:Base frcw1.hlp
1 Works
2 Chronological
3 Psychical (Or Mental) Treatment (1890a)=idh_p1586
3 On The Psychical Mechanism Of Hysterical Phenomena (1893a)=idh_p287
3 Charcot (1893f)=idh_p275
3 The Neuro-Psychoses Of Defence (1894a)=idh_p301
3 On The Grounds For Detaching A Particular Syndrome From Neurasthenia=idh_p327
3 <Under The Description 'Anxiety Neurosis' (1895b)=idh_p327
3 Obsessions And Phobias (1895c)=idh_p317
3 Studies On Hysteria (1895d)=idh_p1
3 A Reply To Criticisms Of My Paper On Anxiety Neurosis (1895f)=idh_p352
3 Heredity And The Aetiology Of The Neuroses (1896a)=idh_p368
3 Further Remarks On The Neuro-Psychoses Of Defence (1896b)=idh_p382
3 Abstracts Of The Scientific Writings Of Dr. Sigm. Freud 1877-1897 (1897b)=idh_p436
3 Sexuality In The Aetiology Of The Neuroses (1898a)=idh_p455
3 The Psychical Mechanism Of Forgetfulness (1898b)=idh_p478
3 Screen Memories (1899a)=idh_p487
3 The Interpretation Of Dreams (1900a)=idh_p507
3 On Dreams (1901a)=idh_p1051
3 The Psychopathology Of Everyday Life (1901b)=idh_p1099
3 Autobiographical Note (1901)=idh_p506
3 Freud's Psycho-Analytic Procedure (1904a)=idh_p1555
3 On Psychotherapy (1905a)=idh_p1563
3 Jokes and Their Relation To The Unconscious (1905c)=idh_p1615
3 Three Essays On The Theory Of Sexuality (1905d)=idh_p1457
3 Fragment Of An Analysis Of A Case Of Hysteria (1905e)=idh_p1350
3 My Views On The Part Played By Sexuality In The Aetiology Of The Neuroses (1906a)=idh_p1575
3 Preface To Freud's Shorter Writings 1893-1906 (1906b)=idh_p272
3 Psycho-Analysis And The Establishment Of The Facts In Legal Proceedings (1906c)=idh_p1888
3 Contribution To A Questionnaire On Reading (1906f)=idh_p1991
3 Delusions And Dreams In Jensen's Gradiva (1907a)=idh_p1812
3 Obsessive Actions And Religious Practices (1907b)=idh_p1901
3 The Sexual Enlightenment Of Children (An Open Letter To Dr. M. Furst) (1907c)=idh_p1912
3 Prospectus For Schriften Zur Angewandten Seelenkunde (1907e)=idh_p1993
3 Hysterical Phantasies And Their Relation To Bisexuality (1908a)=idh_p1932
3 Character And Anal Erotism (1908b)=idh_p1942
3 On The Sexual Theories Of Children (1908c)=idh_p1966
3 'Civilized' Sexual Morality And Modern Nervous Illness (1908d)=idh_p1948
3 Creative Writers And Day-Dreaming (1908e)=idh_p1921
3 Preface To Wilhelm Stekel's Nervous Anxiety-States And Their Treatment (1908f)=idh_p1994
3 Some General Remarks On Hysterical Attacks (1909a)=idh_p1981
3 Analysis Of A Phobia In A Five-Year-Old Boy (1909b)=idh_p2001
3 Family Romances (1909c)=idh_p1987
3 Contributions To The Neue Freie Presse=idh_p1996
3 Notes Upon A Case Of Obsessional Neurosis (1909d)=idh_p2127
3 Five Lectures On Psycho-Analysis (1910a)=idh_p2197
3 Preface To Sandor Ferenczi's Psycho-Analysis: Essays In The Field Of Psycho-Analysis (1910b)=idh_p1995
3 Leonardo Da Vinci And A Memory Of His Childhood (1910c)=idh_p2242
3 The Future Prospects Of Psycho-Analytic Therapy (1910d)=idh_p2307
3 The Antithetical Meaning Of Primal Words (1910e)=idh_p2318
3 Letter To Dr. Friedrich S. Kraus On Anthropophyteia (1910f)=idh_p2382
3 Contributions To A Discussion On Suicide (1910g)=idh_p2381
3 A Special Type Of Choice Of Object Made By Men (1910h)=idh_p2326
3 The Psycho-Analytic View Of Psychogenic Disturbance Of Vision (1910i)=idh_p2366
3 Two Instances Of Pathogenic Phantasies Revealed By The Patients Themselves (1910j)=idh_p2383
3 'Wild' Psycho-Analysis (1910k)=idh_p2374
3 Review Of Wilhelm Neutra's Letters To Neurotic Women (1910m)=idh_p2384
3 Formulations On The Two Principles Of Mental Functioning (1911b)=idh_p2552
3 Psycho-Analytic Notes On An Autobiographical Account Of A Case Of Paranoia (1911c)=idh_p2387
3 The Significance Of Sequences Of Vowels (1911d)=idh_p2642
3 The Handling Of Dream-Interpretation In Psycho-Analysis (1911e)=idh_p2450
3 'Great Is Diana Of The Ephesians' (1911f)=idh_p2643
3 The Dynamics Of Transference (1912b)=idh_p2457
3 Types Of Onset Of Neurosis (1912c)=idh_p2560
3 On The Universal Tendency To Debasement In The Sphere Of Love (1912d)=idh_p2337
3 Recommendations To Physicians Practising Psycho-Analysis (1912e)=idh_p2467
3 Contributions To A Discussion On Masturbation (1912f)=idh_p2567
3 A Note On The Unconscious In Psycho-Analysis (1912g)=idh_p2577
3 An Evidential Dream (1913a)=idh_p2586
3 Introduction To Pfister's The Psycho-Analytic Method (1913b)=idh_p2634
3 On Beginning The Treatment (1913c)=idh_p2477
3 The Occurrence In Dreams Of Material From Fairy Tales (1913d)=idh_p2596
3 Preface To Maxim Steiner's The Psychical Disorders Of Male Potency (1913e)=idh_p2645
3 The Theme Of The Three Caskets (1913f)=idh_p2604
3 Two Lies Told By Children (1913g)=idh_p2617
3 Observations And Examples From Analytic Practice (1913h)=idh_p2829
3 The Disposition To Obsessional Neurosis (1913i)=idh_p2623
3 The Claims Of Psycho-Analysis To Scientific Interest (1913j)=idh_p2802
3 Preface To Bourke's Scatalogic Rites Of All Nations (1913k)=idh_p2639
3 On Psycho-Analysis (1913m)=idh_p2545
3 Totem And Taboo (1912-1913)=idh_p2646
3 Fausse Reconnaissance ('Deja Raconte') In Psycho-Analytic Treatment (1914a)=idh_p2836
3 The Moses Of Michelangelo (1914b)=idh_p2845
3 On Narcissism: An Introduction (1914c)=idh_p2931
3 On The History Of The Psycho-Analytic Movement (1914d)=idh_p2877
3 Some Reflections On Schoolboy Psychology (1914f)=idh_p2871
3 Remembering, Repeating And Working-Through (1914g)=idh_p2498
3 Observations On Transference-Love (1915a)=idh_p2509
3 Thoughts For The Times On War And Death (1915b)=idh_p3067
3 Instincts And Their Vicissitudes (1915c)=idh_p2957
3 Repression (1915d)=idh_p2977
3 The Unconscious (1915e)=idh_p2991
3 A Case Of Paranoia Running Counter To The Psycho-Analytic Theory Of The Disease (1915f)=idh_p3056
