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Introductory Lectures on Psychoanalysis…
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Introductory Lectures on Psychoanalysis (Penguin Freud Library) (original 1917; edition 1991)

by Sigmund Freud

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2,330216,620 (3.6)6
Male chauvinist. Nothing closet about him at all. The wonder is that he is still given any credence. If ever there was advice to be applied to the "teacher", it would be this:

Physician, heal thyself. ( )
1 vote Scribble.Orca | Mar 31, 2013 |
English (19)  Catalan (1)  Italian (1)  All languages (21)
Showing 19 of 19
Wow, such a fascinating text. It read like a detective story with a lot of uncovering of mysteries. Every lecture brought out into light a new aspect of the crime and in the end it was all tied together into a coherent believable system of understanding the dynamics of the psyche.
I haven't yet read any criticism of Freud so what i have at this point is just my amazement and excitement with the models he proposes. He shone a bright light on my understanding of dreams, neurotic symptoms and generally the condition of mental suffering. I am very greatful for that and i want to know more.
This book also provides a glimpse into the history of psychoanalysis, namely the problems that Freud and early psychoanalysts had to encounter while developing theory and practice, ironing out the details and then dealing with the protesting reactions of the public. They faced a lot of hate and it was interesting to read how they dealt with it and how they felt about it. ( )
  rubyman | Feb 21, 2024 |
9/6/22
  laplantelibrary | Sep 6, 2022 |
9/6/22
  laplantelibrary | Sep 6, 2022 |
9/5/22
  laplantelibrary | Sep 5, 2022 |
It was almost a let down as these ideas are now so commonly expressed as to seem almost self-evident. There were of course a number of ideas that have been largely resolved, corrected - but still a very accessible and enjoyable read. ( )
  brakketh | Dec 31, 2021 |
Freud is lucid in this collection of lectures that provides an excellent working-basis for psychoanalysis at the time. While his thinking is a work constantly in development, the footnotes provide guidance and direction. He also tells a few dirty jokes, which is more than I can say for most analysts writing today.
  b.masonjudy | Apr 5, 2020 |
Året er 1927 og 27 forelesninger presenteres her som en introduksjon til psykoanalysen av Sigmund Freud sjøl. Han starter med de såkalte feilreaksjoner og går gjennom disse ganske detaljert og eksemplifisert og jevnfører med filologien og viser behovet for språk-kunnskap i tyding og fortolking av utsagn.
  lestrond | Dec 16, 2019 |
A solid Freud totem based on a series of lectures that were, seemingly, transcribed. This is pure Freud and the introduction really puts what you are reading in context. It is about the ideas, the endless flow of discovery about the inception of his field, that distinguishes and highlights Freud's work. Whether or not it was truthful is besides the point, what remains is still strong enough to stand on, point the way, guide, and surprise the reader.

4 stars- well earned! ( )
  DanielSTJ | Aug 1, 2019 |
Psychoanalysis is weird and complicated to understand and you need to have a lot of knowledge of the contemporary scientific community. But you also need to read the Father och Psychoanalyis own thoughts presented in his own words.
Not a book I would voluntarily read again though!
  asa_linde | Sep 6, 2016 |
Male chauvinist. Nothing closet about him at all. The wonder is that he is still given any credence. If ever there was advice to be applied to the "teacher", it would be this:

