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having gained access to the unconscious affective source, operates during all
these thirty years like a recent one. Whenever its memory is touched, it is
revived and shows itself to be supplied with the excitement which is
discharged in a motor attack. It is just here that the office of psychotherapy
begins, its task being to bring about adjustment and forgetfulness for the
unconscious processes. Indeed, the fading of memories and the flagging of
affects, which we are apt to take as self-evident and to explain as a primary
influence of time on the psychic memories, are in reality secondary changes
brought about by painstaking work. It is the foreconscious that accomplishes
this work; and the only course to be pursued by psychotherapy is the
subjugate the Unc, to the domination of the Forec.
There are, therefore, two exits for the individual unconscious emotional
process. It is either left to itself, in which case it ultimately breaks through
somewhere and secures for once a discharge for its excitation into motility; or
it succumbs to the influence of the foreconscious, and its excitation becomes
confined through this influence instead of being discharged. It is the latter
process that occurs in the dream. Owing to the fact that it is directed by the
conscious excitement, the energy from the Forec., which confronts the dream
when grown to perception, restricts the unconscious excitement of the dream
and renders it harmless as a disturbing factor. When the dreamer wakes up for
a moment, he has actually chased away the fly that has threatened to disturb
his sleep. We can now understand that it is really more expedient and
economical to give full sway to the unconscious wish, and clear its way to
regression so that it may form a dream, and then restrict and adjust this dream
by means of a small expenditure of foreconscious labor, than to curb the
unconscious throughout the entire period of sleep. We should, indeed, expect
that the dream, even if it was not originally an expedient process, would have
acquired some function in the play of forces of the psychic life. We now see
what this function is. The dream has taken it upon itself to bring the liberated
excitement of the Unc. back under the domination of the foreconscious; it
thus affords relief for the excitement of the Unc. and acts as a safety-valve for
the latter, and at the same time it insures the sleep of the foreconscious at a
slight expenditure of the waking state. Like the other psychic formations of its
group, the dream offers itself as a compromise serving simultaneously both
systems by fulfilling both wishes in so far as they are compatible with each
other. A glance at Robert’s “elimination theory,” will show that we must agree
with this author in his main point, viz. in the determination of the function of
the dream, though we differ from him in our hypotheses and in our treatment
of the dream process.
The above qualification—in so far as the two wishes are compatible with
each other—contains a suggestion that there may be cases in which the
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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