interpretations of, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>, <a href='#Page_193'>193</a>, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a></li>
+ <li>typical, <a href='#Page_230'>230</a>, <a href='#Page_278'>278</a></li>
+ <li>undistorted, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a>, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a>, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a></li>
+ <li>visual images in, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a>, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a>, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a>, <a href='#Page_143'>143</a>, <a href='#Page_147'>147</a>, <a href='#Page_152'>152</a></li>
+ <li>wish-fulfilment in, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a>–13, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a>, <a href='#Page_143'>143</a>, <a href='#Page_171'>171</a>, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a>–92, <a href='#Page_301'>301</a>, <a href='#Page_382'>382</a></li>
+ <li>wit in, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a>, <a href='#Page_199'>199</a>, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a></li>
+ <li>word-representation in, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a>, <a href='#Page_147'>147</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'>Dream-censorship, <a href='#Page_114'>114</a>–24, <a href='#Page_142'>142</a>, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a>, <a href='#Page_178'>178</a>–9, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a>–4, <a href='#Page_250'>250</a>, <a href='#Page_349'>349</a>, <a href='#Page_358'>358</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Dream-interpretation:
+ <ul>
+ <li>ancient and popular, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a>, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a></li>
+ <li>doubts and criticisms of, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a>, <a href='#Page_187'>187</a>, <a href='#Page_193'>193</a>–203</li>
+ <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_391'>391</span>resistance against, <a href='#Page_96'>96</a>, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a>, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a>, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a>, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a></li>
+ <li>in analytic treatment, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a>, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>, <a href='#Page_382'>382</a></li>
+ <li>results of, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a>–3, <a href='#Page_193'>193</a>, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a></li>
+ <li>technique of, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a>, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a>, <a href='#Page_193'>193</a>, <a href='#Page_242'>242</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'>Dream-work, <a href='#Page_114'>114</a>, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a>, <a href='#Page_143'>143</a>–54, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a>, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a>, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a>–1, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Dropping and breaking objects, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a>, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'><span class='sc'>Du Prel</span>, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Dynamic conception of mental life, <a href='#Page_53'>53</a>, <a href='#Page_238'>238</a>, <a href='#Page_246'>246</a>, <a href='#Page_288'>288</a>, <a href='#Page_313'>313</a>, <a href='#Page_338'>338</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Dynamics of cure, <a href='#Page_365'>365</a>, <a href='#Page_372'>372</a></li>
+ <li class='c004'>‘Economic’ aspect of mental processes, <a href='#Page_232'>232</a>, <a href='#Page_298'>298</a>, <a href='#Page_313'>313</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Education, <a href='#Page_262'>262</a>, <a href='#Page_298'>298</a>, <a href='#Page_305'>305</a>, <a href='#Page_377'>377</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Ego:
+ <ul>
+ <li>character-traits of the, <a href='#Page_245'>245</a>, <a href='#Page_251'>251</a></li>
+ <li>counter-charges from the, <a href='#Page_301'>301</a>, <a href='#Page_314'>314</a>, <a href='#Page_342'>342</a></li>
+ <li>development of the, <a href='#Page_295'>295</a>–9</li>
+ <li>disintegrations of the, <a href='#Page_353'>353</a>, <a href='#Page_358'>358</a></li>
+ <li>Libido and, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a>, <a href='#Page_318'>318</a>, <a href='#Page_323'>323</a>, <a href='#Page_338'>338</a>, <a href='#Page_345'>345</a>–7, <a href='#Page_366'>366</a>, <a href='#Page_380'>380</a></li>
+ <li>neurosis and the, <a href='#Page_319'>319</a>–21</li>
+ <li>psychology of, <a href='#Page_352'>352</a>, <a href='#Page_357'>357</a></li>
+ <li>repression and, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a></li>
+ <li>sexuality and, <a href='#Page_294'>294</a>, <a href='#Page_318'>318</a>, <a href='#Page_346'>346</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'>Ego-ideal, <a href='#Page_357'>357</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Ego-instincts, <a href='#Page_291'>291</a>, <a href='#Page_294'>294</a>–5, <a href='#Page_297'>297</a>–9, <a href='#Page_344'>344</a>–6, <a href='#Page_350'>350</a>, <a href='#Page_358'>358</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Ego-Libido, <a href='#Page_347'>347</a>, <a href='#Page_350'>350</a>, <a href='#Page_358'>358</a>, <a href='#Page_374'>374</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Egoism:
+ <ul>
+ <li>in children, <a href='#Page_172'>172</a>, <a href='#Page_279'>279</a></li>
+ <li>in dreams, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a>, <a href='#Page_172'>172</a>, <a href='#Page_191'>191</a></li>
+ <li>in neurosis, <a href='#Page_319'>319</a></li>
+ <li>narcissism and, <a href='#Page_348'>348</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'>Erotogenic zones, <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>, <a href='#Page_264'>264</a>–5, <a href='#Page_270'>270</a>, <a href='#Page_275'>275</a>–6, <a href='#Page_324'>324</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Errors:
+ <ul>
+ <li>accumulated and combined, <a href='#Page_43'>43</a></li>
+ <li>attention theory of, <a href='#Page_22'>22</a></li>
+ <li>counter-will in, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a>, <a href='#Page_59'>59</a></li>
+ <li>fatigue, excitement, etc., as a cause of, <a href='#Page_21'>21</a>, <a href='#Page_35'>35</a>–6</li>
+ <li>interference of two tendencies in, <a href='#Page_33'>33</a>, <a href='#Page_36'>36</a>, <a href='#Page_48'>48</a>–54</li>
+ <li>subsequent confirmation of meaning in, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'>Excretory functions, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>, <a href='#Page_265'>265</a>, <a href='#Page_268'>268</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Excretory organs, <a href='#Page_260'>260</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Expectant dread, <a href='#Page_332'>332</a>, <a href='#Page_334'>334</a>–5</li>
+ <li class='c004'>Fact, a mental, <a href='#Page_37'>37</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Fairy tales, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a>, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a>, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a>, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>, <a href='#Page_182'>182</a>, <a href='#Page_268'>268</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Faith, <a href='#Page_372'>372</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Faith-healers, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Family relationships, <a href='#Page_172'>172</a>–5</li>
+ <li class='c021'>Father:
+ <ul>
+ <li>erotic attachment to, <a href='#Page_228'>228</a>, <a href='#Page_231'>231</a>, <a href='#Page_233'>233</a></li>
+ <li>hostility towards, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a>, <a href='#Page_245'>245</a>, <a href='#Page_282'>282</a>–3</li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'><span class='sc'>Fechner, G. T.</span>, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'><span class='sc'>Federn, P.</span>, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'><span class='sc'>Ferenczi</span>, <a href='#Page_295'>295</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Fetichism, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>, <a href='#Page_292'>292</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Fixation:
+ <ul>
+ <li>neurosis and, <a href='#Page_233'>233</a></li>
+ <li>of Libido, <a href='#Page_286'>286</a>–97, <a href='#Page_301'>301</a>–3, <a href='#Page_305'>305</a>, <a href='#Page_308'>308</a>, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a>, <a href='#Page_347'>347</a>, <a href='#Page_352'>352</a></li>
+ <li>upon traumata, <a href='#Page_231'>231</a>–3</li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'><span class='sc'>Flaubert, G.</span>, <a href='#Page_256'>256</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'><i><span lang="de">Fliegende Blätter</span></i>, <a href='#Page_22'>22</a>, <a href='#Page_322'>322</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'><span class='sc'>Fliess, W.</span>, <a href='#Page_269'>269</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>‘Flight into illness,’ <a href='#Page_320'>320</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Folk-lore, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a>, <a href='#Page_139'>139</a>, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Forgetting, <a href='#Page_19'>19</a>, <a href='#Page_22'>22</a>, <a href='#Page_44'>44</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>as an excuse, <a href='#Page_41'>41</a></li>
+ <li>names, <a href='#Page_21'>21</a>, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a>, <a href='#Page_59'>59</a>–61, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a></li>
+ <li>resolutions, <a href='#Page_41'>41</a>, <a href='#Page_57'>57</a></li>
+ <li>to avoid pain, <a href='#Page_60'>60</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'>Free association, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a>, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a>, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a>, <a href='#Page_242'>242</a>, <a href='#Page_381'>381</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>“Free living,” <a href='#Page_361'>361</a></li>
+ <li class='c004'>Gazing-impulse, <em>see</em> Skoptophilia</li>
+ <li class='c021'>Genital organs:
+ <ul>
+ <li>replaced by other organs, <a href='#Page_176'>176</a>, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>, <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>–60, <a href='#Page_265'>265</a>, <a href='#Page_271'>271</a>–2</li>
+ <li>symbols of, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>–33, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a>–8, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a>–4, <a href='#Page_226'>226</a>, <a href='#Page_227'>227</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'>Genital zone, primacy of, <a href='#Page_275'>275</a>–6, <a href='#Page_288'>288</a>, <a href='#Page_290'>290</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'><span class='sc'>Goethe</span>, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a>, <a href='#Page_283'>283</a>, <a href='#Page_349'>349</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Grief, <a href='#Page_233'>233</a></li>
