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- From: drayer-rebecca@MINERVA.CIS.YALE.EDU (Dr. Beverly Crusher)
- Newsgroups: alt.paranormal
- Subject: Freud's Studies of the Occult
- Date: 11 Jan 1993 19:24:35 -0500
- Organization: Yale University Science & Engineering, New Haven, CT 06520-2158
- Message-ID: <1it343INNro8@MINERVA.CIS.YALE.EDU>
- Lines: 835
-
- Here's the paper on Freud's delvings into the paranormal that I promised
- to post. The purpose of this paper was to show that the phenomena Freud
- studied were not true paranormal occurrences, but rather incidents that
- could be explained by psychoanalytic theory. I myself am not sure whether
- or not paranormal phenomena exist; I just don't think that the ones
- described here fall into that category.
-
- With that disclaimer, here it is...
-
-
- *************************************************************************
-
-
-
- Professor Sigmund Freud was an extraordinarily
- controversial figure in his day. His followers adored him,
- and hailed him as a "Columbus" of the mind. On the
- other hand, his critics, who were just as vehement, found
- his views to be outlandish and sometimes referred to him
- as "the most consummate of charlatans."(1) Even
- today, feelings about him run to either extreme, with little
- or no middle ground.
- No doubt Freud's reputation as an eccentric was
- enhanced by his delvings into the occult. Although it
- often seems difficult to believe, Freud spent a distinct
- portion of his professional life investigating paranormal
- phenomena. (Ernest Jones, in his three-volume
- biography, states rather scornfully that Freud's interest
- in the paranormal represents proof of the fact "that highly
- developed critical powers may co-exist in the same
- person with an unexpected fund of credulity."(2)) Much
- as more traditional psychoanalysts might like to ignore
- this aspect of their mentor's career, it must be addressed
- in order to obtain a complete picture of Freud's
- personality.
- It is logical to wonder at this point whether Freud
- truly believed in the phenomena he spent so much time
- studying. Most scholars tend to agree that Freud was
- basically a skeptic, but was willing to keep an open mind
- about certain aspects of the occult. Peter Gay, author of
- a comprehensive biography, asserts in his book that
- Freud thought that most "supernatural" phenomena
- could be explained in a more naturalistic fashion.
- However, he did believe that thought transference might
- be possible under certain conditions.(3)
- Ernest Jones adopted a slightly different position
- on the subject of Freud's belief in the occult. Despite his
- derogatory statement concerning Freud's credulity, he
- contends that equal amounts of evidence exist to either
- support or deny Freud's belief in the paranormal. He
- calls Freud's attitude an "exquisite oscillation between
- scepticism and credulity."(4) Jones summarizes his
- opinion by saying that for Freud, the desire to believe
- was in constant battle with a bias towards disbelief, and
- that the conflict was apparent in Freud's writings on the
- subject.(5)
- It is not the purpose of this paper to determine the
- precise extent of Freud's acceptance of paranormal
- phenomena. Such speculation is best left to the scholars
- and biographers. The intent of this essay is to
- demonstrate that Freud should not have believed in the
- occult, since most of the phenomena to which he ascribed
- a supernatural origin can be better explained by elements
- of modern psychoanalytic theory.
- Freud first became involved with the paranormal
- in 1905. He published his last paper on the subject in
- 1932. During the intervening years, both he and some of
- his colleagues, particularly Carl Jung and Sndor
- Ferenczi, devoted a great deal of time and energy to the
- study of the occult.(6) (One of Freud's favorite quotes
- during those years was, "There are more things in
- heaven and earth than are dreamed of in your
- philosophy."(7)) However, not one of the occurrences
- they witnessed or heard about would today be taken
- seriously by a respectable parapsychologist. Instead,
- these instances can be interpreted in several different
- ways. They could represent examples of the unconscious
- mind acting in ways that can be predicted by Freud's
- theoretical papers. Alternatively, they could be examples
- of investigators only seeing what they wish to see.