3 On Transience (1916a)=idh_p3095
3 A Mythological Parallel To A Visual Obsession (1916b)=idh_p3120
3 A Connection Between A Symbol And A Symptom (1916c)=idh_p3122
3 Some Character-Types Met With In Psycho-Analytic Work (1916d)=idh_p3100
3 Introductory Lectures On Psycho-Analysis (1916-1917)=idh_p3124
3 A Difficulty In The Path Of Psycho-Analysis (1917a)=idh_p3608
3 A Childhood Recollection From Dichtung Und Wahrheit (1917b)=idh_p3618
3 On Transformations Of Instinct As Exemplified In Anal Erotism (1917c)=idh_p3599
3 A Metapsychological Supplement To The Theory Of Dreams (1917d)=idh_p3027
3 Mourning And Melancholia (1917e)=idh_p3041
3 The Taboo Of Virginity (1918a)=idh_p2349
3 From The History Of An Infantile Neurosis (1918b)=idh_p3504
3 Lines Of Advance In Psycho-Analytic Therapy (1919a)=idh_p3628
3 James J. Putnam (1919b)=idh_p3709
3 A Note On Psycho-Analytic Publications And Prizes (1919c)=idh_p3706
3 Introduction To Psycho-Analysis And The War Neuroses (1919d)=idh_p3665
3 'A Child Is Being Beaten' (1919e)=idh_p3643
3 Victor Tausk (1919f)=idh_p3710
3 Preface To Reik's Ritual: Psycho-Analytic Studies (1919g)=idh_p3703
3 The 'Uncanny' (1919h)=idh_p3675
3 Letter To Dr. Hermine Von Hug-Hellmuth (1919i)=idh_p3123
3 On The Teaching Of Psycho-Analysis In Universities (1919j)=idh_p3638
3 The Psychogenesis Of A Case Of Homosexuality In A Woman (1920a)=idh_p3837
3 A Note On The Prehistory Of The Technique Of Analysis (1920b)=idh_p3935
3 Dr. Anton Von Freund (1920c)=idh_p3939
3 Associations Of A Four-Year-Old Child (1920d)=idh_p3938
3 Beyond The Pleasure Principle (1920g)=idh_p3715
3 Preface To J. J. Putnam's Addresses On Psycho-Analysis (1921a)=idh_p3940
3 Introduction To J. Varendonck's The Psychology Of Day-Dreams (1921b)=idh_p3942
3 Group Psychology And The Analysis Of The Ego (1921c)=idh_p3765
3 Dreams And Telepathy (1922a)=idh_p3878
3 Some Neurotic Mechanisms In Jealousy. Paranoia And Homosexuality (1922b)=idh_p3900
3 Preface To Raymond De Saussure's The Psycho-Analytic Method (1922e)=idh_p4173
3 Two Encyclopaedia Articles (1923a )=idh_p3912
3 The Ego And The Id (1923b)=idh_p3946
3 Remarks On The Theory And Practice Of Dream-Interpretation (1923c)=idh_p4030
3 A Seventeenth-Century Demonological Neurosis (1923d)=idh_p3996
3 The Infantile Genital Organization (1923e)=idh_p4058
3 Josef Popper-Lynkeus And The Theory Of Dreams (1923f)=idh_p4159
3 Preface To Max Eitingon's Report On The Berlin Psycho-Analytic Policlinic (1923g)=idh_p4175
3 Letter To Senor Luis Lopez-Ballesteros Y De Torres (1923h)=idh_p4178
3 Dr. Sandor Ferenczi (On His 50th Birthday) (1923i)=idh_p4163
3 Letter To Le Disque Vert (1924a)=idh_p4179
3 Neurosis And Psychosis (1924b)=idh_p4065
3 The Economic Problem Of Masochism (1924c)=idh_p4071
3 The Dissolution Of The Oedipus Complex (1924d)=idh_p4085
3 The Loss Of Reality In Neurosis And Psychosis (1924e)=idh_p4094
3 A Short Account Of Psycho-Analysis (1924f)=idh_p4101
3 Letter To Fritz Wittels (1924g)=idh_p4176
3 Editorial Changes In The Zeitschrift (1924h)=idh_p4182
3 A Note Upon The 'Mystic Writing-Pad' (1925a)=idh_p4133
3 Letter To The Editor Of The Jewish Press Centre In Zurich (1925b)=idh_p4180
3 On The Occasion Of The Opening Of The Hebrew University (1925c)=idh_p4181
3 An Autobiographical Study (1925d)=idh_p4185
3 The Resistances To Psycho-Analysis (1925e)=idh_p4121
3 Preface To Aichhorn's Wayward Youth (1925f)=idh_p4167
3 Josef Breuer (1925g)=idh_p4171
3 Negation (1925h)=idh_p4140
3 Some Additional Notes On Dream-Interpretation As A Whole (1925i)=idh_p4044
3 Some Psychical Consequences Of The Anatomical Distinction Between The Sexes (1925j)=idh_p4146
3 To Romain Rolland (1926a)=idh_p4413
3 Karl Abraham (1926b)=idh_p4412
3 Prefatory Note To A Paper By E. Pickworth Farrow (1926c)=idh_p4414
3 Inhibitions. Symptoms And Anxiety (1926d)=idh_p4248
3 The Question Of Lay Analysis (1926e)=idh_p4327
3 Psycho-Analysis (1926f)=idh_p4401
3 Dr. Reik And The Problem Of Quackery (1926i)=idh_p4608
3 The Future Of An Illusion (1927c)=idh_p4417
3 Humour (1927d)=idh_p4541
3 Fetishism (1927e)=idh_p4535
3 A Religious Experience (1928a)=idh_p4548
3 Dostoevsky And Parricide (1928b)=idh_p4553
3 Dr. Ernest Jones (On His 50th Birthday) (1929a)=idh_p4609
3 Some Dreams Of Descartes' (1929b)=idh_p4573
3 Civilization And Its Discontents (1930a)=idh_p4464
3 Preface To Ten Years Of The Berlin Psycho-Analytic Institute (1930b)=idh_p4614
3 Introduction To The Special Psychopathology Number Of The Medical Review Of Reviews (1930c)=idh_p4612
3 The Goethe Prize=idh_p4575
3 Letter To Dr. Alfons Paquet (1930d)=idh_p4577
3 Address Delivered In The Goethe House At Frankfurt (1930e)=idh_p4578
3 Libidinal Types (1931a)=idh_p4585
3 Female Sexuality (1931b)=idh_p4590
3 Introduction To Edoardo Weiss's Elements Of Psycho-Analysis (1931c)=idh_p4613
3 The Expert Opinion In The Halsmann Case (1931d)=idh_p4610
3 Letter To The Burgomaster Of Pribor (1931e)=idh_p4616
3 Letter To Georg Fuchs (1931f)=idh_p4832
3 The Acquisition And Control Of Fire (1932a)=idh_p4781
3 Preface To Hermann Nunberg's General Theory Of The Neuroses On A Psycho-Analytic Basis (1932b)=idh_p4615
3 My Contact With Josef Popper-Lynkeus (1932c)=idh_p4807
3 New Introductory Lectures On Psycho-Analysis (1933a)=idh_p4617
3 Why War? (1933b)=idh_p4789
3 Sandor Ferenczi (1933c)=idh_p4814
3 Preface To Marie Bonaparte's The Life And Works Of Edgar Allan Poe (1933d)=idh_p4834
3 The Subtleties Of A Faulty Action (1935b)=idh_p4819
3 To Thomas Mann On His Sixtieth Birthday (1935c)=idh_p4835
3 A Disturbance Of Memory On The Acropolis (1936a)=idh_p4823
3 Preface To Richard Sterba's Dictionary Of Psycho-Analysis (1936b)=idh_p4833
3 Lou Andreas-Salome (1937a)=idh_p5076
