Sigmund Freud

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Sigmund Freud

Sigmund Freud, physiologist, medical doctor, psychologist and father of psychoanalysis, is recognized as one of the most influential thinkers of the twentieth century. As the originator of psychoanalysis, Freud distinguished himself as an intellectual giant. He invented new techniques and for understanding human behavior, his efforts resulted in one of the most comprehensive theories of psychology developed.

Freud was born May 6, 1856 in Freiberg in Moravia (what is now Czechoslovakia) to his Jewish parents, his father Jacob who was a wool merchant and his mother Amalia Nathansohn. His father Jacob was 20 years older than, Amalia, Freud's mother and Freud had to older brothers from his father's previous marriage. Sigmund Freud was born Scholomo Sigismund due to increased anti-Semitism he changed his name in 1878. Freud was the firstborn in a Viennese family of three boys and five girls. When he was four, his family moved to Vienna were he spent the rest of his life. Although Freud's family had limited funds and a small apartment, his parents made every effort to fuel his intellectual genius. Although he had many interests, because of his Jewish background his fields of choice were limited.

At the age of 17, he began to study medicine at the University of Vienna. After graduating in 1882, he joined the staff of the Vienna General Hospital, specializing in neurology. He studied in Paris (1883-5) under Jean Martin Charcot, and it was there that he changed from neurology to psychopathology, the branch of psychology that deals with the abnormal workings of the mind. Working with the Austrian neurologist Josef Breuer in the treatment of hysteria by recalling of painful experiences under hypnosis. In 1893, Fre...

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... to explore the abnormal; he had to establish what 'normal' was. To do this he looked to himself, and extrapolated from his own experiences into a general theory.

One of the most interesting and controversial ideas of psychoanalysis is the Odeius complex. Freud believed that in the phallic stage of development (between the years of 2 and 3) every boy dreams of his mother. However, the boy's sexual interests are soon met with the threat of castration. The successful growth involves identification with the father and assuming an active and aggressive social role in a male- dominated society. For a little girl the ideal of the Oedipus complex is different. She gives up the desire for the mother by becoming her Daddy's little girl. In fact she might become too attached to Daddy. As such feelings were unacceptable to the moral ego the female repressed them.

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