- The occult phenomena that Freud described in his
- personal communications and published papers can be
- divided into two broad groups: phenomena that are
- associated with dreams and those that occur during
- waking hours. These categories can be further
- subdivided into prophetic and telepathic occurrences.
- Freud also spent some time examining superstitions,
- beliefs that seemingly chance events actually have a
- hidden meaning and can predict the future.(8) While
- superstitions are not strictly occult phenomena, they
- deserve mention here because a belief in the supernatural
- is intimately connected with them.
- Freud defined telepathy as the instantaneous
- transmission of an event between the minds of two
- people. According to him, the individuals who are
- "telepathically" linked must share strong emotional
- ties,(9) and the event that is transmitted should be
- charged with negative emotions.(10) This definition is
- different from the one employed by professional
- parapsychologists. They define telepathy as
- "extrasensory awareness of another person's mental
- content or state."(11) No mention is made about the
- necessity of an emotional link or the type of event that
- can be transmitted. This more closely corresponds with
- Freud's definition of thought transference, a process he
- considered to be closely connected to telepathy.(12)
- Freud often thought that telepathy, if it did
- actually exist, might prove to be useful in the analytic
- setting. Indeed, in one of his papers on technique Freud
- stated that an analyst must "turn his unconscious like a
- receptive organ towards the transmitting unconscious of
- the patient."(13) Other psychoanalysts jumped on the
- same bandwagon. Helene Deutsch and Istvn Holls,
- contemporaries of Freud's,(14) published papers on their
- theories of the role of the occult in psychoanalysis. Even
- psychoanalysts unconnected to Freud became interested
- in the subject.
-
- Freud never made any secret of his bias towards
- a scientific explanation of mental phenomena. He had,
- after all, first been trained as a medical doctor. He
- described psychoanalysts as having fundamentally
- materialistic and mechanistic attitudes, even though they
- were willing to search for undetected qualities of the mind
- and soul.(15) This inclination towards rational definitions
- extended to the occult.
- Freud proposed a possible physical basis for
- thought transmission (which presumably could be
- extended to telepathy as well) based on an analogy with
- the telephone. He postulated that the thoughts or other
- mental processes that are transmitted are transformed
- into physical processes such as waves or rays.(16) Once
- these waves or rays reach their target, they are
- transformed back into the original mental processes.(17)
- Additional evidence for Freud's belief in this physical
- basis for the occult can be found in a letter of his to
- Ferenczi, in which he describes his opinion of a
- soothsayer whom they had both visited. Freud thought
- that she had a "physiological gift" that allowed her
- access to the thoughts of others.(18)
- It is time to turn to the occult phenomena
- themselves. Superstitions should be dealt with first. It
- can be shown that, even though they seem connected
- with the supernatural, they are really products of the
- unconscious mind. From there, it will be a relatively
- simple matter to extrapolate from them to the other
- supernatural happenings that Freud studied.
- A substantial portion of one of Freud's papers
- was devoted to an examination of superstitions. In this
- paper, called "Determinism, Belief in Chance and
- Superstition -- Some Points of View," Freud described
- the phenomenology of superstitious beliefs. According to
- him, the average person knows very little about
- psychoanalytic theory. Because of this, the person will
- be unaware of the significance of his own chance
- actions.(19) However, these chance actions will possess
- unconscious motivations which will attempt to find
- conscious representations. Since the person has no other
- way to express his hidden desires, he will project them
- onto the external world(20) and will view external chance
- events as having the ability to reveal things that would
- otherwise be hidden from him.(21)
- Usually, the repressed material tends to be a
- death wish against a loved one.(22) It is common for an
- individual to feel both love and hate for the same person.