3 Analysis Terminable And Interminable (1937c)=idh_p5014
3 Constructions In Analysis (1937d)=idh_p5049
3 A Comment On Anti-Semitism (1938a)=idh_p5074
3 Anti-Semitism In England (1938c)=idh_p5079
3 Moses And Monotheism (1939a)=idh_p4836
3 An Outline Of Psycho-Analysis (1940a [1938])=idh_p4956
3 Some Elementary Lessons In Psycho-Analysis (1940b [1938])=idh_p5067
3 Medusa's Head (1940c [1922])=idh_p3943
3 Splitting Of The Ego In The Process Of Defence (1940e [1938])=idh_p5062
3 Psycho-Analysis And Telepathy (1941d [1921])=idh_p3863
3 Address To The Society Of B'nai B'rith (1941e [1926])=idh_p4410
3 Findings, Ideas, Problems (1941f [1938])=idh_p5077
3 Psychopathic Characters On The Stage (1942a [1905])=idh_p1607
3 Dreams In Folklore (1957a [1911])=idh_p2523
2 Alphabetical
3 A Case Of Paranoia Running Counter To The Psycho-Analytic Theory Of The Disease (1915f)=idh_p3056
3 'A Child Is Being Beaten' (1919e)=idh_p3643
3 A Childhood Recollection From Dichtung Und Wahrheit (1917b)=idh_p3618
3 A Comment On Anti-Semitism (1938a)=idh_p5074
3 A Connection Between A Symbol And A Symptom (1916c)=idh_p3122
3 A Difficulty In The Path Of Psycho-Analysis (1917a)=idh_p3608
3 A Disturbance Of Memory On The Acropolis (1936a)=idh_p4823
3 A Metapsychological Supplement To The Theory Of Dreams (1917d)=idh_p3027
3 A Mythological Parallel To A Visual Obsession (1916b)=idh_p3120
3 A Note On Psycho-Analytic Publications And Prizes (1919c)=idh_p3706
3 A Note On The Prehistory Of The Technique Of Analysis (1920b)=idh_p3935
3 A Note On The Unconscious In Psycho-Analysis (1912g)=idh_p2577
3 A Note Upon The 'Mystic Writing-Pad' (1925a)=idh_p4133
3 A Religious Experience (1928a)=idh_p4548
3 A Reply To Criticisms Of My Paper On Anxiety Neurosis (1895f)=idh_p352
3 A Seventeenth-Century Demonological Neurosis (1923d)=idh_p3996
3 A Short Account Of Psycho-Analysis (1924f)=idh_p4101
3 A Special Type Of Choice Of Object Made By Men (1910h)=idh_p2326
3 Abstracts Of The Scientific Writings Of Dr. Sigm. Freud 1877-1897 (1897b)=idh_p436
3 Address Delivered In The Goethe House At Frankfurt (1930e)=idh_p4578
3 Address To The Society Of B'nai B'rith (1941e [1926])=idh_p4410
3 An Autobiographical Study (1925d)=idh_p4185
3 An Evidential Dream (1913a)=idh_p2586
3 An Outline Of Psycho-Analysis (1940a [1938])=idh_p4956
3 Analysis Of A Phobia In A Five-Year-Old Boy (1909b)=idh_p2001
3 Analysis Terminable And Interminable (1937c)=idh_p5014
3 Anti-Semitism In England (1938c)=idh_p5079
3 Associations Of A Four-Year-Old Child (1920d)=idh_p3938
3 Autobiographical Note (1901)=idh_p506
3 Beyond The Pleasure Principle (1920g)=idh_p3715
3 Character And Anal Erotism (1908b)=idh_p1942
3 Charcot (1893f)=idh_p275
3 Civilization And Its Discontents (1930a)=idh_p4464
3 'Civilized' Sexual Morality And Modern Nervous Illness (1908d)=idh_p1948
3 Constructions In Analysis (1937d)=idh_p5049
3 Contribution To A Questionnaire On Reading (1906f)=idh_p1991
3 Contributions To A Discussion On Masturbation (1912f)=idh_p2567
3 Contributions To A Discussion On Suicide (1910g)=idh_p2381
3 Contributions To The Neue Freie Presse=idh_p1996
3 Creative Writers And Day-Dreaming (1908e)=idh_p1921
3 Delusions And Dreams In Jensen's Gradiva (1907a)=idh_p1812
3 Dostoevsky And Parricide (1928b)=idh_p4553
3 Dr. Anton Von Freund (1920c)=idh_p3939
3 Dr. Ernest Jones (On His 50th Birthday) (1929a)=idh_p4609
3 Dr. Reik And The Problem Of Quackery (1926i)=idh_p4608
3 Dr. Sandor Ferenczi (On His 50th Birthday) (1923i)=idh_p4163
3 Dreams And Telepathy (1922a)=idh_p3878
3 Dreams In Folklore (1957a [1911])=idh_p2523
3 Editorial Changes In The Zeitschrift (1924h)=idh_p4182
3 Family Romances (1909c)=idh_p1987
3 Fausse Reconnaissance ('Deja Raconte') In Psycho-Analytic Treatment (1914a)=idh_p2836
3 Female Sexuality (1931b)=idh_p4590
3 Fetishism (1927e)=idh_p4535
3 Findings, Ideas, Problems (1941f [1938])=idh_p5077
3 Five Lectures On Psycho-Analysis (1910a)=idh_p2197
3 Formulations On The Two Principles Of Mental Functioning (1911b)=idh_p2552
3 Fragment Of An Analysis Of A Case Of Hysteria (1905e)=idh_p1350
3 Freud's Psycho-Analytic Procedure (1904a)=idh_p1555
3 From The History Of An Infantile Neurosis (1918b)=idh_p3504
3 Further Remarks On The Neuro-Psychoses Of Defence (1896b)=idh_p382
3 'Great Is Diana Of The Ephesians' (1911f)=idh_p2643
3 Group Psychology And The Analysis Of The Ego (1921c)=idh_p3765
3 Heredity And The Aetiology Of The Neuroses (1896a)=idh_p368
3 Humour (1927d)=idh_p4541
3 Hysterical Phantasies And Their Relation To Bisexuality (1908a)=idh_p1932
3 Inhibitions. Symptoms And Anxiety (1926d)=idh_p4248
3 Instincts And Their Vicissitudes (1915c)=idh_p2957
3 Introduction To Edoardo Weiss's Elements Of Psycho-Analysis (1931c)=idh_p4613
3 Introduction To J. Varendonck's The Psychology Of Day-Dreams (1921b)=idh_p3942
3 Introduction To Pfister's The Psycho-Analytic Method (1913b)=idh_p2634
3 Introduction To Psycho-Analysis And The War Neuroses (1919d)=idh_p3665
3 Introduction To The Special Psychopathology Number Of The Medical Review Of Reviews (1930c)=idh_p4612
3 Introductory Lectures On Psycho-Analysis (1916-1917)=idh_p3124
3 James J. Putnam (1919b)=idh_p3709
3 Jokes and Their Relation To The Unconscious (1905c)=idh_p1615
3 Josef Breuer (1925g)=idh_p4171
3 Josef Popper-Lynkeus And The Theory Of Dreams (1923f)=idh_p4159
3 Karl Abraham (1926b)=idh_p4412
3 Leonardo Da Vinci And A Memory Of His Childhood (1910c)=idh_p2242
3 Letter To Dr. Alfons Paquet (1930d)=idh_p4577
3 Letter To Dr. Friedrich S. Kraus On Anthropophyteia (1910f)=idh_p2382
3 Letter To Dr. Hermine Von Hug-Hellmuth (1919i)=idh_p3123
3 Letter To Fritz Wittels (1924g)=idh_p4176
3 Letter To Georg Fuchs (1931f)=idh_p4832
