Sigismund Schlomo Freud: The Psychology And Development Of Sigmund Freud

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The first psychologist to explore the dreams, to explain the non-biological brain intelligently, to successfully treat Anna O., and to expound the stages of childhood is Sigmund Freud, whose biological name is Sigismund Schlomo Freud, exploited the human brain through hysteria as his first hypothesis. His adventure began with a young Amalia whom married a man of her father’s age, Jacob, in Freiburg of Moravia and gave birth to Freud on the sixth of May 1856. At the understanding age, he must have ben quite confuse of the age gap in his family due to the fact that his step brothers could be his father and his real father was of his grandfather age. Because of living in such environment, he was the most favorable and intelligent child in the …show more content…

He started unearthing the five stages of the Oedipus complex. As a matter of fact to the big five factors, Freud believed the tripartite structure, which consists of the id, the ego, and the superego, affected all stages, for the conscious mind has control of the ego and the superego while the unconscious mind grasp power of the id and the super-ego. Therefore, the superego, the principle of morality, has the best of both side which explained how murders still have integrity even if they lived through a rough childhood while their ego and id led them. Justice and love can successfully recover the superego of the unconscious only the murders cooperate through the tough awakening. In addition, Freud took dreams into account of strange behaviors by cause of his own experience with Irma, where Freud dreamed of his failure to treat her was not his fault but rather other doctors. He believed this was his wish, and the dream was just to fulfill what the unconscious superego disagree on; in other words, his unconscious won’t accept failure. His hypotheses seem common and agreeable upon, but Freud did not have much evidence or data to support his perspective on dreams other than that he sounded akin to similar cases. Overall, Freud devoted his whole life to study the mental processes and …show more content…

With his new ideas of psychoanalysis, topographical model, structural model, Oedipus complex, and dreams analysis, the twentieth as well as the twenty-first century contain more knowledge of the mental faculty. Freud changed perspectives of art, literature, and early education of children. Until today, a small number of psychologists could still disagree of his theories, but most psychologists have analyzed his ideas and develope new ideas upon his to complete the researches he left. Therefore, Kendra Cherry, the author of “Is Psychology Still Relevant Today?” and “‘The Interpretation of Dreams’ by Sigmund Freud,” has praise and recently discussed whether Freud thinking is

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