+ <li class='c004'>Hate-impulses, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a>, <a href='#Page_171'>171</a>–4, <a href='#Page_280'>280</a>, <a href='#Page_282'>282</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Homosexuality, <a href='#Page_176'>176</a>, <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>, <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>, <a href='#Page_370'>370</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>and paranoia, <a href='#Page_354'>354</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'><span class='sc'>Hug-Hellmuth, Frau Dr.</span> v., <a href='#Page_114'>114</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Human nature:
+ <ul>
+ <li>good and evil in, <a href='#Page_12'>12</a>, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a>–3</li>
+ <li>self-love in, <a href='#Page_240'>240</a></li>
+ <li>sense of guilt in, <a href='#Page_279'>279</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'>Hypnosis:
+ <ul>
+ <li>experiments under, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a>, <a href='#Page_234'>234</a></li>
+ <li>treatment by, <a href='#Page_246'>246</a>, <a href='#Page_373'>373</a>–9</li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'>Hypochondria, <a href='#Page_325'>325</a>–6</li>
+ <li class='c021'>Hysteria, <a href='#Page_219'>219</a>, <a href='#Page_244'>244</a>, <a href='#Page_252'>252</a>, <a href='#Page_288'>288</a>, <a href='#Page_351'>351</a>–2, <a href='#Page_365'>365</a>–7, <a href='#Page_372'>372</a>, <a href='#Page_374'>374</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>agoraphobia and, <a href='#Page_229'>229</a></li>
+ <li>amnesia in, <a href='#Page_239'>239</a>, <a href='#Page_240'>240</a></li>
+ <li>attacks, <a href='#Page_240'>240</a>, <a href='#Page_331'>331</a></li>
+ <li>Breuer’s case of, <a href='#Page_218'>218</a>, <a href='#Page_228'>228</a>, <a href='#Page_232'>232</a>, <a href='#Page_246'>246</a></li>
+ <li>symptoms of, <a href='#Page_229'>229</a>, <a href='#Page_239'>239</a>, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>, <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>, <a href='#Page_273'>273</a>, <a href='#Page_302'>302</a>, <a href='#Page_314'>314</a>, <a href='#Page_326'>326</a>, <a href='#Page_334'>334</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c004'>Identification, <a href='#Page_222'>222</a>, <a href='#Page_357'>357</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'><cite>Imago</cite>, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'><span class='pageno' id='Page_392'>392</span>Incest, horror of, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a>, <a href='#Page_281'>281</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Inferiority, feeling of, <a href='#Page_339'>339</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Inhibition, <a href='#Page_285'>285</a>, <a href='#Page_305'>305</a>, <a href='#Page_314'>314</a>, <a href='#Page_323'>323</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Insomnia, <a href='#Page_184'>184</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Interference of two tendencies, <a href='#Page_33'>33</a>, <a href='#Page_36'>36</a>, <a href='#Page_48'>48</a>–54</li>
+ <li class='c021'><cite>Interpretation of Dreams</cite>, <a href='#Page_143'>143</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Intra-uterine existence, <a href='#Page_71'>71</a>, <a href='#Page_348'>348</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Introversion, <a href='#Page_313'>313</a></li>
+ <li class='c004'><span class='sc'>Janet, P.</span>, <a href='#Page_218'>218</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'><span class='sc'>Jenner</span>, <a href='#Page_387'>387</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'><span class='sc'>Jodl</span>, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Jokes, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a>, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a>, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>in dreams, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a>, <a href='#Page_199'>199</a>, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'><span class='sc'>Jones, Ernest</span>, <a href='#Page_44'>44</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'><span class='sc'>Jung, C. G.</span>, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a>, <a href='#Page_228'>228</a>, <a href='#Page_313'>313</a>, <a href='#Page_345'>345</a></li>
+ <li class='c004'>Kiss, the, <a href='#Page_270'>270</a>, <a href='#Page_273'>273</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Knowing, various kinds of, <a href='#Page_237'>237</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Knowledge, unconscious possession of, <a href='#Page_51'>51</a>, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a>, <a href='#Page_139'>139</a>, <a href='#Page_234'>234</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'><span class='sc'>Koch</span>, <a href='#Page_387'>387</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'><span class='sc'>Kraus, F. S.</span>, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a>.</li>
+ <li class='c004'>Language:
+ <ul>
+ <li>development of, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a>, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a>, <a href='#Page_154'>154</a></li>
+ <li>implications in, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>, <a href='#Page_109'>109</a>, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a>, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a></li>
+ <li>of sexual origin, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a></li>
+ <li>the Chinese, <a href='#Page_195'>195</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'>Latency period, <a href='#Page_274'>274</a>, <a href='#Page_277'>277</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'><span class='sc'>Leuret</span>, <a href='#Page_218'>218</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'><span class='sc'>Levy, L.</span>, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Libido, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a>, <a href='#Page_263'>263</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>‘adhesiveness’ of, <a href='#Page_292'>292</a>, <a href='#Page_380'>380</a></li>
+ <li>anxiety and, <a href='#Page_335'>335</a>–43, <a href='#Page_359'>359</a></li>
+ <li>attachment to objects, <a href='#Page_284'>284</a>, <a href='#Page_350'>350</a>–6, <a href='#Page_373'>373</a>, <a href='#Page_374'>374</a>, <a href='#Page_379'>379</a>–81</li>
+ <li>regression of, <a href='#Page_285'>285</a>–9, <a href='#Page_301'>301</a>–6, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a></li>
+ <li>symptom-formation and, <a href='#Page_300'>300</a>–15, <a href='#Page_323'>323</a></li>
+ <li>theory of the, <a href='#Page_344'>344</a>–59, <a href='#Page_379'>379</a>–81</li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'>Libido-development, <a href='#Page_274'>274</a>–7, <a href='#Page_285'>285</a>–99, <a href='#Page_352'>352</a>–3
+ <ul>
+ <li>genital stage of, <a href='#Page_275'>275</a>–6, <a href='#Page_290'>290</a></li>
+ <li>inhibition of, <a href='#Page_285'>285</a>, <a href='#Page_305'>305</a></li>
+ <li>pre-genital stage of, <a href='#Page_275'>275</a>–6</li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'><span class='sc'>Lichtenberg</span>, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a>, <a href='#Page_56'>56</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'><span class='sc'>Liébault</span>, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'><span class='sc'>Lindner, Dr.</span>, <a href='#Page_264'>264</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Looking-impulse, <em>see</em> Skoptophilia</li>
+ <li class='c021'>Losing and mislaying objects, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a>, <a href='#Page_44'>44</a>, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Love-impulse, <a href='#Page_172'>172</a>, <a href='#Page_277'>277</a>, <a href='#Page_289'>289</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'><span class='sc'>Löwenfeld</span>, <a href='#Page_208'>208</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'><i><span lang="de">Lutschen</span></i>, <a href='#Page_263'>263</a>–4</li>
+ <li class='c004'><span class='sc'>Maeder, A.</span>, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a>, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Magic:
+ <ul>
+ <li>ceremonies, <a href='#Page_227'>227</a></li>
+ <li>precautions, <a href='#Page_231'>231</a></li>
+ <li>words and, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'>Masochism, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Masturbation, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a>, <a href='#Page_260'>260</a>, <a href='#Page_274'>274</a>, <a href='#Page_296'>296</a>, <a href='#Page_322'>322</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'><span class='sc'>Maury</span>, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>experiments by, <a href='#Page_74'>74</a>–6</li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'>Meaning:
+ <ul>
+ <li>in dreams, <a href='#Page_67'>67</a>, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a>, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a>, <a href='#Page_74'>74</a>, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a>, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a></li>
+ <li>in errors, <a href='#Page_27'>27</a>–63</li>
+ <li>in symptoms, <a href='#Page_67'>67</a>, <a href='#Page_218'>218</a>–30, <a href='#Page_235'>235</a>, <a href='#Page_237'>237</a>, <a href='#Page_323'>323</a>, <a href='#Page_372'>372</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'>Melancholia, <a href='#Page_356'>356</a>, <a href='#Page_366'>366</a>, <a href='#Page_387'>387</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Memory, <em>see</em> Amnesia</li>
+ <li class='c021'>Mental activities, systems of, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>–50, <a href='#Page_287'>287</a>–8, <a href='#Page_301'>301</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Mental life, conceptions of:
+ <ul>
+ <li>dynamic, <a href='#Page_53'>53</a>, <a href='#Page_238'>238</a>, <a href='#Page_246'>246</a>, <a href='#Page_288'>288</a>, <a href='#Page_313'>313</a>, <a href='#Page_338'>338</a></li>
+ <li>economic, <a href='#Page_232'>232</a>, <a href='#Page_298'>298</a>, <a href='#Page_313'>313</a></li>
+ <li>topographic, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>, <a href='#Page_287'>287</a>–8, <a href='#Page_338'>338</a>, <a href='#Page_364'>364</a>, <a href='#Page_366'>366</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'>Mental processes:
+ <ul>
+ <li>conscious, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a>, <a href='#Page_94'>94</a>, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>–50, <a href='#Page_287'>287</a>–8, <a href='#Page_301'>301</a>, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a>, <a href='#Page_362'>362</a></li>
+ <li>preconscious, <a href='#Page_199'>199</a>, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>–50, <a href='#Page_287'>287</a>–8, <a href='#Page_301'>301</a>, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a>, <a href='#Page_362'>362</a></li>
+ <li>unconscious, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a>, <a href='#Page_94'>94</a>, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a>, <a href='#Page_202'>202</a>, <a href='#Page_301'>301</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>in symptom-formation, <a href='#Page_234'>234</a>–8, <a href='#Page_307'>307</a></li>
+ <li>made conscious, <a href='#Page_237'>237</a>, <a href='#Page_239'>239</a>, <a href='#Page_363'>363</a>, <a href='#Page_372'>372</a></li>
+ <li>symbolism and, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a>, <a href='#Page_139'>139</a></li>
+ <li>under repression, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>–50, <a href='#Page_287'>287</a>, <a href='#Page_336'>336</a></li>