- The hatred, however, will be imprisoned in the
- unconscious, since the person will most likely have been
- brought up to deny such negative emotions. Since
- superstitions are usually associated with anticipations of
- trouble, it can be seen that they are really unconscious
- expectations of punishment for evil thoughts.(23)
- Interestingly, Freud compares superstitious
- people with paranoiacs. Both, he says, will fabricate a
- supernatural reality in order to express unconscious
- processes and relationships. It falls to science to
- recognize this fact and project it back into a psychology of
- the unconscious.(24)
- As alert as Freud was to the causes of
- superstitions, he fell prey to them nonetheless. He was
- particularly susceptible to number superstition, the belief
- that certain numbers had a special significance. His
- telephone number in 1899 was 14362; he was convinced
- that the last two digits represented the age at which he
- would die. This number served to remind Freud of his
- mortality; indeed, he attributed his own superstitions to
- an unconscious desire for immortality instead of the usual
- repressed hostility.(25)
- The next topic to be covered is one on which
- Freud concentrated a great deal: the appearance of occult
- phenomena in dreams. Freud wrote several papers
- dealing with this subject. He repeatedly maintained,
- however, that supernatural phenomena are fundamentally
- distinct from dreams. The two are often grouped together
- because they occur together, but the supernatural really
- has no place in the theory of dreams. The important
- questions instead should be why the paranormal seems
- to surface repeatedly under dream conditions(26) and
- whether the phenomena involved are truly paranormal in
- nature.
- Occult phenomena tend to be linked with dreams
- for the additional reason that both seem very
- mysterious.(27) In one of his papers, Freud remarked that
- dreams were frequently regarded as "portals to the world
- of mysticism" and were seen by the uneducated as occult
- phenomena in their own right. However, as Freud would
- so often repeat, both dreams and their subject matter --
- occult or mundane -- could only be understood by
- scientific investigation.(28) Mysticism had no place in the
- study of dreams.
- Telepathic dreams were the more common type of
- "occult" dreams investigated by Freud; he very rarely
- analyzed prophetic dreams. Naturally, he was quick to
- state that the only reason for mentioning the connection
- between telepathy and dreams was that sleep seemed to
- be conducive for the reception of telepathic
- communications. Telepathic messages, he claimed,
- would not be treated any differently by the mind than any
- other material used in dreams.(29) Furthermore, telepathic
- dreams should in all ways adhere strictly to the accepted
- view of dreams, since telepathy in no way altered the
- fundamental character of the dream.(30)
- According to Freud's theory of dreams, there are
- two types of dream-contents. There is the latent dream-
- content, which consists of the actual psychical material
- behind the dream, and there is the manifest dream-
- content, which is the material actually remembered by the
- dreamer.(31) A process called the dream-work serves to
- transform the latent into the manifest.(32)
- Freud postulated that a telepathic message would
- serve as the latent dream-content. The message would
- be distorted during the dreaming process, and hence the
- dream would not exactly reflect the nature of the
- communication. As a result, only analysis of a telepathic
- dream would enable it to be distinguished from a
- nontelepathic one. Freud hoped that psychoanalysis
- would be equally successful at uncovering other types of
- occult phenomena.(33)
- At this point, it is necessary to point out a flaw in
- Freud's explanation of telepathic phenomena. If so-
- called telepathic messages are modified and distorted by
- the dream work, then how is it possible to prove that
- they are indeed telepathic? Might they just be other
- unconscious images altered beyond immediate
- recognition so that they appear to be telepathic in nature?
- If this is the case, then analysis should enable alternative
- interpretations of the dreams to be made that do not
- involve the supernatural.
