Page - 27 - in Dream Psychology
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No feature known to our reason whilst awake is absent. If a dream is to grow
out of all this, the psychical matter is submitted to a pressure which condenses
it extremely, to an inner shrinking and displacement, creating at the same time
fresh surfaces, to a selective interweaving among the constituents best
adapted for the construction of these scenes. Having regard to the origin of
this stuff, the term regression can be fairly applied to this process. The logical
chains which hitherto held the psychical stuff together become lost in this
transformation to the dream content. The dream work takes on, as it were,
only the essential content of the dream thoughts for elaboration. It is left to
analysis to restore the connection which the dream work has destroyed. The
dream’s means of expression must therefore be regarded as meager in
comparison with those of our imagination, though the dream does not
renounce all claims to the restitution of logical relation to the dream thoughts.
It rather succeeds with tolerable frequency in replacing these by formal
characters of its own. By reason of the undoubted connection existing
between all the parts of dream thoughts, the dream is able to embody this
matter into a single scene. It upholds a logical connection as approximation in
time and space, just as the painter, who groups all the poets for his picture of
Parnassus who, though they have never been all together on a mountain peak,
yet form ideally a community. The dream continues this method of
presentation in individual dreams, and often when it displays two elements
close together in the dream content it warrants some special inner connection
between what they represent in the dream thoughts. It should be, moreover,
observed that all the dreams of one night prove on analysis to originate from
the same sphere of thought. The causal connection between two ideas is either
left without presentation, or replaced by two different long portions of dreams
one after the other. This presentation is frequently a reversed one, the
beginning of the dream being the deduction, and its end the hypothesis. The
direct transformation of one thing into another in the dream seems to serve the
relationship of cause and effect. The dream never utters the alternative
“either-or,” but accepts both as having equal rights in the same connection.
When “either-or” is used in the reproduction of dreams, it is, as I have already
mentioned, to be replaced by “and.” Conceptions which stand in opposition to
one another are preferably expressed in dreams by the same element.[2] There
seems no “not” in dreams. Opposition between two ideas, the relation of
conversion, is represented in dreams in a very remarkable way. It is expressed
by the reversal of another part of the dream content just as if by way of
appendix. We shall later on deal with another form of expressing
disagreement. The common dream sensation of movement checked serves the
purpose of representing disagreement of impulses—a conflict of the will.
Only one of the logical relationships—that of similarity, identity, agreement—
is found highly developed in the mechanism of dream formation. Dream work
27
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book Dream Psychology"
Dream Psychology
- Title
- Dream Psychology
- Author
- Sigmund Freud
- Date
- 1920
- Language
- English
- License
- PD
- Size
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Pages
- 114
- Keywords
- Neurology, Neurologie, Träume, Psycholgie, Traum
- Categories
- Geisteswissenschaften
- International
- Medizin
Table of contents
- Introduction 4
- Chapter 1: Dreams have a meaning 9
- Chapter 2: The Dream mechanism 20
- Chapter 3: Why the dream diguises the desire 34
- Chapter 4: Dream analysis 43
- Chapter 5: Sex in dreams 54
- Chapter 6: The Wish in dreams 67
- Chapter 7: The Function of the dream 79
- Chapter 8: The Primary and Secondary process - Regression 89
- Chapter 9: The Unconscious and Consciousness - Reality 104