Physician, heal thyself. ( )
1 vote Scribble.Orca | Mar 31, 2013 |
In 28 lectures delivered in Vienna 1915-1917. [9] They are confined to three topics by way of introducing the method of the analysis he had developed over the previous 30 years -- psychopathology of everyday life "errors", dreams, and neuroses. The translation maintains the "conversational" teaching quality Freud used.
  keylawk | Dec 30, 2012 |
This book of around 500 pages consists of the transcripts of a series of 28 lectures on Psychoanalysis first delivered by Freud nearly a hundred years ago. His style is conversational, playful even, and puts the reader immediately at ease. He describes the hypotheses on which the theory of Psychoanalysis is based, amongst which is probably the most important discovery in psychology, the unconscious.
Though Psychoanalysis was developed as a means to treat neurosis, he explains that there is no single distinction between a neurotic patient and a healthy individual, it is a matter of continuous gradation between the two. The dreams and waking behaviour of each can be analysed therefore using the same method, and reveal the contents of the unconscious. Freud reasons that as the unconscious is the part of the mind not available to direct examination, the only way to study its contents is through the analysis of behaviour and thoughts for which we cannot provide a conscious motive. In the case of normal people these indicators of the contents of the unconscious include our dreams, and seemingly accidental occurrances such as forgetting certain things, slips of the tongue, and a few other things which are collectively known as parapraxes. In neurotic patients, these behaviours can also be analysed in the same way, in addition to the neurotic symptoms such as compulsions, irrational fears, anxieties etcetera for which they are being treated.
The symptoms, he explains, are caused by experiences or thoughts buried in the unconscious, which push through to the conscious and cause behaviours, thoughts, and compulsions, over which the patient has no control. By bringing these unconscious motives to light, into the consciousness, they lose their power and the symptoms dissipate. A large part of Psychoanalytic theory concerns the libido, and the nature of sexuality, which Freud reasons to be involved in virtually all of the neuroses. Jung, in his books, contends that the contents of the unconscious that cause neuroses extend beyond the sexual, and in this his theory of the Archetypes of the Unconscious is important, but after reading Freud I believe that the two theories are not necessarily mutually exclusive as they don't agree on what certain terms mean.
However these things are to be understood, it is clear that Freud was the most important contributor to the understanding of the mind in the last century, whether or not he was wrong about details. For this reason these lectures are essential reading for anyone who would pretend to an education. I was initially sceptical about Freud, from what I had heard about his theories secondhand, but it is not rational to dismiss him without a reading of his works. Rational Freud certainly is, and like all big thinkers, his ideas are not without controversy. ( )
  P_S_Patrick | Jul 8, 2012 |
In 1916, some twenty years after coining the word psychoanalysis, Freud began a series of lectures entitled Introductory Lectures on Psychoanalysis. In it he describes his theories and techniques directed towards discovering and finding solutions to the mental problems observed in patients.
During the course of the twenty-eight extremely accessible essays, we discover that he came by the idea that there could be unconscious desires from the practice of hypnosis, in which wish suggestions are rooted in the brain and some time after the patient has awakened actuates upon those suggestions without knowing why.
The book is divided into three sections pertaining to parapraxes, dreams and a general theory of the neuroses. Although mutually related, we find that Freud's discourse throughout follows a similar pattern: hypotheses, research and discovery, and one may wonder whether the research inspired the hypotheses, or if the presuppositions needed to begin questioning and researching led to his very particular and revolutionary brand of ideas.
This is the best place to start if you have never read Freud. He explains the "freudian slip" and other concepts which have become part of our cultural heritage. ( )
  jwhenderson | Jul 22, 2011 |
This book is collection of lectures held by Sigmund Freud in front of all those interested in psychoanalysis - doctors and laymen alike.
Book is divided into three sections - omissions, dreams and their interpretation (hardest but without doubt the most important part of the book) and finally neurosis and general overview of [psychoanalysis] practice.
What I like about Freud's writing is that he does not go around "beating the bush" but goes straight to the point. This book is just an overview of foundation of psychoanalysis, its main fields of interests and short overview of problems encountered during the practice (of which practice itself is [and especially in those days was] the greatest issue itself).

Highly recommended. ( )
  Zare | Mar 13, 2009 |
In 1915 at the University of Vienna 60-year-old Sigmund Freud delivered these lectures on psychoanalysis, pointing to the interplay of unconscious and conscious forces within individual psyches. In reasoned progression he outlined core psychoanalytic concepts, such as repression, free association and libido.
  antimuzak | Apr 2, 2007 |
dipping in and out type of thing hard going ( )
  vicarofdibley | Apr 9, 2006 |
150 FREU 8
  luvucenanzo06 | Aug 21, 2023 |
Case 13 shelf 2
  semoffat | Aug 30, 2021 |
""
  rouzejp | Sep 2, 2015 |
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