- As will be subsequently proved, that is exactly
- what analysis does. An excellent example of a
- "telepathic" dream that was stripped of its paranormal
- nature can be found in Freud's paper "Dreams and
- Telepathy," which was published in 1922.(34) This dream
- was reported to Freud via correspondence; Freud was
- unable to interview the dreamer, whom he did not know
- personally.(35)
- The dreamer was a mature widower who had
- remarried. His daughter from his first marriage was
- pregnant at the time of the dream, but was not expecting
- the baby for another month. In his dream, the man vividly
- saw his second wife and the twins she had just given
- birth to. The man gave a very detailed description of the
- newborn babies, down to the color of their hair, and
- stated that one was a boy and the other a girl. Two days
- later, the man received a telegram stating that his
- daughter had given birth to different-sex twins at the
- approximate time of the dream.(36)
- The dreamer proceeded to offer more information
- about himself and his family situation. He stated that he
- and his daughter were very close, and that they had
- frequently corresponded during the pregnancy. The
- dreamer therefore felt certain that she would have
- thought about him during the delivery. In addition, both
- the dreamer and his first wife were very fond of
- children.(37) Finally, the man considered his second wife
- unfit to raise children.(38)
- To give Freud credit, he immediately
- acknowledged the possibility that the dream might have a
- non-paranormal explanation. He stated that the dream
- could presumably be a manifestation of a repressed
- desire on the part of the father to violate the incest taboo
- and have his daughter bear his children. Freud claimed
- that the appearance of the man's second wife as the
- mother of the twins represented nothing more than a
- wish that the daughter could be his second wife.(39)
- Furthermore, instead of the dream being a
- telepathic message of the birth, it might have been an
- unconscious expression of the man's belief that his
- daughter had miscalculated the length of her pregnancy
- by one month. Therefore, instead of the babies being due
- a month from then, they would really be due at the time of
- the dream. The appearance of twins instead of a single
- child could be explained by a wistful notion on the part of
- the man that if his first wife were still alive she would
- love to have more than one grandchild.(40)
- Therefore, this "telepathic" dream has been
- shown to be a wish-fulfillment fantasy on the part of the
- dreamer.(41) However, despite this interpretation, Freud
- still insists that the existence of telepathy has not been
- disproved. In "Dreams and the Occult," he states that
- the possibility of telepathy could only be dismissed if all
- the circumstances of the case were thoroughly examined,
- something he could not do because of his lack of personal
- contact with the dreamer.(42) These are the words of a
- man who does not want to admit that the "desire to
- believe" has been made futile by the necessity of
- disbelief.
- The second type of "occult" dream that Freud
- analyzed is the prophetic dream. He only analyzed one of
- these, and he had absolutely no qualms about stripping it
- of its supernatural character. Instead, Freud offered a
- perfectly rational psychoanalytic interpretation that
- attributed this kind of dream to activity of the censor
- between the unconscious and the conscious.(43)
- The dream, described in "A Premonitory Dream
- Fulfilled," was related to Freud several years after its
- occurrence. The dreamer, a woman whom Freud called
- Frau B., stated that one night she had dreamed that she
- met a certain Dr. K. at a particular spot on Vienna's main
- street. Dr. K was a friend and had at one time been her
- physician. The next day, Frau B. actually met Dr. K. at
- that spot.(44)
- At first glance, this dream would indeed appear to
- be premonitory, since it predicted an event which later
- came to pass. However, Frau B. had not written down
- the dream immediately after she had woken up. Indeed,
- there was no evidence of her having even remembered
- the dream before the meeting.(45) This fact proved to be
- crucial to Freud's explanation of the situation.