+ <li>wishes as, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a>, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a>, <a href='#Page_171'>171</a>, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a>, <a href='#Page_278'>278</a>–9</li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'><span class='sc'>Meringer</span> and <span class='sc'>Mayer</span>, <a href='#Page_25'>25</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Milk, dislike of, <a href='#Page_306'>306</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Mind:
+ <ul>
+ <li>a psychological attitude of, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a></li>
+ <li>distribution of forces in, <a href='#Page_203'>203</a></li>
+ <li>play of forces in, <a href='#Page_53'>53</a></li>
+ <li>psycho-analytical definition of, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a></li>
+ <li>the scientific habit of, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'>Misprints, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Misreading, <a href='#Page_56'>56</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Mistaking of objects, <a href='#Page_62'>62</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Mother:
+ <ul>
+ <li>daughter and, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a>–4</li>
+ <li>love-object, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a>–7, <a href='#Page_277'>277</a>–82, <a href='#Page_339'>339</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'><span class='sc'>Mourly Vold, J.</span>, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a>, <a href='#Page_74'>74</a>, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a>, <a href='#Page_202'>202</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Mouth, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>, <a href='#Page_270'>270</a>, <a href='#Page_275'>275</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Myths, mythology, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a>, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a>, <a href='#Page_139'>139</a>, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a>, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>, <a href='#Page_281'>281</a>, <a href='#Page_308'>308</a></li>
+ <li class='c004'><span class='sc'>Näcke, P.</span>, <a href='#Page_347'>347</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'><span class='pageno' id='Page_393'>393</span>Names:
+ <ul>
+ <li>forgetting of, <a href='#Page_21'>21</a>, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a>, <a href='#Page_59'>59</a>–61, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a></li>
+ <li>wrong pronunciation of, <a href='#Page_33'>33</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'>Narcissism, <a href='#Page_347'>347</a>–59, <a href='#Page_381'>381</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>object-love and, <a href='#Page_347'>347</a>–9</li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'>Narcissistic neuroses, <a href='#Page_287'>287</a>–8, <a href='#Page_318'>318</a>, <a href='#Page_351'>351</a>–3, <a href='#Page_358'>358</a>, <a href='#Page_374'>374</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Necessity, <a href='#Page_298'>298</a>, <a href='#Page_344'>344</a>, <a href='#Page_358'>358</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Nervousness, <a href='#Page_316'>316</a>–27</li>
+ <li class='c021'>Neurasthenia, <a href='#Page_325'>325</a>–6</li>
+ <li class='c021'>Neuroses:
+ <ul>
+ <li>actual, <a href='#Page_322'>322</a>–7</li>
+ <li>ætiology (or causation) of, <a href='#Page_216'>216</a>, <a href='#Page_287'>287</a>–93, <a href='#Page_295'>295</a>, <a href='#Page_303'>303</a>–5, <a href='#Page_308'>308</a>, <a href='#Page_313'>313</a>, <a href='#Page_322'>322</a></li>
+ <li>amnesia of, <a href='#Page_239'>239</a>–40</li>
+ <li>characteristics of, <a href='#Page_231'>231</a>, <a href='#Page_235'>235</a>, <a href='#Page_239'>239</a>, <a href='#Page_289'>289</a>, <a href='#Page_339'>339</a></li>
+ <li>dynamic conception of, <a href='#Page_246'>246</a></li>
+ <li>grief and, <a href='#Page_233'>233</a></li>
+ <li>in children, <a href='#Page_304'>304</a></li>
+ <li>narcissistic, <a href='#Page_287'>287</a>–8, <a href='#Page_318'>318</a>, <a href='#Page_351'>351</a>–3, <a href='#Page_358'>358</a>, <a href='#Page_374'>374</a></li>
+ <li>prevention of, <a href='#Page_305'>305</a></li>
+ <li>transference, <a href='#Page_252'>252</a>, <a href='#Page_287'>287</a>–8, <a href='#Page_294'>294</a>, <a href='#Page_323'>323</a>, <a href='#Page_346'>346</a>, <a href='#Page_350'>350</a>, <a href='#Page_352'>352</a>, <a href='#Page_366'>366</a>, <a href='#Page_372'>372</a></li>
+ <li>traumatic, <a href='#Page_232'>232</a>, <a href='#Page_319'>319</a></li>
+ <li>with organic disease, <a href='#Page_327'>327</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'><span class='sc'>Nordenskjöld</span>, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Nutrition:
+ <ul>
+ <li>function of, <a href='#Page_263'>263</a>, <a href='#Page_265'>265</a></li>
+ <li>organs of, <a href='#Page_260'>260</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c004'>Object-choice:
+ <ul>
+ <li>incestuous, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a>, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a>, <a href='#Page_274'>274</a>–88</li>
+ <li>types of, <a href='#Page_356'>356</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'>Object-Libido, <a href='#Page_347'>347</a>, <a href='#Page_350'>350</a>, <a href='#Page_374'>374</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Object-love, <a href='#Page_347'>347</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Obsessional neurosis, <a href='#Page_252'>252</a>, <a href='#Page_337'>337</a>, <a href='#Page_365'>365</a>–7, <a href='#Page_372'>372</a>–4
+ <ul>
+ <li>a case of, <a href='#Page_221'>221</a>, <a href='#Page_224'>224</a>, <a href='#Page_239'>239</a>, <a href='#Page_251'>251</a>, <a href='#Page_259'>259</a></li>
+ <li>doubt in, <a href='#Page_220'>220</a>, <a href='#Page_225'>225</a>, <a href='#Page_230'>230</a>, <a href='#Page_244'>244</a></li>
+ <li>masturbation and, <a href='#Page_260'>260</a></li>
+ <li>rituals of, <a href='#Page_224'>224</a>, <a href='#Page_229'>229</a>, <a href='#Page_239'>239</a>, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a></li>
+ <li>sadism and, <a href='#Page_260'>260</a>, <a href='#Page_289'>289</a></li>
+ <li>symptoms of, <a href='#Page_219'>219</a>–21, <a href='#Page_229'>229</a>, <a href='#Page_231'>231</a>, <a href='#Page_235'>235</a>, <a href='#Page_239'>239</a>–40, <a href='#Page_314'>314</a>, <a href='#Page_318'>318</a>, <a href='#Page_337'>337</a>, <a href='#Page_352'>352</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'>Obsessions, <a href='#Page_219'>219</a>, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>, <a href='#Page_289'>289</a>, <a href='#Page_351'>351</a>, <a href='#Page_356'>356</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Obsessive acts, <a href='#Page_219'>219</a>, <a href='#Page_221'>221</a>, <a href='#Page_234'>234</a>, <a href='#Page_239'>239</a>, <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>, <a href='#Page_260'>260</a>, <a href='#Page_337'>337</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Obsessive ideas, <a href='#Page_68'>68</a>, <a href='#Page_235'>235</a>, <a href='#Page_289'>289</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Oedipus complex, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a>, <a href='#Page_277'>277</a>–84</li>
+ <li class='c021'>Omens, <a href='#Page_46'>46</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Onanism, <a href='#Page_160'>160</a>, <a href='#Page_264'>264</a>, <a href='#Page_266'>266</a>, <a href='#Page_310'>310</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>castration and, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a>, <a href='#Page_139'>139</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'>Opposites (polarity):
+ <ul>
+ <li>in dreams, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a>, <a href='#Page_164'>164</a>, <a href='#Page_182'>182</a></li>
+ <li>in the mind, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a>, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>, <a href='#Page_185'>185</a>, <a href='#Page_220'>220</a>, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>, <a href='#Page_275'>275</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'>Oral phase of Libido-development, <a href='#Page_275'>275</a>–6</li>
+ <li class='c021'>‘Organ-pleasure,’ <a href='#Page_272'>272</a>, <a href='#Page_273'>273</a></li>
+ <li class='c004'>Pain, avoidance of, <a href='#Page_60'>60</a>, <a href='#Page_298'>298</a>, <a href='#Page_313'>313</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Paranoia, <a href='#Page_53'>53</a>, <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>, <a href='#Page_319'>319</a>, <a href='#Page_326'>326</a>, <a href='#Page_366'>366</a>, <a href='#Page_384'>384</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>and homosexuality, <a href='#Page_354'>354</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'>Paraphrenia, <a href='#Page_326'>326</a>, <a href='#Page_354'>354</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Parents:
+ <ul>
+ <li>coitus of, <a href='#Page_186'>186</a>, <a href='#Page_227'>227</a>, <a href='#Page_252'>252</a>, <a href='#Page_268'>268</a>, <a href='#Page_309'>309</a></li>
+ <li>detachment from, <a href='#Page_283'>283</a></li>
+ <li>relationship to, <a href='#Page_172'>172</a>–5, <a href='#Page_277'>277</a>–83</li>
+ <li>symbols of, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'>Patient, relatives of, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a>, <a href='#Page_237'>237</a>, <a href='#Page_367'>367</a>, <a href='#Page_384'>384</a>–6</li>
+ <li class='c021'>Penis, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>, <a href='#Page_267'>267</a>, <a href='#Page_309'>309</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Perversions, <a href='#Page_176'>176</a>, <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>–62, <a href='#Page_266'>266</a>, <a href='#Page_269'>269</a>–72, <a href='#Page_289'>289</a>, <a href='#Page_292'>292</a>, <a href='#Page_297'>297</a>, <a href='#Page_301'>301</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'><span class='sc'>Pfister, Dr.</span>, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Phantasies, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a>, <a href='#Page_227'>227</a>, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a>, <a href='#Page_258'>258</a>, <a href='#Page_260'>260</a>, <a href='#Page_307'>307</a>–15
+ <ul>
+ <li>artists and, <a href='#Page_314'>314</a></li>
+ <li>symptom-formation and, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a></li>
+ <li>typical, <a href='#Page_309'>309</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'>‘Phantasy-making, retrogressive,’ <a href='#Page_282'>282</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Philosophy, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a>, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a>, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Phobias, <a href='#Page_332'>332</a>–4, <a href='#Page_341'>341</a>–3
+ <ul>
+ <li>in children, <a href='#Page_340'>340</a></li>
+ <li>symbolism in, <a href='#Page_343'>343</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'>Phylogenetic development, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a>, <a href='#Page_307'>307</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Phylogenetic inheritance, <a href='#Page_297'>297</a>, <a href='#Page_311'>311</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Physician, <a href='#Page_319'>319</a>, <a href='#Page_321'>321</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>transference to, <a href='#Page_245'>245</a>, <a href='#Page_367'>367</a>–81</li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'><span class='sc'>Plato</span>, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Pleasure, <a href='#Page_265'>265</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Pleasure-principle, <a href='#Page_299'>299</a>, <a href='#Page_307'>307</a>, <a href='#Page_319'>319</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Polarity, <em>see</em> Opposites</li>