3 Letter To Le Disque Vert (1924a)=idh_p4179
3 Letter To Senor Luis Lopez-Ballesteros Y De Torres (1923h)=idh_p4178
3 Letter To The Burgomaster Of Pribor (1931e)=idh_p4616
3 Letter To The Editor Of The Jewish Press Centre In Zurich (1925b)=idh_p4180
3 Libidinal Types (1931a)=idh_p4585
3 Lines Of Advance In Psycho-Analytic Therapy (1919a)=idh_p3628
3 Lou Andreas-Salome (1937a)=idh_p5076
3 Medusa's Head (1940c [1922])=idh_p3943
3 Moses And Monotheism (1939a)=idh_p4836
3 Mourning And Melancholia (1917e)=idh_p3041
3 My Contact With Josef Popper-Lynkeus (1932c)=idh_p4807
3 My Views On The Part Played By Sexuality In The Aetiology Of The Neuroses (1906a)=idh_p1575
3 Negation (1925h)=idh_p4140
3 Neurosis And Psychosis (1924b)=idh_p4065
3 New Introductory Lectures On Psycho-Analysis (1933a)=idh_p4617
3 Notes Upon A Case Of Obsessional Neurosis (1909d)=idh_p2127
3 Observations And Examples From Analytic Practice (1913h)=idh_p2829
3 Observations On Transference-Love (1915a)=idh_p2509
3 Obsessions And Phobias (1895c)=idh_p317
3 Obsessive Actions And Religious Practices (1907b)=idh_p1901
3 On Beginning The Treatment (1913c)=idh_p2477
3 On Dreams (1901a)=idh_p1051
3 On Narcissism: An Introduction (1914c)=idh_p2931
3 On Psycho-Analysis (1913m)=idh_p2545
3 On Psychotherapy (1905a)=idh_p1563
3 On The Grounds For Detaching A Particular Syndrome From Neurasthenia=idh_p327
3 <Under The Description 'Anxiety Neurosis' (1895b)=idh_p327
3 On The History Of The Psycho-Analytic Movement (1914d)=idh_p2877
3 On The Occasion Of The Opening Of The Hebrew University (1925c)=idh_p4181
3 On The Psychical Mechanism Of Hysterical Phenomena (1893a)=idh_p287
3 On The Sexual Theories Of Children (1908c)=idh_p1966
3 On The Teaching Of Psycho-Analysis In Universities (1919j)=idh_p3638
3 On The Universal Tendency To Debasement In The Sphere Of Love (1912d)=idh_p2337
3 On Transformations Of Instinct As Exemplified In Anal Erotism (1917c)=idh_p3599
3 On Transience (1916a)=idh_p3095
3 Preface To Aichhorn's Wayward Youth (1925f)=idh_p4167
3 Preface To Bourke's Scatalogic Rites Of All Nations (1913k)=idh_p2639
3 Preface To Freud's Shorter Writings 1893-1906 (1906b)=idh_p272
3 Preface To Hermann Nunberg's General Theory Of The Neuroses On A Psycho-Analytic Basis (1932b)=idh_p4615
3 Preface To J. J. Putnam's Addresses On Psycho-Analysis (1921a)=idh_p3940
3 Preface To Marie Bonaparte's The Life And Works Of Edgar Allan Poe (1933d)=idh_p4834
3 Preface To Max Eitingon's Report On The Berlin Psycho-Analytic Policlinic (1923g)=idh_p4175
3 Preface To Maxim Steiner's The Psychical Disorders Of Male Potency (1913e)=idh_p2645
3 Preface To Raymond De Saussure's The Psycho-Analytic Method (1922e)=idh_p4173
3 Preface To Reik's Ritual: Psycho-Analytic Studies (1919g)=idh_p3703
3 Preface To Richard Sterba's Dictionary Of Psycho-Analysis (1936b)=idh_p4833
3 Preface To Sandor Ferenczi's Psycho-Analysis: Essays In The Field Of Psycho-Analysis (1910b)=idh_p1995
3 Preface To Ten Years Of The Berlin Psycho-Analytic Institute (1930b)=idh_p4614
3 Preface To Wilhelm Stekel's Nervous Anxiety-States And Their Treatment (1908f)=idh_p1994
3 Prefatory Note To A Paper By E. Pickworth Farrow (1926c)=idh_p4414
3 Prospectus For Schriften Zur Angewandten Seelenkunde (1907e)=idh_p1993
3 Psychical (Or Mental) Treatment (1890a)=idh_p1586
3 Psycho-Analysis (1926f)=idh_p4401
3 Psycho-Analysis And Telepathy (1941d [1921])=idh_p3863
3 Psycho-Analysis And The Establishment Of The Facts In Legal Proceedings (1906c)=idh_p1888
3 Psycho-Analytic Notes On An Autobiographical Account Of A Case Of Paranoia (1911c)=idh_p2387
3 Psychopathic Characters On The Stage (1942a [1905])=idh_p1607
3 Recommendations To Physicians Practising Psycho-Analysis (1912e)=idh_p2467
3 Remarks On The Theory And Practice Of Dream-Interpretation (1923c)=idh_p4030
3 Remembering, Repeating And Working-Through (1914g)=idh_p2498
3 Repression (1915d)=idh_p2977
3 Review Of Wilhelm Neutra's Letters To Neurotic Women (1910m)=idh_p2384
3 Sandor Ferenczi (1933c)=idh_p4814
3 Screen Memories (1899a)=idh_p487
3 Sexuality In The Aetiology Of The Neuroses (1898a)=idh_p455
3 Some Additional Notes On Dream-Interpretation As A Whole (1925i)=idh_p4044
3 Some Character-Types Met With In Psycho-Analytic Work (1916d)=idh_p3100
3 Some Dreams Of Descartes' (1929b)=idh_p4573
3 Some Elementary Lessons In Psycho-Analysis (1940b [1938])=idh_p5067
3 Some General Remarks On Hysterical Attacks (1909a)=idh_p1981
3 Some Neurotic Mechanisms In Jealousy. Paranoia And Homosexuality (1922b)=idh_p3900
3 Some Psychical Consequences Of The Anatomical Distinction Between The Sexes (1925j)=idh_p4146
3 Some Reflections On Schoolboy Psychology (1914f)=idh_p2871
3 Splitting Of The Ego In The Process Of Defence (1940e [1938])=idh_p5062
3 Studies On Hysteria (1895d)=idh_p1
3 The 'Uncanny' (1919h)=idh_p3675
3 The Acquisition And Control Of Fire (1932a)=idh_p4781
3 The Antithetical Meaning Of Primal Words (1910e)=idh_p2318
3 The Claims Of Psycho-Analysis To Scientific Interest (1913j)=idh_p2802
3 The Disposition To Obsessional Neurosis (1913i)=idh_p2623
3 The Dissolution Of The Oedipus Complex (1924d)=idh_p4085
3 The Dynamics Of Transference (1912b)=idh_p2457
3 The Economic Problem Of Masochism (1924c)=idh_p4071
3 The Ego And The Id (1923b)=idh_p3946
3 The Expert Opinion In The Halsmann Case (1931d)=idh_p4610
3 The Future Of An Illusion (1927c)=idh_p4417
3 The Future Prospects Of Psycho-Analytic Therapy (1910d)=idh_p2307
3 The Goethe Prize=idh_p4575
3 The Handling Of Dream-Interpretation In Psycho-Analysis (1911e)=idh_p2450
3 The Infantile Genital Organization (1923e)=idh_p4058
3 The Interpretation Of Dreams (1900a)=idh_p507
3 The Loss Of Reality In Neurosis And Psychosis (1924e)=idh_p4094
