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- Freud's Theory Analyzed -- A Report on Research
-
- Recent research on Freud finds his theory has been profoundly mis-
- understood (O'Brien, 1989). The logic of this assertion follows.
- Reading may require concentration.
-
- Freud held that, through motives of defense, acts of repression
- caused censorship, omission, and distortion of one's "real" thoughts
- about an Oedipus complex. One's "conscious" thoughts would be un-
- consciously determined and distorted by what one had censored. One's
- conscious thoughts condensed, displaced, reversed, omitted, covertly
- alluded to, and disguised, by substitution of analogous symbols, one's
- "real" thoughts about an Oedipus complex (Freud, 1900). He applied his
- theory not only to dreams and hysterical symptoms, but to everyday
- actions including reading, writing, and speaking (Freud, 1901).
- Freud generalized his theory so broadly that it included his own
- conscious thoughts and thus his theory.
-
- In reading Freud's theory, therefore, one has to presume Freud's
- conscious thoughts--his theory--regarding an Oedipus complex represents
- not his real thoughts directly but his defensive condensations,
- displacements, reversals, omissions, distortions, etc., of his real
- thoughts. If one wishes to gain "insight" into his "real" thoughts
- regarding an Oedipus complex, one has to analyze and interpret the
- manifest content of his thought with these defenses in mind. According
- to Freud, one must use his method of analysis to overcome such defenses
- and resistances--the same method he used on hysterical symptoms,
- dreams, and activities of everyday life. The first rule of Freud's
- method was to reject the manifest content--the apparent meaning--
- -of the dream, symptom, or activity as merely "a distorted substitute"
- for one's real thoughts.
-
- Because of this "complexity" of interaction of theory and defenses
- in Freud's thought, the following would seem to be true: 1) most
- people today who are familiar with Freud don't know what he really
- thought; 2) Freud's own theory contraindicates accepting its manifest
- content as his real thought; 3) there is no justification in Freud's
- thought for accepting the manifest content of his writing as his
- real thoughts. 4) There is no point in teaching Freud, quoting him,
- researching his theory, or imitating his therapy, since his words
- and actions, by his own testimony, conceal, distort, and obfuscate
- his genuine thoughts.
-
- With these observations as a starting point, my research went on
- to ask what thoughts _were_ on Freud's mind regarding an Oedipus
- complex. Freud himself warned these were unconscionable. I found
- this to be the case. His theory tells us his "real" thoughts would
- concern the same "elements" of thought manifest in his associations,
- but in a different relationship to each other. When Freud's method
- of analysis was systematically applied to the manifest content of
- his theory, an altogether new meaning emerged, quite as his theory
- predicted--a meaning awful to contemplate. My analysis found his
- thoughts concerned memories of a scene pertaining to an infant in
- which a father perversely and polymorphously sexually abused and
- "destroyed" ("infantile sexuality" and the "death" instinct) his
- male infant son (the "homosexual object" of his theory). Thereafter,
- unable to forget his awful memories and terrible self-reproaches,
- the father (Freud) developed hysterical symptoms, obsessional ideas,
- obscure dreams, an infantile neurosis, obsessional rituals, and
- other actions--typically involving reading, writing, speaking, and
- making mistakes--which served to repeat his memories and self-reproaches
- in disguised and distorted forms. Analysis and interpretation of
- these products of his conscious thought and activity are thus required
- to obtain insight into the real meaning they had in his own mind.
-
- In short, my research found Freud's theory to have been true in
- his own case. As Freud himself reported, self-reproaches would
- automatically be projected onto others, forming a (delusional) theory
- of the nature of the external world. He himself suggested such
- theories were projections, and that reproaches against others should
- be interpreted as self-reproaches having the exact same content
- (Freud, 1905 [9901], p. 35].
-
- When his theory is analyzed as a defense, it turns out to be not
- a theory, but a defense--a defense _disguised_ as a theory. Freud
- considered defenses to be characterized by a "dreamlike" confusion.
- He characterized such defenses as "hallucinatory confusion" when
- they caused one's real thoughts became lost to sight (Freud, 1984).
-
- This "insight" into Freud's theory affects our understanding of
- the entire manifest content of _The standard edition of the complete
- psychological works of Sigmund Freud, Volumes 1 - 24_. Conceptualizations
- since Freud that have been based upon his theory's manifest content
- have, according to Freud's way of thinking, been built upon a false
- foundation. Structures erected upon his manifest thought as their
- foundation stand upon a quicksand.
-
- Destruction of Freud's theory by Freud himself was neither accidental
- nor insignificant. Rather, Freud enacted a symbol of what he could
- not say openly. Acting out both the creation and destruction of
- a magnificent theory, senselessly destroying what he had created
- in its very first application or "earliest infancy," Freud acted
- out something analogous to what he remembered and could not forget,
- and could not say openly. An expression in one of his letters to
- Fliess, where he seems to equate his metapsychology with his "woebegone
- child," is telling (Freud, 1985, p. 216). And, of course, according
- to Freud, it would have been unconsciously determined by what he
- had repressed. Man's most basic motivation, he insisted so abstractly,
- was to both create (Eros) and destroy (Thanatos).
-
- The intent of this analysis is not to attack or denigrate Freud,
- or to attack his theory by attacking his personality. It is to
- _understand_ what his theory meant _to him_. It is to listen to
- and follow _his_ rules for interpretation of _his_ thought. It
- is by no means recommended that the thoughts of others can be analyzed
- in this way. It was Freud who insisted that one look backward in
- the history of the individual to just before a symptom, dream, or
- obsessional idea made its first appearance. There, he contended,
- one would always find an embarrassing sexual event that the individual
- was trying to forget. Freud, therefore, not the present author,
- in the first instance directs attention from one's thoughts to
- the case history of the individual, a kind of _a cogitationibus
- ad hominem_. The whole point of his theory is that he had
- self-reproaches he could not bear to contemplate or communicate
- directly.
-
- Comments and responses are invited.
-
- References
-
- Freud, S. (1894). The neuro-psychoses of defence. _Standard Edition,
- Vol. 3_, pp. 45-61. London: Hogarth Press, 1962.
-
- _____ (1900). The interpretation of dreams. _Standard Edition,
- Vols. 4 - 5_. London: Hogarth Press, 1953.
-
- _____ (1901). The psychopathology of everyday life. _Standard
- Edition, Vol. 6_. London: Hogarth Press, 1960.
-
- _____ (1905 [1901]). Fragment of an analysis of a case of hysteria.
- _Standard Edition, Vol. 7_, pp. 7-122. London: Hogarth Press,
- 1953.
-
- _____ (1985). _The complete letters of Sigmund Freud to Wilhelm
- Fliess, 1887-1904_ (J. M. Masson, Ed. & Trans.). Cambridge: Harvard
- University Press
-
- O'Brien, M. T. (1989). Freud's Oedipus complex: A reappraisal of
- its meaning, Volumes I and II. Ann Arbor, MI: University Microfilms--
- -Dissertation Information Service, No. 89-08560.
-
- - End -
- *************************************************************
- | Michael T. O'Brien | Phone: 617-643-6642 |
- | 146 Highland Ave. | |
- | Arlington, MA 02174 | Internet: mto@world.std.com |
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