+ <li class='c021'>Preconscious, <em>see under</em> Mental Processes</li>
+ <li class='c021'>Primacy of genital zone, <a href='#Page_275'>275</a>–6, <a href='#Page_288'>288</a>, <a href='#Page_290'>290</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Privation, <a href='#Page_252'>252</a>, <a href='#Page_260'>260</a>, <a href='#Page_289'>289</a>–91, <a href='#Page_293'>293</a>–5, <a href='#Page_301'>301</a>, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a>, <a href='#Page_360'>360</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Psychiatry, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a>, <a href='#Page_207'>207</a>–17, <a href='#Page_218'>218</a>, <a href='#Page_221'>221</a>, <a href='#Page_235'>235</a>, <a href='#Page_353'>353</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Psychical systems, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>–50, <a href='#Page_287'>287</a>–8, <a href='#Page_301'>301</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Psycho-Analysis:
+ <ul>
+ <li>as a science, <a href='#Page_325'>325</a></li>
+ <li>attitude to sexual matters, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a></li>
+ <li>based on observations, <a href='#Page_208'>208</a></li>
+ <li>compared with mineralogy, <a href='#Page_326'>326</a></li>
+ <li>conventional morality and, <a href='#Page_362'>362</a></li>
+ <li>criticisms of, <a href='#Page_247'>247</a>, <a href='#Page_294'>294</a>, <a href='#Page_378'>378</a></li>
+ <li>difficulties of, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>–18</li>
+ <li>implicit in literature, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a>, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a>, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a>, <a href='#Page_278'>278</a>, <a href='#Page_283'>283</a></li>
+ <li>infancy of, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>, <a href='#Page_252'>252</a>, <a href='#Page_383'>383</a></li>
+ <li>opposition against, <a href='#Page_12'>12</a>, <a href='#Page_17'>17</a>, <a href='#Page_37'>37</a>, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a>, <a href='#Page_208'>208</a>, <a href='#Page_240'>240</a>, <a href='#Page_244'>244</a>, <a href='#Page_318'>318</a>, <a href='#Page_383'>383</a></li>
+ <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_394'>394</span>prejudices against, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a>, <a href='#Page_18'>18</a>, <a href='#Page_387'>387</a></li>
+ <li>study of, <a href='#Page_12'>12</a>, <a href='#Page_14'>14</a></li>
+ <li>treatment (or therapy), <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>–13, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>, <a href='#Page_169'>169</a>, <a href='#Page_217'>217</a>, <a href='#Page_219'>219</a>, <a href='#Page_226'>226</a>, <a href='#Page_237'>237</a>, <a href='#Page_239'>239</a>, <a href='#Page_242'>242</a>, <a href='#Page_252'>252</a>, <a href='#Page_360'>360</a>–88
+ <ul>
+ <li>advice and guidance during, <a href='#Page_362'>362</a></li>
+ <li>education by, <a href='#Page_377'>377</a>, <a href='#Page_381'>381</a></li>
+ <li>fundamental rule of technique in, <a href='#Page_243'>243</a></li>
+ <li>misuse of, <a href='#Page_387'>387</a></li>
+ <li>repetition and recollection during, <a href='#Page_371'>371</a></li>
+ <li>resistances during, <a href='#Page_242'>242</a>–47, <a href='#Page_267'>267</a>, <a href='#Page_353'>353</a>, <a href='#Page_369'>369</a>, <a href='#Page_379'>379</a>, <a href='#Page_384'>384</a></li>
+ <li>suggestion in, <a href='#Page_373'>373</a>–9</li>
+ <li>technique of, <a href='#Page_242'>242</a>, <a href='#Page_353'>353</a>, <a href='#Page_378'>378</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li>warnings against, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>, <a href='#Page_12'>12</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'>Psychology, experimental, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a>, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a>, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a>, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Psycho-neuroses, <a href='#Page_323'>323</a>, <a href='#Page_336'>336</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'><cite>Psycho-pathology of Everyday Life</cite>, <a href='#Page_43'>43</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Puberty, <a href='#Page_262'>262</a>, <a href='#Page_282'>282</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Puberty-rites, <a href='#Page_139'>139</a>, <a href='#Page_281'>281</a></li>
+ <li class='c004'><span class='sc'>Rank, O.</span>, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a>, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a>, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a>, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a>, <a href='#Page_283'>283</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Rationalization, <a href='#Page_354'>354</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Reaction-formations, <a href='#Page_314'>314</a>, <a href='#Page_319'>319</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Real anxiety, <a href='#Page_329'>329</a>, <a href='#Page_335'>335</a>, <a href='#Page_337'>337</a>–41, <a href='#Page_343'>343</a>, <a href='#Page_359'>359</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Reality:
+ <ul>
+ <li>depreciation of, <a href='#Page_308'>308</a></li>
+ <li>material and psychical, <a href='#Page_56'>56</a>, <a href='#Page_309'>309</a></li>
+ <li>the ‘testing’ of, <a href='#Page_311'>311</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'>Reality-principle, <a href='#Page_299'>299</a>, <a href='#Page_307'>307</a>, <a href='#Page_344'>344</a>, <a href='#Page_347'>347</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Reason under affective influence, <a href='#Page_208'>208</a>, <a href='#Page_247'>247</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Regression:
+ <ul>
+ <li>in dreams, <a href='#Page_152'>152</a>, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a>–9, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a></li>
+ <li>of Ego, <a href='#Page_299'>299</a></li>
+ <li>of Libido, <a href='#Page_285'>285</a>–9, <a href='#Page_301'>301</a>–6, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a></li>
+ <li>to phantasies, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'><span class='sc'>Reik, Th.</span>, <a href='#Page_281'>281</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Repetition of previous experience, <a href='#Page_331'>331</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Repression, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>–51, <a href='#Page_295'>295</a>, <a href='#Page_297'>297</a>, <a href='#Page_306'>306</a>, <a href='#Page_342'>342</a>, <a href='#Page_351'>351</a>, <a href='#Page_354'>354</a>, <a href='#Page_361'>361</a>, <a href='#Page_363'>363</a>–7, <a href='#Page_380'>380</a>, <a href='#Page_382'>382</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>regression and, <a href='#Page_287'>287</a>, <a href='#Page_289'>289</a></li>
+ <li>transformation of affect and, <a href='#Page_337'>337</a>, <a href='#Page_341'>341</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'>Reproduction, function of, <a href='#Page_255'>255</a>, <a href='#Page_262'>262</a>, <a href='#Page_266'>266</a>, <a href='#Page_268'>268</a>, <a href='#Page_269'>269</a>, <a href='#Page_271'>271</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Resistance:
+ <ul>
+ <li>against associations, <a href='#Page_96'>96</a>, <a href='#Page_243'>243</a></li>
+ <li>during treatment, <a href='#Page_242'>242</a>–47, <a href='#Page_267'>267</a>, <a href='#Page_353'>353</a>, <a href='#Page_369'>369</a>, <a href='#Page_379'>379</a>, <a href='#Page_384'>384</a></li>
+ <li>overcoming of, <a href='#Page_246'>246</a>, <a href='#Page_365'>365</a>, <a href='#Page_374'>374</a>, <a href='#Page_378'>378</a>–81</li>
+ <li>to dream-interpretation, <a href='#Page_96'>96</a>, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a>, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a>, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a>, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'><span class='sc'>Roux</span>, <a href='#Page_303'>303</a></li>
+ <li class='c004'><span class='sc'>Sachs, H.</span>, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a>, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Sadism, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>, <a href='#Page_260'>260</a>, <a href='#Page_268'>268</a>, <a href='#Page_275'>275</a>–6, <a href='#Page_289'>289</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'><span class='sc'>Scherner, K. A.</span>, <a href='#Page_77'>77</a>, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a>, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'><span class='sc'>Schiller</span>, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'><span class='sc'>Schubert</span>, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Screen-memories, <a href='#Page_169'>169</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Secondary elaboration:
+ <ul>
+ <li>in dreams, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a></li>
+ <li>in paranoia, <a href='#Page_319'>319</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'>Seduction, <a href='#Page_309'>309</a>–10</li>
+ <li class='c021'>Self-analysis, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Self-preservation, <a href='#Page_295'>295</a>, <a href='#Page_298'>298</a>, <a href='#Page_329'>329</a>, <a href='#Page_343'>343</a>–6, <a href='#Page_350'>350</a>, <a href='#Page_358'>358</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Self-punishment, <a href='#Page_62'>62</a>, <a href='#Page_185'>185</a>, <a href='#Page_278'>278</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Series, complemental, <a href='#Page_292'>292</a>, <a href='#Page_303'>303</a>, <a href='#Page_305'>305</a>, <a href='#Page_310'>310</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Sexual:
+ <ul>
+ <li>abstinence, <a href='#Page_290'>290</a>, <a href='#Page_336'>336</a>, <a href='#Page_361'>361</a>, <a href='#Page_363'>363</a></li>
+ <li>act, <a href='#Page_255'>255</a>, <a href='#Page_271'>271</a>, <a href='#Page_297'>297</a>, <a href='#Page_326'>326</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>introductory, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>, <a href='#Page_260'>260</a>, <a href='#Page_271'>271</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li>aim, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>–8, <a href='#Page_277'>277</a>, <a href='#Page_311'>311</a></li>
+ <li>anæsthesia, <a href='#Page_267'>267</a></li>
+ <li>curiosity, <a href='#Page_186'>186</a>, <a href='#Page_275'>275</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>in children, <a href='#Page_176'>176</a>, <a href='#Page_186'>186</a>, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>, <a href='#Page_267'>267</a>, <a href='#Page_274'>274</a>, <a href='#Page_280'>280</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li>experiences, in childhood, <a href='#Page_302'>302</a>–11</li>
+ <li>instinct and civilization, <a href='#Page_17'>17</a>, <a href='#Page_262'>262</a>, <a href='#Page_290'>290</a></li>
+ <li>instincts and Ego-instincts, <a href='#Page_291'>291</a>, <a href='#Page_294'>294</a>–5, <a href='#Page_297'>297</a>–9, <a href='#Page_344'>344</a>–6, <a href='#Page_350'>350</a></li>