3 The Moses Of Michelangelo (1914b)=idh_p2845
3 The Neuro-Psychoses Of Defence (1894a)=idh_p301
3 The Occurrence In Dreams Of Material From Fairy Tales (1913d)=idh_p2596
3 The Psychical Mechanism Of Forgetfulness (1898b)=idh_p478
3 The Psycho-Analytic View Of Psychogenic Disturbance Of Vision (1910i)=idh_p2366
3 The Psychogenesis Of A Case Of Homosexuality In A Woman (1920a)=idh_p3837
3 The Psychopathology Of Everyday Life (1901b)=idh_p1099
3 The Question Of Lay Analysis (1926e)=idh_p4327
3 The Resistances To Psycho-Analysis (1925e)=idh_p4121
3 The Sexual Enlightenment Of Children (An Open Letter To Dr. M. Furst) (1907c)=idh_p1912
3 The Significance Of Sequences Of Vowels (1911d)=idh_p2642
3 The Subtleties Of A Faulty Action (1935b)=idh_p4819
3 The Taboo Of Virginity (1918a)=idh_p2349
3 The Theme Of The Three Caskets (1913f)=idh_p2604
3 The Unconscious (1915e)=idh_p2991
3 Thoughts For The Times On War And Death (1915b)=idh_p3067
3 Three Essays On The Theory Of Sexuality (1905d)=idh_p1457
3 To Romain Rolland (1926a)=idh_p4413
3 To Thomas Mann On His Sixtieth Birthday (1935c)=idh_p4835
3 Totem And Taboo (1912-1913)=idh_p2646
3 Two Encyclopaedia Articles (1923a )=idh_p3912
3 Two Instances Of Pathogenic Phantasies Revealed By The Patients Themselves (1910j)=idh_p2383
3 Two Lies Told By Children (1913g)=idh_p2617
3 Types Of Onset Of Neurosis (1912c)=idh_p2560
3 Victor Tausk (1919f)=idh_p3710
3 Why War? (1933b)=idh_p4789
3 'Wild' Psycho-Analysis (1910k)=idh_p2374
1 Topic Index
2 Introduction
3 The corner-stones of psycho-analytic theory=!al("2708")
3 The existence of an unconscious portion of the mind=!al("437")
3 <Division of the mind into conscious and unconscious parts=!al("437")
3 <Importance of the unconscious=!al("437")
3 Division of the mind into agencies=!al("710")
3 Two primary instincts at work in the mind=!al("543")
3 Importance of early period of life=!al("1715")
3 Importance of sexuality, both in health and in illness=!al("6")
3 Infantile sexuality. The Oedipus Complex.=!al("1287")
3 A sexual aetiology for the neuroses=!al("609")
3 Dynamic view of mental processes=!al("711")
3 Repression and resistance=!al("2709")
3 Definitions of psycho-analysis=!al("106")
2 The Mental Apparatus
3 Introduction
4 In general=!al("4400")
4 Origins. As originally being in the nature of a reflex apparatus (arc)=!al("4703")
4 <developed in response to the exigencies of life (external dangers, internal needs)=!al("4703")
3 Structure
4 The brain as the scene of action of our mental processes=!al("286")
4 <(Neurones, contact-barriers, facilitations, memory, pain,=!al("286")
4 <role of quantity and quality in, the property of consciousness)=!al("286")
4 The mind as an apparatus, a compound instrument, extended in space, comprised of several portions=!al("835")
4 As being extended in space=!al("1711")
4 The concept of a stratification of the psyche=!al("3794")
4 The spatial viewpoint=!al("4840")
4 <When using the spatial metaphor, don't always necessarily=!al("4840")
4 <mean a different locality but, rather, a different mode of functioning=!al("4840")
4 The question of localization of function in the brain (brain `centres')=!al("5166")
4 Events within the psychical apparatus as flowing in a given direction=!al("3883")
4 <As starting out from stimuli and moving (at first) toward hallucination and later=!al("3883")
4 <in the direction of motor activity.=!al("3883")
4 <Role played by memory in bringing about repetitions of experiences of satisfaction.=!al("3883")
4 The concept of  already cathected neurones/systems being =!al("3943")
4 <more susceptible to cathexis than uncathected ones=!al("3943")
4 Division of the psychical apparatus into agencies (`systems'). [See also under 'The Agencies']=!al("737")
3 Dynamics
4 A dynamic view of mental processes=!al("589")
4 The concept of there being some kind of mobile energy at work in mental life=!al("1201")
4 The forces at work in the mind - the instincts [See also under 'The Instincts']=!al("1058")
4 Importance of economic viewpoint=!al("590")
3 Division Into Conscious And Unconscious Parts
4 Introduction
5 In general=!al("5614")
5 Existence of an unconscious portion of the mind. Its importance.=!al("1180")
5 Four possible states for a mental process (conscious, preconscious, unconscious, repressed)=!al("438")
4 Consciousness
5 The question of consciousness, in general.=!al("224")
5 <Consciousness as constituting a negligible portion of mental life=!al("224")
5 <The bulk of our mental activity as being unconscious.=!al("224")
5 The Property Of Consciousness
6 How a mental process becomes conscious=!al("238")
6 <Relationship to perceptual organs=!al("238")
6 <By coming into association with the word-presentations of things (mnemic residues of speech)=!al("238")
6 Ideas as representing the instincts=!al("650")
6 Ideas as becoming conscious through verbal-presentations=!al("4340")
6 State of consciousness a mobile quantity - may or may not attach to mental processes at any give time=!al("3980")
6 Stimuli may arise from two directions - the external world and from the interior=!al("4849")
6 <The latter can only be perceived as feeling in the pleasure-unpleasure series=!al("4849")
6 The fact that the system responsible for consciousness has no memory=!al("4852")
6 The mechanism of attention=!al("4016")
6 The mechanism behind hallucinations=!al("1093")
6 The role played by consciousness in mental life in general=!al("4848")
6 The biological function of consciousness=!al("5550")
4 The Unconscious
5 Introduction
6 The existence of an unconscious portion of the mind=!al("1049")
6 <The concept of unconscious mental processes, unconscious mental activity=!al("1049")