- Freud also learned from Frau B. that she had been
- married twice. The first time, many years before, had
- been to an elderly rich gentleman. Several years after the
- marriage, the man lost his money, became ill with
- tuberculosis, and eventually died. To support them, Frau
- B. began to give music lessons. Dr. K. was extremely
- supportive, and helped her find students.(46)
- The family barrister, also called Dr. K., managed
- the financial affairs of Herr B. during this period. At the
- same time, he managed a different type of affair with Frau
- B. However, Frau B.'s scruples prevented her from
- obtaining any real happiness from this relationship.(47)
- Even though the love affair was not a complete
- success, the barrister continued to offer help and support
- to Frau B. She remembered one instance when she was
- sobbing wildly and wishing for Dr. K's presence. At the
- exact moment of her wish, in he walked. (Freud did not
- even consider this to be prophetic, since she probably
- thought of him a great deal and he probably visited her
- quite often.)(48)
- The dream occurred more than twenty-five years
- after these events, during which time Frau B. remarried
- and was widowed again. This time, however, she had
- been left with money and a child. Dr. K. the barrister was
- still involved in administering her affairs, although they
- were no longer intimate.(49)
- Based on all this information, Freud proposed the
- following interpretation of the dream. Frau B. had been
- expecting a visit from Dr. K., but for some reason he did
- not come. As a result, she nostalgically dreamed of the
- day when he visited at the exact moment she had wanted
- him to. However, that period in her life had generally
- been an unhappy one, and thinking about the bygone
- romance made her uncomfortable. As a result, the dream
- was repressed and she did not remember it when she
- awoke in the morning.(50)
- Later on that day, she went for a walk and met the
- physician Dr. K. At that point a distorted derivative of
- the dream was able to gain access to Frau B.'s conscious
- mind. (Freud's theory of repression states that
- derivatives of a repressed idea that are far removed from
- the actual idea will be able to enter consciousness.)(51)
- The neutral figure of the physician was substituted for the
- emotionally charged figure of the barrister. Since both
- figures were named Dr. K., Frau B. believed that she had
- dreamt the actual rendezvous.(52)
- According to Freud's interpretation, Frau B.
- created a dream in response to an actual event.(53) This
- phenomenon is similar to a screen memory, a psychical
- construct which plays an important role in childhood
- development. Screen memories can be defined as
- memories of one's earliest years that are actually formed
- during later periods of emotional arousal.(54) They are not
- entirely fabrications, since they are based on actual
- memory-traces(55), but they owe their greatest value to
- the fact that they represent repressed material in the
- unconscious.(56) Even though Frau B.'s dream was not in
- any way involved with childhood events or memories, it
- still suggests the formation of some sort of screen
- construction.
- Besides examining dream-related occult
- phenomena, Freud also studied those that appeared in
- the conscious life of a person. He conducted several
- experiments of his own; he attempted thought
- transference with Ferenczi and his daughter Anna(57) and
- on one occasion observed Jung as he supposedly made
- objects rattle of their own accord.(58) However, these
- experiments were generally inconclusive. Of more use is
- Freud's analysis of some of the spontaneous experiences
- recalled by himself or by his patients and friends.
- Freud describes many such occurrences. He
- particularly liked to examine prophecies of fortune-tellers
- that did not come true. He claimed that the significance
- of these prophecies did not lie in predicting the future,(59)
- but rather in supporting the existence of telepathy.(60)
- One such failed prophecy was reported by a 43
- year-old female patient of Freud's. At the time of her
- analysis she was childless, yet she desperately wanted
- to bear children.(61) (Freud claimed that she reason she
- wanted to bear children was so that her husband could
- replace her father, a man whose child she had
- unconsciously wanted her entire life.) The reason why
- the patient could not have children was that her husband
- had been sterilized by an earlier illness.(62)
- Many years before coming to Freud, when the
- woman had been 27 years old, she had consulted a
- fortuneteller in the lobby of a Paris hotel. She was very
- young-looking and had removed her wedding ring. The
- fortuneteller, Monsieur le Professeur, prophesied that
- she would get married and have two children by age
- thirty-two. The prophecy was never fulfilled, yet the
- woman expressed no hostility towards Monsieur le
- Professeur in her sessions with Freud. Rather, she
- recalled the entire experience with a certain amount of
- pleasure.(63)
- Freud, upon questioning his patient, learned that
- her mother's life had proceeded along a path remarkably
- similar to that predicted by the fortune-teller. She had
- married late (she was over thirty at the time of her
- wedding), but had managed to have two children by the
- time of her thirty-second birthday. Therefore, if the
- fortune-teller's words were true, the patient would be in
- the same position as her mother. To the patient, this
- identification with her mother would be tantamount to
- taking her mother's place with her father. The patient
- could not help but feel pleasure at recollecting the
- fortune-teller's prediction of the fulfillment of her fondest
- wish.(64)
- Freud was naturally curious as to how Monsieur
- le Professeur had come up with those particular numbers.