+ <li>intercourse, <a href='#Page_226'>226</a>, <a href='#Page_265'>265</a>, <a href='#Page_296'>296</a>, <a href='#Page_355'>355</a>, <a href='#Page_363'>363</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>parental, <a href='#Page_186'>186</a>, <a href='#Page_227'>227</a>, <a href='#Page_252'>252</a>, <a href='#Page_268'>268</a>, <a href='#Page_309'>309</a></li>
+ <li>sadistic conception of, <a href='#Page_268'>268</a></li>
+ <li>symbols of, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a>, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>, <a href='#Page_164'>164</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li>object, <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>–8, <a href='#Page_264'>264</a>, <a href='#Page_277'>277</a>, <a href='#Page_311'>311</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>of component-impulses, <a href='#Page_276'>276</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li>organizations, <em>see</em> Libido-development</li>
+ <li>the term, <a href='#Page_255'>255</a>, <a href='#Page_264'>264</a>, <a href='#Page_268'>268</a>–70, <a href='#Page_273'>273</a></li>
+ <li>toxins, <a href='#Page_324'>324</a>, <a href='#Page_326'>326</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'>Sexuality:
+ <ul>
+ <li>infantile, <a href='#Page_176'>176</a>, <a href='#Page_261'>261</a>–84, <a href='#Page_296'>296</a>, <a href='#Page_302'>302</a>–11</li>
+ <li>perverted, <a href='#Page_176'>176</a>, <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>–62, <a href='#Page_266'>266</a>, <a href='#Page_269'>269</a>–72, <a href='#Page_289'>289</a>, <a href='#Page_292'>292</a>, <a href='#Page_297'>297</a>, <a href='#Page_301'>301</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'><span class='sc'>Shakespeare</span>, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'><span class='sc'>Shaw, G. B.</span>, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a>, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'><span class='sc'>Silberer, H.</span>, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a>, <a href='#Page_255'>255</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Skoptophilia (gazing-impulse), <a href='#Page_186'>186</a>, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>, <a href='#Page_260'>260</a>, <a href='#Page_271'>271</a>, <a href='#Page_275'>275</a>–6, <a href='#Page_310'>310</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Sleep, the condition of, <a href='#Page_71'>71</a>, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a>, <a href='#Page_184'>184</a>, <a href='#Page_348'>348</a>, <a href='#Page_350'>350</a>, <a href='#Page_382'>382</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Slips of the pen, <a href='#Page_55'>55</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'><span class='pageno' id='Page_395'>395</span>Slips of the tongue, <a href='#Page_24'>24</a>–40, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a>–54, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a>, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>, <a href='#Page_199'>199</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Slips of the tongue in literature, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a>, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Spatial, <em>see</em> Topographical</li>
+ <li class='c021'><span class='sc'>Sperber, H.</span>, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'><span class='sc'>Stekel, W.</span>, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Struggle for existence, <a href='#Page_262'>262</a>, <a href='#Page_298'>298</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'><cite>Struwelpeter</cite>, <a href='#Page_309'>309</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Sublimation, <a href='#Page_17'>17</a>, <a href='#Page_290'>290</a>, <a href='#Page_314'>314</a>, <a href='#Page_381'>381</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Sucking:
+ <ul>
+ <li>for nourishment, <a href='#Page_263'>263</a>–4, <a href='#Page_306'>306</a></li>
+ <li>for pleasure, <a href='#Page_263'>263</a>–4, <a href='#Page_275'>275</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'>Suggestion, treatment by, <a href='#Page_373'>373</a>–9</li>
+ <li class='c021'>Symbolism:
+ <ul>
+ <li>a mode of expression, <a href='#Page_139'>139</a>, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a></li>
+ <li>in dreams, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a>–42, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a>–6</li>
+ <li>in phobias, <a href='#Page_343'>343</a></li>
+ <li>in symptom-formation, <a href='#Page_222'>222</a>, <a href='#Page_226'>226</a>–7</li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'>Symptomatic acts, <a href='#Page_48'>48</a>, <a href='#Page_209'>209</a>, <a href='#Page_215'>215</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Symptom-formation, <a href='#Page_293'>293</a>, <a href='#Page_300'>300</a>–15, <a href='#Page_318'>318</a>–19, <a href='#Page_326'>326</a>, <a href='#Page_352'>352</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li>phantasy and, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a></li>
+ <li>repression and, <a href='#Page_251'>251</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'>Symptoms, Neurotic:
+ <ul>
+ <li>analysis of, and past life, <a href='#Page_232'>232</a>, <a href='#Page_237'>237</a>, <a href='#Page_261'>261</a></li>
+ <li>ascetic character of, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>, <a href='#Page_361'>361</a></li>
+ <li>conflict expressed in, <a href='#Page_260'>260</a>, <a href='#Page_300'>300</a>, <a href='#Page_306'>306</a>, <a href='#Page_319'>319</a></li>
+ <li>dreams and, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>, <a href='#Page_202'>202</a>, <a href='#Page_250'>250</a>, <a href='#Page_383'>383</a></li>
+ <li>meaning of, <a href='#Page_67'>67</a>, <a href='#Page_218'>218</a>–30, <a href='#Page_235'>235</a>, <a href='#Page_237'>237</a>, <a href='#Page_323'>323</a>, <a href='#Page_372'>372</a></li>
+ <li>purpose of, <a href='#Page_223'>223</a>, <a href='#Page_251'>251</a>, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a></li>
+ <li>substitutes, <a href='#Page_236'>236</a>, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>, <a href='#Page_251'>251</a>, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>, <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>, <a href='#Page_293'>293</a>, <a href='#Page_306'>306</a>, <a href='#Page_323'>323</a>, <a href='#Page_326'>326</a>, <a href='#Page_372'>372</a>, <a href='#Page_380'>380</a></li>
+ <li>typical, <a href='#Page_229'>229</a></li>
+ <li>‘whence,’ and ‘whither’ or ‘why’ of, <a href='#Page_234'>234</a>, <a href='#Page_240'>240</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'>Systems of mental activities, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>–50, <a href='#Page_287'>287</a>–8, <a href='#Page_301'>301</a></li>
+ <li class='c004'>Taboos, <a href='#Page_216'>216</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Topographical (spatial) conception of mental life, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>, <a href='#Page_287'>287</a>–8, <a href='#Page_338'>338</a>, <a href='#Page_364'>364</a>, <a href='#Page_366'>366</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'><cite><span lang="de">Totem und Tabu</span></cite>, <a href='#Page_216'>216</a>, <a href='#Page_279'>279</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Toxins, <a href='#Page_324'>324</a>, <a href='#Page_326'>326</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Transference, <a href='#Page_245'>245</a>, <a href='#Page_367'>367</a>–81</li>
+ <li class='c021'>Transference neuroses, <a href='#Page_252'>252</a>, <a href='#Page_287'>287</a>–8, <a href='#Page_294'>294</a>, <a href='#Page_323'>323</a>, <a href='#Page_346'>346</a>, <a href='#Page_350'>350</a>, <a href='#Page_352'>352</a>, <a href='#Page_366'>366</a>, <a href='#Page_372'>372</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Traumatic neuroses, <a href='#Page_232'>232</a>, <a href='#Page_319'>319</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Treatment, <em>see under</em> Psycho-Analysis</li>
+ <li class='c004'>Unconscious, <em>see under</em> Mental Processes</li>
+ <li class='c021'>Unconscious, the:
+ <ul>
+ <li>affects and, <a href='#Page_342'>342</a></li>
+ <li>dreams and, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a>, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a></li>
+ <li>Ego and, <a href='#Page_318'>318</a>, <a href='#Page_349'>349</a></li>
+ <li>Janet’s view of, <a href='#Page_218'>218</a></li>
+ <li>meaning of term, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a></li>
+ <li>mechanisms of, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a>, <a href='#Page_199'>199</a>, <a href='#Page_202'>202</a>, <a href='#Page_307'>307</a></li>
+ <li>memories in, <a href='#Page_169'>169</a></li>
+ <li>opposites in, <a href='#Page_185'>185</a></li>
+ <li>psycho-analysis and, <a href='#Page_235'>235</a>, <a href='#Page_325'>325</a></li>
+ <li>symbolism and, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a>, <a href='#Page_139'>139</a></li>
+ <li>symptoms and, <a href='#Page_238'>238</a>–40</li>
+ <li>system, <a href='#Page_178'>178</a>–9, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>–50, <a href='#Page_287'>287</a>–8, <a href='#Page_301'>301</a>–2, <a href='#Page_365'>365</a></li>
+ <li>wishes in, <a href='#Page_278'>278</a>–9</li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'>Urination, <a href='#Page_265'>265</a>, <a href='#Page_268'>268</a></li>
+ <li class='c004'>Vagina, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>, <a href='#Page_265'>265</a>, <a href='#Page_267'>267</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Virginity, <a href='#Page_226'>226</a>, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a></li>
+ <li class='c004'>War, the, <a href='#Page_12'>12</a>, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a>, <a href='#Page_387'>387</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Wish-fulfilment:
+ <ul>
+ <li>in dreams, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a>–13, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a>, <a href='#Page_143'>143</a>, <a href='#Page_171'>171</a>, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a>–92, <a href='#Page_301'>301</a>, <a href='#Page_382'>382</a></li>
+ <li>in phantasy, <a href='#Page_311'>311</a></li>
+ <li>in symptoms, <a href='#Page_223'>223</a>, <a href='#Page_252'>252</a>, <a href='#Page_260'>260</a>, <a href='#Page_302'>302</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'><em>Wit</em>, <a href='#Page_98'>98</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Word-association, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a></li>
+ <li class='c021'>Words:
+ <ul>
+ <li>an exchange of, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a></li>
+ <li>magic and, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a></li>
+ <li>sound-values of, <a href='#Page_36'>36</a></li>
+ <li>verbal images, <a href='#Page_352'>352</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li class='c021'><span class='sc'>Wundt</span>, <a href='#Page_36'>36</a>, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a>, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a></li>
+ <li class='c004'><span class='sc'>Zola, Émile</span>, <a href='#Page_221'>221</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c004'>
+ <div><span class='small'><em>Printed in Great Britain by</em></span></div>
+ <div><span class='small'>UNWIN BROTHERS, LIMITED, THE GRESHAM PRESS, LONDON AND WOKING</span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<hr class='c022'>