6 The bulk of our mind as being unconscious=!al("237")
6 <The basic unconsciousness of mental life, in general=!al("237")
6 Our definition of the unconscious=!al("1060")
6 The unconscious as being what is truly psychical=!al("1052")
6 An unconscious portion of the mind as being an unavoidable assumption if we are to=!al("1055")
6 <make any headway in an understanding neurotic symptoms and analogous phenomena=!al("1055")
6 Refutation of notion that consciousness is all there is.=!al("1183")
6 <Over-estimation of the property of consciousness.=!al("1183")
6 <Overestimation of the role played by consciousness in mental life.=!al("1183")
6 <Consciousness not a necessary accompaniment of mental events.=!al("1183")
6 <Justification for the concept of (the case for) unconscious mental processes.=!al("1183")
6 <Knowledge of unconscious mental processes arrived at through inference=!al("1183")
6 Types of things (mental processes) that can be unconscious=!al("788")
6 <(Emotions, affects, thoughts, impulses, phantasies)=!al("788")
6 <Proofs of the existence of unconscious mental processes=!al("788")
6 <(solutions to problems arrived at without conscious intervention, hypnotic phenomena)=!al("788")
6 An idea or impulse may be unconscious and yet still be active=!al("3676")
6 Relevance to the neuroses. Importance of unconscious mental processes in the neuroses.=!al("2521")
6 How we may become aware of unconscious mental processes=!al("1053")
6 How we arrive at a knowledge of unconscious mental processes. Knowledge arrived at by inference.=!al("1717")
6 A problem. Three different types of unconscious.=!al("441")
6 <Sub-division of what is unconscious into preconscious, unconscious and repressed.=!al("441")
6 <General distinctions between them.=!al("441")
5 Preconscious
6 In general=!al("225")
6 Origins of preconscious state=!al("1197")
6 Relationship of preconscious state to mnemic residues of speech=!al("1194")
5 The Unconscious Proper
6 Characteristics of.=!al("1063")
6 Further sub-division into unconscious and repressed=!al("1050")
6 The (ordinary) unconscious=!al("1070")
6 The repressed unconscious=!al("1071")
6 The repressed unconscious only capable of being made conscious in the  face of a resistance=!al("1069")
6 A mental process' being unconscious not necessarily due to repression=!al("4862")
6 Conditions Under Which Changes In Rules Governing States May Occur
6 In general=!al("1082")
7 Sleep=!al("1083")
7 Psychosis (exception to requirement that resistances must be overcome)=!al("1084")
7 Parapraxes=!al("1086")
7 Jokes=!al("1087")
7 The neuroses=!al("1088")
4 Relationships Between The Various States
5 In general=!al("4031")
5 Distinctions between the various states. What distinguishes conscious, preconscious and unconscious processes.=!al("235")
5 Distinctions between preconscious and unconscious states=!al("1064")
5 Distinctions not absolute or permanent=!al("1067")
5 The possibility of there being more than one record of the same material=!al("1068")
5 Correspondences between the various states and the agencies=!al("223")
6 Discussion of state prevailing in higher animals=!al("1092")
3 The Agencies
4 The Id
5 Introduction
6 The very existence of such an agency=!al("4716")
6 As the oldest of the provinces=!al("230")
6 Initially the only agency=!al("1196")
6 Choice of nomenclature for=!al("1009")
6 Processes within it as being wholly unconscious=!al("231")
6 As being far larger than the ego=!al("763")
6 What it is. What's in it, what goes on in it. Nature and characteristics of.=!al("232")
6 General description of. Characteristics of processes in, in general.=!al("729")
6 As having no direct contact with the external world=!al("1725")
6 Contents=!al("821")
6 Everything that is inherited present at birth/laid down in constitution=!al("822")
6 As representing the past=!al("289")
6 As being the representative of the  body's needs=!al("730")
6 As being the point at which the body's needs first make themselves felt=!al("829")
6 Instincts as finding first somatic expression here=!al("831")
6 As being the home of the instincts=!al("828")
6 As containing the repressed=!al("1316")
6 Relationship between the repressed and the infantile=!al("5564")
5 Characteristics Of
6 In general=!al("1007")
6 Mental processes within it as being governed by different rules=!al("233")
6 <As being governed by the *primary process*.=!al("233")
6 <Characteristics of the primary process=!al("233")
6 Absence of logic in. No conflict in.=!al("734")
6 No such thing as a `No' in. No negatives in.=!al("5134")
6 No sense of reality in. No reality testing performed by.=!al("3843")
6 Timelessness of processes in=!al("525")
6 Absence of anxiety in=!al("1724")
6 As having no concern for self-preservation.=!al("292")
6 <Processes within as being governed by considerations of discharge.=!al("292")
6 <Press only for immediate satisfaction of needs.=!al("292")
6 Processes within as being under the sway of  the *pleasure principle*.=!al("422")
6 <Processes within as being governed by considerations of pleasure-unpleasure.=!al("422")
6 As being unable to do anything but wish=!al("4811")
5 Dependant Relationships
6 Vis a vis the ego=!al("732")
6 Vis a vis the super-ego=!al("733")
5 Conclusion
6 As representing the true essence and purpose of our existence=!al("863")
6 <The unconscious wishful impulses in the Id as representing the true core of our being=!al("863")
4 The Ego
5 Introduction
6 Definition of=!al("905")
5 Origins
6 In general=!al("3950")
6 The ego and the Id as originally having been one=!al("2130")
6 The ego as having developed out of the Id, as a sort of cortical layer,=!al("229")
6 <through the modifying influence of the external world=!al("229")