- One theory he proposed was that his patient had
- transferred her strong unconscious desire to the fortune-
- teller. He believed that emotionally charged thoughts
- could be transferred quite easily, especially if they were
- at the border between the conscious and the
- unconscious.(65)
- However, Freud also suggested that the patient
- herself may have inserted the numbers into the prophecy.
- After all, she was relating an incident that had occurred
- many years prior to her analysis; Freud believed it quite
- possible that she could have unconsciously falsified the
- memory.(66) This explanation seems much more plausible,
- especially since it seems to signify the creation of a type
- of screen memory, the existence of which had already
- been successfully demonstrated in Freud's publications.
- A personal recollection of Freud's, reported in his
- paper on determinism and chance, represents another
- seemingly paranormal phenomenon that was really
- caused by the workings of the unconscious. On the
- surface, the experience seemed prophetic in nature.
- Freud recalled taking a walk one night soon after he had
- received the title of professor. Suddenly he experienced a
- vengeful fantasy against a couple who had refused to let
- him treat their daughter. He imagined them returning to
- him after other treatments had failed and begging him to
- cure the little girl. He pictured himself saying in response
- that his professional abilities were the same as they
- were when he was but a lecturer. If they wouldn't avail
- themselves of his services then, they weren't going to
- receive them now.(67)
- At that moment, his reverie was disrupted by a
- loud voice saying, "Good day to you, Professor!" Freud
- looked up to see the couple of whom he had just been
- thinking. Had he really predicted the future in his
- thoughts? Probably not; there is a simpler explanation of
- the event.(68)
- Freud had been walking down a straight, deserted
- street. It is probable that he had looked up and seen the
- couple in the distance. Due to the hostility he felt
- towards them he suppressed the perception and instead
- took refuge in a seemingly spontaneous fantasy.(69) So
- much for Freud's prophetic powers.
- All the preceding examples of supposedly occult
- phenomena were proven to be natural occurrences
- instead. There presumably exist mundane explanations
- for most of the other so-called supernatural happenings
- that are constantly being reported. The question to
- consider now is why people persist in believing in the
- occult.
- According to Dr. George Devereux, telepathy is
- connected to infantile omnipotence fantasies.(70) So
- perhaps, as Helene Deutsch suggests, man's belief in his
- own occult powers is a way of elevating himself to the
- level of the "Divinity which he fashioned in his own
- likeness."(71) Or maybe belief in the paranormal is a type
- of narcissism; Freud based his studies of narcissism on
- children and primitive people, both of whom tend to
- believe in magic and the "omnipotence of thoughts."(72)
- However, I think the best explanation of why
- people believe in the occult was offered by Freud himself
- in "Psychoanalysis and Telepathy." He stated that this
- type of belief was an attempt to regain by supernatural
- means "the lost appeal of life on this earth."(73) This puts
- me in mind of "Miniver Cheevy", E. A. Robinson's poem
- about a man who found no appeal in his life because he
- was born at the wrong time.
-
- "Miniver Cheevy, born too late,
- Scratched his head and kept on thinking;
- Miniver coughed, and called it fate,
- And kept on drinking."(74)
-
- Perhaps those who too fanatically believe in the occult were also
- Rborn too late.S
-
- References
-
- (1) Gay, Peter. Freud: A Life for Our Time. New
- York: W.W. Norton and Company, 1988, p. xvi.
-
- (2) Jones, Ernest. The Life and Work of Sigmund
- Freud (vol. 3), New York: Basic Books, Inc., 1957, p.
- 375.
-
- (3) Gay, pp. 444-5.
-
- (4) Jones, p. 375.
-
- (5) Jones, p. 406.