+<div class='footnote' id='f1'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r1'>1</a>. [Literally: “that wishes to build in the dark and fish in murky waters.”—<span class='sc'>Tr.</span>]</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f2'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r2'>2</a>. In German—<i><span lang="de">Versprechen</span></i>.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f3'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r3'>3</a>. <i><span lang="de">Verschreiben.</span></i></p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f4'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r4'>4</a>. <i><span lang="de">Verlesen.</span></i></p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f5'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r5'>5</a>. <i><span lang="de">Verhören.</span></i></p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f6'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r6'>6</a>. <i><span lang="de">Vergessen.</span></i></p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f7'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r7'>7</a>. <i><span lang="de">Verlegen.</span></i></p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f8'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r8'>8</a>. [The equivalent English prefix is “mis-,” but is not so widely employed.—<span class='sc'>Tr.</span>]</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f9'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r9'>9</a>. In German—<i><span lang="de">Vergreifen</span></i>.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f10'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r10'>10</a>. [English example.—<span class='sc'>Tr.</span>]</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f11'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r11'>11</a>. [<i><span lang="de">Komfortabel</span></i> is a slang Viennese expression for a one-horse cab. An
+English example of this is as follows: In a play during a scene of a funeral
+procession the actor was made to say, “Stand back, my Lord, and let the
+<em>parson cough</em>!” instead of “the coffin pass.”—<span class='sc'>Tr.</span>]</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f12'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r12'>12</a>. [English examples.—<span class='sc'>Tr.</span>]</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f13'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r13'>13</a>. [English examples.—<span class='sc'>Tr.</span>]</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f14'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r14'>14</a>. <span lang="de">“Ja, das draut” = das <em>dauert</em>&#160;... eine <em>traurige</em> Geschichte.</span></p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f15'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r15'>15</a>. <span lang="de">“Dann aber sind Tatsachen zum <em>Vorschwein</em> gekommen” = <em>Vorschein</em>&#160;... <em>Schweinerei</em>.</span></p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f16'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r16'>16</a>. [The two words “<i><span lang="de">begleiten</span></i>” and “<i><span lang="de">beleidigen</span></i>” are a good deal more
+obvious in the German “<i><span lang="de">begleidigen</span></i>” than in the translation.—<span class='sc'>Tr.</span>]</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f17'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r17'>17</a>. [Two untranslatable examples are given in the text, <em>apopos</em> for <em>apropos</em>
+and <i><span lang="de">Eischeissweibchen</span></i> for <i><span lang="de">Eiweisscheibchen</span></i>. (Meringer and Mayer.)—<span class='sc'>Tr.</span>]</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f18'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r18'>18</a>. <span lang="de"><em>Vor</em>schussmitglieder</span> instead of <span lang="de"><em>Aus</em>schussmitglieder</span>.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f19'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r19'>19</a>. From C. G. Jung.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f20'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r20'>20</a>. From A. A. Brill.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f21'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r21'>21</a>. From B. Dattner.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f22'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r22'>22</a>. Also in the writings of A. Maeder (<em>French</em>), A. A. Brill and Ernest
+Jones (<em>English</em>), and J. Stärcke (<em>Dutch</em>) and others.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f23'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r23'>23</a>. From R. Reitler.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f24'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r24'>24</a>. [German: <i><span lang="de">Zurückdrängen</span></i> = to force back. This word is stronger
+than <i><span lang="de">unterdrücken</span></i> = to press under, which we translate by suppress (not
+a technical term); <i><span lang="de">zurückdrängen</span></i> contains already the <i><span lang="de">drängen</span></i> of <i><span lang="de">verdrängen</span></i>,
+the technical word used by Freud to denote the strongest pressure of all,
+<em>repression</em>. In the examples discussed here, the agency withholding the
+intention from expression may be either conscious or unconscious (groups
+one, two, and three, according to the degree of unconsciousness); Freud
+does not use <i><span lang="de">verdrängen</span></i> = “repression,” the technical word for <em>unconscious</em>
+agency only, here, but one very near to it in sense.—<span class='sc'>Tr.</span>]</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f25'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r25'>25</a>. Joseph Breuer, in the years 1880–1882. Cf. my Lectures on Psycho-Analysis,
+delivered in the United States in 1909.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f26'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r26'>26</a>. [It should be noted that in using the word “unconscious” to translate
+the German “<i><span lang="de">unbewusst</span></i>” we are deflecting it from its customary English
+sense, which is “absence of unawareness,” such as in the phrases “he lay
+unconscious,” “a stone is unconscious,” etc. <i><span lang="de">Unbewusst</span></i> is rather “unconscious’d,”
+i.e. something of which the subject is not aware. Of it two
+statements may therefore be predicated, not only that it is not conscious
+in itself or of itself, but also that the subject is not conscious of its
+existence.—<span class='sc'>Tr.</span>]</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f27'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r27'>27</a>. [Lit.: “Tablers”—<span class='sc'>Tr.</span>]</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f28'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r28'>28</a>. [This example has been altered in translation to bring in the play
+upon words in English.—<span class='sc'>Tr.</span>]</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f29'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r29'>29</a>. [See note on preceding example.—<span class='sc'>Tr.</span>]</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f30'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r30'>30</a>. See Frontispiece.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f31'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r31'>31</a>. Frau Dr. von Hug-Hellmuth.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f32'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r32'>32</a>. [<i><span lang="de">Liebesdienst</span></i> = “love service,” a popular expression adapted from
+“military service.”—<span class='sc'>Tr.</span>]</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f33'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r33'>33</a>. [Cf. sweetheart, sweetest.—<span class='sc'>Tr.</span>]</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f34'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r34'>34</a>. [In German, an old acquaintance is often addressed as “old house”
+(<i><span lang="de">altes Haus</span></i>); the expression “giving him one on the roof” (<i><span lang="de">einem eins
+aufs Dachl geben</span></i>) corresponds to “hitting him over the head.”]</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f35'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r35'>35</a>. [The <em>portal</em> vein carries nourishment from the bowels to the body <em>via</em>
+the liver. The <em>pylorus</em> (from πύλη = gate) is the entrance to the small
+intestine. In German, the apertures of the body are called <i><span lang="de">Leibespforten</span></i>
+(gates of the body).—<span class='sc'>Tr.</span>]</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f36'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r36'>36</a>. [Cf. the Russian expression, “Little father.”—<span class='sc'>Tr.</span>]</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f37'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r37'>37</a>. [Cf. “I am a wall and my breasts like towers: then was I in his eyes
+as one that found favour.” Cant. viii. 10.—<span class='sc'>Tr.</span>]</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f38'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r38'>38</a>. [This is certainly so with English patients.—<span class='sc'>Tr.</span>]</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f39'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r39'>39</a>. Whilst correcting these pages, my eye happened to fall upon a newspaper
+paragraph which I reproduce here as affording unexpected confirmation
+of the above words.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c004'>
+ <div>DIVINE RETRIBUTION</div>
+ <div class='c003'><span class='sc'>A Broken Arm for a Broken Marriage-Vow.</span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c007'>Frau Anna M., the wife of a soldier in the reserve, accused Frau Clementine
+K. of unfaithfulness to her husband. In her accusation she stated
+that Frau K. had had an illicit relationship with Karl M. during her husband’s
+absence at the front, and while he was sending her as much as 70
+crowns a month. Besides this, she had already received a large sum of
+money from her (Frau M.’s) husband, while his wife and children had to
+live in hunger and misery. Some of her husband’s comrades had informed
+her that he and Frau K. had visited public-houses together and remained
+there drinking late into the night. The accused woman had once actually
+asked the husband of the accuser, in the presence of several soldiers, whether
+he would not soon leave his “old woman” and come to her, and the caretaker
+of the house where Frau K. lived had repeatedly seen the plaintiff’s
+husband in Frau K.’s room, in a state of complete undress.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Yesterday, before a magistrate in the Leopoldstadt, Frau K. denied
+knowing M. at all: any intimate relations between them were out of the
+question, she said.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>Albertine M., a witness, however, gave evidence of having surprised
+Frau K. in the act of kissing the accuser’s husband.</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>M., who had been called as a witness in some earlier proceedings, had
+then denied any intimate relations with the accused. Yesterday, a letter
+was handed to the magistrate, in which the witness retracted his former
+denial and confessed that up to the previous June he had carried on illicit
+relations with Frau K. In the earlier proceedings he had denied his relations
+with the accused only because she had come to him before the action
+came into court and begged him on her knees to save her and say nothing.