6 As being an outgrowth or modified portion of the Id=!al("823")
5 Characteristics And Functions Of
6 As being in direct contact with the external world=!al("1734")
6 As being equipped with the organs for reception of stimuli=!al("825")
6 As serving as a protective shield against stimuli=!al("826")
6 As occupying an intermediate position between the external world and the Id=!al("358")
6 As being the agency we know best=!al("1733")
6 Neuro-physiological description of=!al("689")
6 Content of, in general=!al("5785")
6 Characteristics of processes within it=!al("5782")
6 Relationship to consciousness. Large portions preconscious or unconscious.=!al("222")
6 Preconscious state as being found only in the ego=!al("1099")
6 As controlling the gates to consciousness=!al("688")
6 As acting as a screen between the Id and consciousness=!al("4846")
6 As controlling access to voluntary movement=!al("687")
6 As owing its origin and therefore its most important characteristics to external reality=!al("1735")
6 As owing its primary allegiance to external reality=!al("1776")
6 As being the home of our logical thought-processes=!al("1098")
6 Mental processes within as being governed by the secondary process.=!al("1208")
6 As displaying a trend toward unification and synthesis=!al("741")
6 As representing the present=!al("291")
6 As representing the external world in the mind=!al("1732")
6 Relationship to pleasure principle. As being governed by the *reality principle*.=!al("257")
5 Tasks. Responsibilities. Dependent Relationships.
6 Tasks the ego is faced with, in general=!al("1904")
6 Vis A Vis The Id
7 Relationship between the ego and the Id, in general=!al("1752")
7 Energy within as being in a bound state. As working with much smaller quotas of energy.=!al("4022")
7 As raising mental processes in the Id to a higher level=!al("1737")
7 As acting as an intermediary between the Id and the external world=!al("827")
7 As being the representative of the Id in the external world=!al("1909")
7 As being a facade for the Id=!al("735")
7 As being responsible for securing satisfaction for the instincts in the Id=!al("677")
7 As being the servant of the Id=!al("676")
7 As being the agency responsible for self-preservation=!al("1905")
7 As being the agency responsible for *reality-testing*=!al("1101")
7 Conditions under which reality testing is allowed to fall into abeyance (dreams, psychosis, hypnosis)=!al("1749")
7 Role played by in the function of time=!al("5780")
6 Dangers Faced By The Ego.
7 In general=!al("2163")
7 Dangers posed by the external world=!al("1944")
7 Dangers posed by the Id=!al("1751")
7 Satisfaction of impulses as leading to conflict with the external world=!al("1945")
7 Demands of the Id treated as external dangers=!al("1947")
7 As adopting a defensive attitude toward the Id=!al("1907")
6 Defensive Functions
7 Defensive functions, in general=!al("1924")
7 Repression. Justification for.=!al("1949")
7 Act of repression as preventing an internal demand from becoming an external danger=!al("1941")
7 Scene of the fight thus transferred from the outside to the inside=!al("1948")
7 Ego's main task as being that of controlling the Id=!al("1010")
7 <As exercising control over the satisfaction of instincts=!al("1010")
7 <Its task vis a vis the Id as being mainly an inhibitory one=!al("1010")
7 Censorship function. Presence of a censorship function in mental life.=!al("780")
7 <Existence of a censorship function between the  Id and the ego=!al("780")
7 The possibility of there being more than one layer of censorship=!al("4863")
7 As the agency responsible for repression=!al("592")
7 As the mediator between the Id and reality=!al("751")
7 As being responsible for the restriction satisfactions=!al("3952")
7 As allowing satisfaction when circumstances are right=!al("1939")
7 As exercising an influence over events in the Id=!al("1736")
7 The manner in which it does so=!al("1738")
7 By interpolating thought processes=!al("1746")
7 As the agency entrusted with the task of self-preservation=!al("692")
7 How accomplished in general=!al("865")
7 Use of memories=!al("1822")
7 How accomplished vis a vis the external world (reality)=!al("836")
7 How accomplished vis a vis the Id (how it gains control over the Id)=!al("824")
7 Anxiety. Role in. Function of. Use of.=!al("1747")
7 As being dependent on the Id for love=!al("602")
6 Vis a Vis The Super-ego
7 In general=!al("1739")
7 The (simple) picture painted above as applying only till the age of +- 5 years=!al("1825")
7 Super-ego. Existence of.=!al("1950")
7 The super-ego as a third force which ego has to take into account=!al("1951")
6 Vis A Vis Reality
7 Dangers posed by reality=!al("1764")
6 Dependant Relationships (Summary)
7 In general.=!al("805")
7 The normal state of affairs. When things are going well.=!al("3245")
7 An ideal action on the part of the ego=!al("849")
7 The state of affairs when things go wrong=!al("465")
7 Dangers faced by the ego on three fronts=!al("1765")
7 What the ego tries to do in general=!al("1952")
7 The concept of defence - in general=!al("1767")
7 Defence by ego in general [in brief]=!al("1753")
7 Dependant relationships in general - summary=!al("1145")
7 Internal reality harder to escape from than external reality=!al("1754")
6 Sources of energy. Relationship to instincts. As operating on borrowed forces.=!al("761")
6 As being far smaller than we had thought it to be. Ego not master in its own home.=!al("1205")
6 Horse and rider analogy for=!al("1224")
6 Clown in circus analogy for=!al("2074")
4 The Super-Ego
5 Introduction
6 The existence of such an agency=!al("5804")
6 General discussion of=!al("234")
6 As being located within the ego=!al("764")
6 As occupying intermediate position between Id and external world=!al("1835")
5 Origins
6 Origins of, in general=!al("845")
6 Origins of in mastery of Oedipus complex=!al("782")
6 As a precipitate of the Oedipus complex=!al("850")
6 As heir to the Oedipus complex=!al("1828")
6 As representing a prolongation of the parental influence of childhood=!al("852")
5 Functions And Characteristics Of
6 In general=!al("781")
6 As the critical agency=!al("1808")
6 Censorship functions=!al("1246")
6 As being responsible for the limitation of satisfactions=!al("866")
6 As a punishing agency=!al("3931")
6 As the home of the ego-ideal=!al("1041")
5 Dependant Relationships
6 Vis a Vis The Ego
7 In general=!al("853")
7 As a third force with which the ego has to contend=!al("854")
7 Relationship when things are going right=!al("1829")
7 Relationship when things go wrong=!al("1830")
6 Vis a Vis The Id
7 In general=!al("855")
5 Sundry
6 Further characteristics of=!al("1832")
6 Addition of other figures (relatives, teachers) and influences (social milieu) to those of parents=!al("851")
6 As being more severe than original parents. Explanation for.=!al("1826")
6 Criticisms of ego based not only on deeds but on its thoughts and intentions=!al("1827")
6 Phylogenetic influences. The super-ego as a representing the influence of the past.=!al("290")
6 As uniting the influences of the present and the past=!al("1837")
6 Sources of energy, in general=!al("1833")
6 Role of narcissistic (and more especially homosexual) libido in=!al("490")
6 Role of the destructive instinct in=!al("303")
6 Role played by in pathology, in general=!al("857")
6 Role played by in unconscious sense of guilt=!al("537")
6 Role played by in obsessional neurosis=!al("736")
6 Role played by in melancholia=!al("846")
6 Role played by in paranoia=!al("847")
6 Relationship to `conscience' as we know it (as being not quite the same)=!al("1042")
6 The concept of criminals out of an unconscious sense of guilt. Criminality in general.=!al("766")
4 Miscellaneous Topics
5 Introduction
6 Metapsychology - definition and discussion of term=!al("2199")
6 Dynamic view of mental processes=!al("565")
5 The Pleasure And Reality Principles
6 The Pleasure Principle
7 In general=!al("2239")
7 Alternative designations for the pleasure principle=!al("2196")
7 The whole question of pleasure and unpleasure (quantitative and qualitative aspects)=!al("3935")
7 The mental apparatus as, in general, being governed (regulated) by the pleasure principle=!al("772")
7 As applying in both in the ego and the Id=!al("4812")
7 Apparent contradictions to the above assertion=!al("2215")
6 The Reality Principle
7 Replacement of the pleasure principle by the reality principle. Reasons for.=!al("3413")