-
- (6) Jones, pp. 382-383, 405.
-
- (7) Jones, p. 381.
-
- (8) Freud, Sigmund. "Determinism, Belief in Chance
- and Superstition -- Some Points of View." The
- Psychopathology of Everyday Life. New York: W.W.
- Norton and Company, Inc., 1965, p. 257.
-
- (9) Freud, Sigmund. "Dreams and the Occult."
- Psychoanalysis and the Occult, George Devereux, ed.
- New York: International Universities Press, Inc., 1953, p.
- 95.
-
- (10) Jones, p. 381.
-
- (11) Handbook of Parapsychology, Benjamin B.
- Wolman, ed. New York: Van Nostrand Reinhold
- Company, 1977, p. 935.
-
- (12) Freud, Sigmund. "Dreams and the Occult," pp.
- 97-8. (in Devereux, Psychoanalysis and the Occult.)
-
- (13) Freud, Sigmund. "Recommendations to
- Physicians Practicing Psycho-Analysis." The Freud
- Reader, Peter Gay, ed. New York: W.W. Norton and
- Company, Inc., 1989, p. 360.
-
- (14) Gay, p. 537.
-
- (15) Freud, Sigmund. "Psychoanalysis and
- Telepathy." Psychoanalysis and the Occult, George
- Devereux, ed. New York: International Universities
- Press, Inc., 1953, p. 58.
-
- (16) Jones, p. 381.
-
- (17) Freud, Sigmund. "Dreams and the Occult," p.
- 108. (in Devereux, Psychoanalysis and the Occult.)
-
- (18) Jones, pp. 384-5.
-
- (19) Freud, Sigmund. "Determinism and
- Superstition," pp. 257-8. (in The Psychopathology of
- Everyday Life.)
-
- (20) Jones, p. 378.
-
- (21) Freud, Sigmund. "Determinism and
- Superstition," p. 258. (in The Psychopathology of
- Everyday Life.)
-
- (22) Jones, p. 378.
-
- (23) Freud, Sigmund. "Determinism and
- Superstition," p. 260. (in The Psychopathology of
- Everyday Life.)
-
- (24) Ibid., pp. 258-9.
-
- (25) Gay, p. 58.
-
- (26) Freud, Sigmund. "The Occult Significance of
- Dreams." Psychoanalysis and the Occult, George
- Devereux, ed. New York: International Universities
- Press, Inc., 1953, p. 87.
-
- (27) Ibid., p. 87.
-
- (28) Freud, Sigmund. "Dreams and the Occult," p.
- 91. (in Devereux, Psychoanalysis and the Occult.)
-
- (29) Ibid., p. 96.
-
- (30) Ibid., p. 95.
-
- (31) Freud, Sigmund. "On Dreams." The Freud
- Reader, Peter Gay, ed. New York: W.W. Norton and
- Company, Inc., 1989, p. 148.
-
- (32) Freud, Sigmund. "The Dream-Work."
- Introductory Lectures on Psychoanalysis. New York:
- W.W. Norton and Company, Inc., 1966, p. 170.
-
- (33) Freud, Sigmund. "Dreams and the Occult," p.
- 97. (in Devereux, Psychoanalysis and the Occult.)
-
- (34) The Freud Reader, p. xliii.
-
- (35) Freud, Sigmund. "Dreams and Telepathy," p.
- 71. (in Devereux, Psychoanalysis and the Occult.)
-
- (36) Ibid., pp. 71-2.
-
- (37) Ibid., pp. 72-3.
-
- (38) Freud, Sigmund. "Dreams and the Occult," p.
- 96. (in Devereux, Psychoanalysis and the Occult.)
-
- (39) Freud, Sigmund. "Dreams and Telepathy," pp.
- 75-6. (in Devereux, Psychoanalysis and the Occult.)
-
- (40) Ibid., p. 76.
-
- (41) Ibid., p. 76.
-
- (42) Freud, Sigmund. "Dreams and the Occult," p.