+“To-day,” wrote the witness, “I feel compelled to lay a full confession
+before the court, for I have broken my left arm and regard this as God’s
+punishment for my offence.”</p>
+
+<p class='c007'>The judge decided that the penal offence had been committed too long
+ago for the action to stand, whereupon the accuser withdrew her accusation
+and the accused was discharged.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f40'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r40'>40</a>. [Both senses of cleave are still alive in English: to cleave (= separate)
+and to cleave to (= adhere).—<span class='sc'>Tr.</span>]</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f41'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r41'>41</a>. [The principal park of Vienna.—<span class='sc'>Tr.</span>]</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f42'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r42'>42</a>. Another interpretation of the number <em>three</em>, occurring in the dream
+of this childless woman, lies very close; but I will not mention it here,
+because this analysis did not furnish any material illustrating it.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f43'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r43'>43</a>. <i><span lang="de">Verranntheit.</span></i></p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f44'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r44'>44</a>. Cf. <cite>Totem und Tabu</cite>, 1913.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f45'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r45'>45</a>. [<i><span lang="de">Zwangsneurose</span></i>, sometimes called in English compulsion-neurosis.—<span class='sc'>Tr.</span>]</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f46'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r46'>46</a>. E. Toulouse, <cite><span lang="fr">Émile Zola. Enquête medico-psychologique.</span></cite> Paris, 1896.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f47'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r47'>47</a>. See p. <a href='#Page_222'>222</a>.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f48'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r48'>48</a>. Ferenczi, <cite>Contributions to Psycho-Analysis</cite>. English translation by
+Ernest Jones, 1916. Chap. viii, p. 181.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f49'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r49'>49</a>. [I.e. Grave’s disease, exophthalmic goitre.—<span class='sc'>Tr.</span>]</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f50'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r50'>50</a>. [<i><span lang="de">Angst.</span></i> The German word denotes a more intense feeling than the
+English ‘anxiety’; the latter however, derived from the same root, has
+become established as the technical English term.—<span class='sc'>Tr.</span>]</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f51'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r51'>51</a>. [In Germany it replaces the use of “duck” for this purpose in
+English.—<span class='sc'>Tr.</span>]</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f52'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r52'>52</a>. [Taken, with very slight modifications, from Ernest Dowden’s translation.—<span class='sc'>Tr.</span>]</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f53'>
+<p class='c007'><a href='#r53'>53</a>. [This name is based on a reference to a relationship with an older
+person in early life.—<span class='sc'>Tr.</span>]</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c004'>
+ <div><em>BY THE SAME AUTHOR</em></div>
+ <div class='c004'><span class='large'>The Interpretation of Dreams</span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<table class='table2'>
+<colgroup>
+<col class='colwidth24'>
+<col class='colwidth50'>
+<col class='colwidth24'>
+</colgroup>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c010'><em>Demy 8vo.</em></td>
+ <td class='c019'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c011'><em>16s. net.</em></td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c007'>“This is certainly the author’s greatest and most important
+work. To psychologist and physician the work is indispensable.”—<cite>Lancet.</cite></p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“This work shows further proof of his remarkable ability in
+psychological analysis, and has added greatly to our knowledge of
+the dream, its exciting and determining factors, meaning and
+relationship.”—<cite>Medico-Chirological Journal.</cite></p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c004'>
+ <div><span class='large'>Delusion and Dream</span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<table class='table2'>
+<colgroup>
+<col class='colwidth24'>
+<col class='colwidth50'>
+<col class='colwidth24'>
+</colgroup>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c010'><em>Demy 8vo.</em></td>
+ <td class='c019'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c011'><em>12s. 6d. net.</em></td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c007'>“In this remarkable book there lies at least a double interest.
+There is, in the first place, a longish short story of unusual merit
+and charm; and, in the second, Professor Freud’s commentary on
+it from the psycho-analytic standpoint—a brilliant and ingenious
+treatment of the story as a narrative of real happenings.”—<cite>Manchester
+Guardian.</cite></p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“A wholly charming fantasy.... Professor Freud treats
+Jensen’s very delicate and finely spun story with artistic respect,
+and presents it in full as an artistic delight.”—<cite>Westminster Gazette.</cite></p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c004'>
+ <div><span class='large'>The Psychology of Day Dreams</span></div>
+ <div><span class='sc'>By</span> DR. J. VARENDONCK</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<table class='table2'>
+<colgroup>
+<col class='colwidth24'>
+<col class='colwidth50'>
+<col class='colwidth24'>
+</colgroup>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c010'><em>Demy 8vo.</em></td>
+ <td class='c019'><span class='sc'>Introduction by</span> PROFESSOR FREUD</td>
+ <td class='c011'><em>18s. net.</em></td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c007'>“A genuine, well documented first-hand study of an important psychological
+phenomenon.”—<cite>Times.</cite></p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c004'>
+ <div><span class='large'>Delusion and Dream</span></div>
+ <div class='c003'><span class='sc'>By Dr.</span> SIGMUND FREUD</div>
+ <div class='c003'><span class='sc'>Translated by</span> HELEN M. DOWNEY</div>
+ <div class='c003'><span class='sc'>Introduction by Dr.</span> G. STANLEY HALL</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<table class='table2'>
+<colgroup>
+<col class='colwidth24'>
+<col class='colwidth50'>
+<col class='colwidth24'>
+</colgroup>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c010'><em>Demy 8vo.</em></td>
+ <td class='c019'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c011'><em>12s. 6d. net.</em></td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c007'>“In this remarkable book there lies at least a double interest. In the
+first place a longish short story of unusual merit and in the second
+Professor Freud’s commentary on it from the psycho-analytic standpoint,
+a brilliant and ingenious treatment of the story as a narrative of real
+happenings.”—<cite>Manchester Guardian.</cite></p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c004'>
+ <div><span class='large'>A Young Girl’s Diary</span></div>
+ <div class='c003'><span class='sc'>Prefaced with a Letter by</span> SIGMUND FREUD</div>
+ <div class='c003'><span class='sc'>Translated from the German by</span> EDEN <span class='fss'>AND</span> CEDAR PAUL</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<table class='table2'>
+<colgroup>
+<col class='colwidth24'>
+<col class='colwidth50'>
+<col class='colwidth24'>
+</colgroup>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c010'><em>Demy 8vo.</em></td>
+ <td class='c019'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c011'><em>12s. 6d. net.</em></td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c007'>“All educationists—and, indeed, many others—should welcome this
+book; it will provide amazing food for thought.... Every page bears
+upon it the mark of absolute genuineness, and this alone makes the book
+of exceeding value.... A book of deep interest and significance.”—<cite>Education.</cite></p>
+
+<p class='c007'><em>The sale of this book is rigidly restricted to members of the medical,
+educational and legal professions.</em></p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c004'>
+ <div><span class='large'>The Interpretation of Dreams</span></div>
+ <div class='c003'><span class='sc'>By Professor</span> SIGM. FREUD</div>
+ <div class='c003'><span class='sc'>Translated by</span> A. A. BRILL, <span class='sc'>Ph.D.</span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<table class='table2'>
+<colgroup>
+<col class='colwidth24'>
+<col class='colwidth50'>
+<col class='colwidth24'>
+</colgroup>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c010'><em>Demy 8vo.</em></td>
+ <td class='c019'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c011'><em>16s. net.</em></td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c007'>“This is certainly the author’s greatest and most important work. To
+psychologist and physician the work is indispensable.”—<cite>Lancet</cite></p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c004'>
+ <div><span class='large'>Fundamental Conceptions of Psycho-Analysis</span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<table class='table2'>
+<colgroup>
+<col class='colwidth24'>
+<col class='colwidth50'>
+<col class='colwidth24'>
+</colgroup>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c010'><em>Demy 8vo.</em></td>
+ <td class='c019'><span class='sc'>By</span> A. A. BRILL, M.D.</td>
+ <td class='c011'><em>About 12s. 6d. net.</em></td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c007'>An authoritative statement of the Freudian doctrine of psycho-analysis,
+written by Freud’s chief American disciple and translator, done in a
+lively and coherent fashion, and with unusual delicacy in the choice of
+illustrative material.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c004'>
+ <div><span class='large'>Some Applications of Psycho-Analysis</span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<table class='table2'>
+<colgroup>
+<col class='colwidth24'>
+<col class='colwidth50'>
+<col class='colwidth24'>
+</colgroup>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c010'><em>Demy 8vo.</em></td>
+ <td class='c019'><span class='sc'>By Dr.</span> O. PFISTER</td>
+ <td class='c011'><em>About 18s. net.</em></td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c007'>This is a collection of essays dealing with the nature and application
+of psycho-analysis in various mental and spiritual domains. The author
+treats of psychology, philosophy, the psychology of the sources of
+artistic inspiration, of war and peace, of religion, of science and pedagogics,
+particularly of psychic inhibitions and abnormalities in children.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c004'>
+ <div><span class='large'>The Evolution of the Conscious Faculties</span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<table class='table2'>
+<colgroup>
+<col class='colwidth24'>
+<col class='colwidth50'>
+<col class='colwidth24'>
+</colgroup>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c010'><em>Demy 8vo.</em></td>
+ <td class='c019'><span class='sc'>By Dr.</span> J. VARENDONCK</td>
+ <td class='c011'><em>15s. net.</em></td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c007'>This book, which is the sequel of the author’s “Psychology of
+Day-dreams,” is mainly devoted to the study of the two different aspects
+of the faculty of retention: duplicative and synthetical memory.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c004'>
+ <div><span class='large'>Psycho-Analysis</span></div>
+ <div class='c003'><span class='sc'>By</span> BARBARA LOW, B.A., Ex-Training College Lecturer</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<table class='table2'>
+<colgroup>
+<col class='colwidth24'>
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+<col class='colwidth24'>
+</colgroup>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c010'><em>Cr. 8vo.</em></td>
+ <td class='c019'><em>Third Edition</em></td>
+ <td class='c011'><em>6s. net.</em></td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c007'>“An admirable little outline of the theory and application of psycho-analysis&#160;... as a primer in the first elements of the subject, it could
+hardly be improved upon.”—<cite>Westminster Gazette.</cite></p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c004'>
+ <div><span class='large'>Psychoanalysis and Sociology</span></div>
+ <div class='c003'><span class='sc'>By</span> AUREL KOLNAI</div>
+ <div class='c003'><span class='sc'>Translated by</span> EDEN <span class='fss'>AND</span> CEDAR PAUL</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<table class='table2'>
+<colgroup>
+<col class='colwidth24'>
+<col class='colwidth50'>
+<col class='colwidth24'>
+</colgroup>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c010'><em>Cr. 8vo.</em></td>
+ <td class='c019'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c011'><em>7s. 6d. net.</em></td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c007'>“A book of bold and ponderable ideas about the progress of
+humanity.”—<cite>Daily News.</cite></p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c004'>
+ <div><span class='large'>Studies in Psychoanalysis</span></div>
+ <div class='c003'>An account of 27 concrete cases preceded by a Theoretical Exposition</div>
+ <div class='c003'><span class='sc'>By Prof.</span> C. BAUDOUIN</div>
+ <div class='c003'>Author of Suggestion and Autosuggestion, etc.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<table class='table2'>
+<colgroup>
+<col class='colwidth24'>
+<col class='colwidth50'>
+<col class='colwidth24'>
+</colgroup>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c010'><em>Demy 8vo.</em></td>
+ <td class='c019'><span class='sc'>Translated by</span> E. <span class='fss'>AND</span> C. Paul</td>
+ <td class='c011'><em>About 16s. net.</em></td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c004'>
+ <div><span class='large'>The New Psychology: and its Relation to Life</span></div>
+ <div class='c003'><span class='sc'>By</span> A. G. TANSLEY</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<table class='table2'>
+<colgroup>
+<col class='colwidth24'>
+<col class='colwidth50'>
+<col class='colwidth24'>
+</colgroup>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c010'><em>Demy 8vo.</em></td>
+ <td class='c019'><em>Fifth Impression (revised)</em></td>
+ <td class='c011'><em>10s. 6d. net.</em></td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c007'>The issue of the Fifth Impression of this book—originally published in
+June 1920—has given the opportunity of a fairly thorough revision.
+Advantage has been taken of criticisms to make various statements more
+explicit, and a few fresh topics have been dealt with; for instance,
+Dr. Varendonck’s recent work on Day-dreaming and Adler’s views on the
+importance of the feeling of inferiority in moulding the character. A new
+preface and a glossary have been added.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c004'>
+ <div><span class='large'>Suggestion &#38; Autosuggestion</span></div>
+ <div class='c003'>A Study of the Work of M. Emile Coué based upon Investigations made by the New Nancy School</div>
+ <div class='c003'><span class='sc'>By Professor</span> CHARLES BAUDOUIN</div>
+ <div class='c003'><span class='sc'>Translated by</span> EDEN <span class='fss'>AND</span> CEDAR PAUL</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<table class='table2'>
+<colgroup>
+<col class='colwidth24'>
+<col class='colwidth50'>
+<col class='colwidth24'>
+</colgroup>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c010'><em>Demy 8vo.</em></td>
+ <td class='c019'><em>Sixth Impression</em></td>
+ <td class='c011'><em>10s. 6d. net.</em></td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c007'>“The most exciting book published since ‘The Origin of Species.’”—<cite>Nation.</cite></p>
+
+<p class='c007'>“It is full of thought in itself. It is bound to be a cause of thought....
+We very strongly advise our readers to read and study M. Baudouin’s
+book.”—<cite>Spectator.</cite></p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c004'>
+ <div><span class='large'>Hypnotism and Suggestion</span></div>
+ <div class='c003'><span class='sc'>By</span> LOUIS SATOW</div>
+ <div class='c003'><span class='sc'>Translated by</span> BERNARD MIALL</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<table class='table2'>
+<colgroup>
+<col class='colwidth24'>
+<col class='colwidth50'>
+<col class='colwidth24'>
+</colgroup>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c010'><em>Demy 8vo.</em></td>
+ <td class='c019'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c011'><em>About 10s. 6d. net.</em></td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c007'>This volume, which contains a glossary of technical terms, should fill a
+long-felt want, as supplying a foundation of accurate knowledge which
+will enable the reader to follow and understand the recent developments
+of psycho-analysis. An exact knowledge of the various phases of
+hypnosis is equally essential for a true understanding of the phenomena
+of religion, politics, education, herd-psychology, minority rule and war.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c004'>
+ <div><span class='large'>History of Psychology</span></div>
+ <div class='c003'><span class='sc'>By</span> G. S. BRETT, M.A.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<table class='table2'>
+<colgroup>
+<col class='colwidth24'>
+<col class='colwidth50'>
+<col class='colwidth24'>
+</colgroup>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c010'><em>Demy 8vo.</em></td>
+ <td class='c019'><span class='sc'>3 Volumes.</span></td>
+ <td class='c011'><em>16s. each. net.</em></td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c007'>“The value of a work at once impartial and scholarly, scientific and
+comprehensive, which, of matter all compact, surveys more than six
+hundred of the greatest thinkers, needs no emphasis.”—<cite>Holborn Review.</cite></p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c004'>
+ <div><span class='large'>Abnormal Psychology and Education</span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<table class='table2'>
+<colgroup>
+<col class='colwidth24'>
+<col class='colwidth50'>
+<col class='colwidth24'>
+</colgroup>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c010'><em>Cr. 8vo.</em></td>
+ <td class='c019'><span class='sc'>By</span> FRANK WATTS, M.A.</td>
+ <td class='c011'><em>7s. 6d. net.</em></td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c007'>“This is a very clear and admirable study&#160;... his handling of the
+problem of repression in education seems to us excellent. We hope
+this book may find its way into the studies of our teachers.”—<cite>Challenge.</cite></p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c004'>
+ <div><span class='large'>The Psychological Problems of Industry</span></div>
+ <div class='c003'><span class='sc'>By</span> FRANK WATTS</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<table class='table2'>
+<colgroup>
+<col class='colwidth24'>
+<col class='colwidth50'>
+<col class='colwidth24'>
+</colgroup>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c010'><em>Demy 8vo.</em></td>
+ <td class='c019'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c011'><em>12s. 6d. net.</em></td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='c007'>“An interesting book which Trade Unionists should study.”—<cite>Daily
+Herald.</cite></p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c004'>
+ <div><span class='small'>LONDON: GEORGE ALLEN &#38; UNWIN LTD.</span></div>
+ <div><span class='small'>RUSKIN HOUSE, 40 MUSEUM STREET, W.C. 1.</span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c003'>
+</div>
+<div class='tnotes x-ebookmaker'>
+
+<div class='chapter ph2'>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c001'>
+ <div>TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+ <ul class='ul_1 c004'>
+ <li>Typos fixed; non-standard spelling and dialect retained.
+
+ </li>
+ <li>Used numbers for footnotes, placing them all at the end of the last chapter.
+ </li>
+ </ul>
+
+</div>
+
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75810 ***</div>
+ </body>
+ <!-- created with ppgen.py 3.57e (with regex) on 2025-04-07 16:22:41 GMT -->
+</html>
+
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