- 97. (in Devereux, Psychoanalysis and the Occult.)
-
- (43) Freud, Sigmund. "A Premonitory Dream
- Fulfilled." Psychoanalysis and the Occult, George
- Devereux, ed. New York: International Universities
- Press, Inc., 1953, p. 51.
-
- (44) Ibid., p. 49.
-
- (45) Ibid., p. 49.
-
- (46) Ibid., pp. 49-50.
-
- (47) Ibid., p. 50.
-
- (48) Ibid., p. 50.
-
- (49) Ibid., p. 50.
-
- (50) Ibid., p. 50.
-
- (51) Freud, Sigmund. "Repression." The Freud
- Reader, Peter Gay, ed. New York: W.W. Norton and
- Company, Inc., 1989, p. 571.
-
- (52) Freud, Sigmund. "A Premonitory Dream
- Fulfilled," pp. 50-1. (in Devereux, Psychoanalysis and
- the Occult.)
-
- (53) Ibid., p. 51.
-
- (54) Freud, Sigmund. "Screen Memories." The
- Freud Reader, Peter Gay, ed. New York: W.W. Norton
- and Company, Inc., 1989, p. 126.
-
- (55) Ibid., pp. 124-5.
-
- (56) Ibid., p. 126.
-
- (57) Jones, p. 395.
-
- (58) Jones, pp. 383-4.
-
- (59) Freud, Sigmund. "Psychoanalysis and
- Telepathy," p. 59. (in Devereux, Psychoanalysis and the
- Occult.)
-
- (60) Freud, Sigmund. "The Occult Significance of
- Dreams," p. 88. (in Devereux, Psychoanalysis and the
- Occult.)
-
- (61) Freud, Sigmund. "Dreams and the Occult," pp.
- 98-99. (in Devereux, Psychoanalysis and the Occult.)
-
- (62) Freud, Sigmund. "Psychoanalysis and
- Telepathy," pp. 61-62. (in Devereux, Psychoanalysis
- and the Occult.)
-
- (63) Freud, Sigmund. "Dreams and the Occult," pp.
- 98-99. (in Devereux, Psychoanalysis and the Occult.)
-
- (64) Ibid., p. 99.
-
- (65) Freud, Sigmund. "The Occult Significance of
- Dreams," p. 89. (in Devereux, Psychoanalysis and the
- Occult.)
-
- (66) Freud, Sigmund. "Psychoanalysis and
- Telepathy," p. 65. (in Devereux, Psychoanalysis and the
- Occult.)
-
- (67) Freud, Sigmund. "Determinism and
- Superstition," pp. 263-4. (in The Psychopathology of
- Everyday Life.)
-
- (68) Ibid., p. 264.
-
- (69) Ibid., p. 264.
-
- (70) Devereux, George. "A Summary of Istvn
- Holls' Theories." Psychoanalysis and the Occult,
- George Devereux, ed. New York: International
- Universities Press, Inc., 1953, p. 199.
-
- (71) Deutsch, Helene. "Occult Processes Occurring
- During Psychoanalysis." Psychoanalysis and the Occult,
- George Devereux, ed. New York: International
- Universities Press, Inc., 1953, p. 133.
-
- (72) Freud, Sigmund. "On Narcissism: An
- Introduction." The Freud Reader, Peter Gay, ed. New
- York: W.W. Norton and Company, Inc., 1989, p. 547.
-
- (73) Freud, Sigmund. "Psychoanalysis and
- Telepathy," p. 57. (in Devereux, Psychoanalysis and the
- Occult.)
-
- (74) Collected Poems of Edwin Arlington Robinson.
- New York: The Macmillan Company, 1954, p. 348.
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-
-
- (c) 1993 Rebecca Drayer
- --
- Rebecca A. Drayer, EMT-A | drayer@minerva.cis.yale.edu
- Neurobiology major | Computing Assistant
- | Silliman College, Yale University
-