7 The reality principle, in general=!al("2221")
7 <The reality principle as a modified version of the pleasure principle=!al("2221")
7 Contrast between the pleasure principle and the reality principle=!al("256")
7 Relationship of the sexual instincts to the pleasure principle (recalcitrant, hard to educate)=!al("2223")
5 The Primary And Secondary Processes
6 Two distinct modes of mental functioning=!al("3958")
6 Different laws as governing mental processes in the Id and ego. Distinctions between them.=!al("1314")
6 Primary process (condensation, displacement, tendency to discharge)=!al("3280")
6 Secondary process=!al("3281")
6 The secondary process as being a later development.=!al("4816")
6 <The secondary process as simply overlaying and inhibiting the primary process.=!al("4816")
6 The primary process as an integral part of normal mental life=!al("5042")
6 Role played by primary process in psychopathological structures (dreams, parapraxes, neurotic symptoms)=!al("4878")
6 The concepts of bound and free energy=!al("4023")
6 Relationships between the primary process, secondary process, pleasure principle and reality principle=!al("4024")
5 Other
6 Introduction of the economic viewpoint in mental functioning=!al("2201")
6 The tendency to keep the quantity of excitation in the mind as low as possible, or at least constant.=!al("2209")
6 <Fechner's `constancy principle', principle of `the tendency toward stability', the `Nirvana Principle'=!al("2209")
6 Relationships between the three agencies=!al("423")
6 The strengths and weaknesses of the ego=!al("3031")
6 The ability of the ego to influence processes in the Id=!al("5786")
6 The ego as representing the present, the Id the organic past and the super-ego the cultural past=!al("1834")
6 What the super-ego and Id have in common=!al("858")
6 Differences of Id and super-ego from ego=!al("859")
6 Distinctions between the ego and the Id=!al("1144")
6 How ego may avoid unpleasure.=!al("2001")
6 <External reality by flight or actively changing it=!al("2001")
6 <Internal reality by defence (though it cannot ever really escape it)=!al("2001")
6 Distinctions between the unconscious proper and the repressed=!al("1198")
6 Relationships between the unconscious proper and the repressed in health and in illness-=!al("815")
6 The ideal situation of the agencies working together in harmony=!al("902")
6 The state of affairs when things go wrong=!al("1318")
6 Relationship between the agencies not always one of antagonism - often work together toward common goals=!al("4632")
6 Use of the term 'unconscious' in its descriptive, dynamic and systematic (topographical) senses=!al("1192")
6 <Objections to the use of the use of the term `subconscious'=!al("1192")
6 Relationships of the agencies to the various states of consciousness=!al("1156")
6 Comparison of state of affairs in the individual to whole nations=!al("424")
6 Similar psychical organization may be assumed to exist in higher animals=!al("860")
2 The Instincts
3 Introduction
4 The energies or forces at work in the mind=!al("1051")
4 Broad definitions of an instinct=!al("378")
4 As holding to a dualistic view of the instincts=!al("871")
4 Only two basic instincts. Broad definitions of each. Aims of each.=!al("870")
4 Everything can be explained in terms of the interplay between these two basic forces=!al("2947")
4 As corresponding to the forces of attraction and repulsion in the inorganic world=!al("295")
4 Endogenous/somatic origins of. Origin in cells/organs of body.=!al("774")
4 What do the instincts want?=!al("771")
4 The question of satisfaction - of how satisfaction is achieved=!al("255")
4 Possible paths of discharge (emotion, affect, motor activity, specific action)=!al("3939")
4 The need to bring about particular changes in the external world for their satisfaction=!al("3947")
4 The need for specific objects in the external world for their satisfaction=!al("3942")
4 The ability of one instinct to fill in for another=!al("4166")
4 Role played by the instincts in mental life, in general=!al("5337")
4 The instincts as the ultimate source of all psychical activity=!al("867")
3 The Sexual Instinct
4 Introduction
5 In general=!al("48")
4 The Popular View Of The Sexual Instinct
5 In general=!al("312")
5 The popular view as being in error. Facts contradicting the popular view.=!al("313")
5 In general=!al("953")
5 The perversions=!al("379")
5 Foreplay=!al("1632")
5 The unmistakable presence of the sexual instinct in childhood=!al("315")
4 The Psycho-Analytic View Of The Sexual Instinct
5 In general=!al("952")
5 Existence of sexual needs=!al("790")
5 As extending the scope of  the term 'sexual'=!al("2606")
5 As being present from birth and undergoing development in childhood=!al("3268")
5 Extension as  called for by the perversions=!al("2592")
5 Loosening of tie with reproduction.=!al("957")
5 Distinguishes `genital' from `sexual'=!al("319")
5 Embraces the obtaining of pleasure from any suitable area of the body=!al("957")
5 The sexual instinct as being made up of a number of component instincts=!al("310")
5 Erotogenic zones. Each component instinct as having its origin in a specific area of the body.=!al("608")
5 (Oral erotism, an anal erotism, a urethral erotism)=!al("608")
5 Each component as have a particular aim=!al("2767")
5 Each component as requiring a particular object for its satisfaction.=!al("2766")
5 Each component as seeking pleasure for its own account=!al("1522")
5 As only later, after a period of development in childhood, being united toward a common goal=!al("2625")
5 <under the primacy of the genitals=!al("2625")
5 Science as having been scarcely unaware of the presence of sexuality in childhood=!al("2595")
5 Presence in childhood.=!al("1519")
5 The libido as undergoing development in early childhood=!al("1403")
5 Development as occurring in phases=!al("959")
5 Characteristics of infantile sexuality=!al("2607")
5 The  concept of organizations of the libido (oral, anal-sadistic, phallic, genital)=!al("626")
5 Development of the ego in childhood=!al(1284")
5 Benefits of our enlarged view of sexuality=!al("2608")
5 Reason why we will be going into infantile sexuality and development in detail=!al("1517")
5 <Role of infantile sexuality in the neuroses and perversions=!al("1517")
5 The sexual instinct as being comprised of both a somatic and a psychical component=!al("3203")
5 Development of sexuality as being comprised of both somatic and a psychical elements=!al("629")
4 Somatic Origins
5 In general=!al("3205")
5 The sexual process=!al("3209")
5 Origins in the organs of the body=!al("307")
4 Psychical Manifestations. The Libido.
5 Origin of the term.=!al("2813")
5 As representing the aims of the sexual instinct=!al("1958")
5 Correspondence with Eros of the philosophers [Plato]=!al("308")
5 Aims of, in general=!al("2814")
5 Primary narcissism=!al("1188")
5 The ego as the main reservoir of the libido=!al("1188")
4 Properties And Characteristics Of The Libido
5 In general=!al("3154")
5 As being a force=!al("1959")
5 As being capable of increase, diminution, displacement, satisfaction=!al("3155")
5 As being a mobile force, as being fluid=!al("942")
5 Analogy with electrical force/fluid=!al("1960")
5 The concept of auto-erotism=!al("620")
5 Need for external objects. Early object relationships.=!al("622")
5 <Forms of early sexuality in which an extraneous object is required. The concept of object-choice.=!al("622")
5 Relationship between object-choice and auto-erotism=!al("2641")
5 Behaviour of the libido. Vicissitudes the libido may undergo.=!al("1187")
5 Narcissistic libido (ego-libido), object-libido\; distinctions between them.=!al("5315")
5 <Transformation of the one into the other.=!al("5315")
5 Libidinal cathexis.=!al("908")
5 As flowing out to (cathecting) objects=!al("236")
5 <Hypercathexis, withdrawal of cathexis.=!al("236")
5 <Object love. Object-cathexis. Amoeba analogy.=!al("236")
5 Attachment to ideas representing its aims.=!al("3207")
5 Return to the ego. Secondary narcissism.=!al("5323")
5 Overcoming of object-cathexes through identification with the object=!al("940")
5 <Distinction between primary and secondary narcissism=!al("940")
5 The concept of there being only a fixed quota of libido available for  object-cathexes=!al("2139")
5 Concept of fixation. Possibility of fixation on particular objects.=!al("306")
5 Dangers of narcissistic fixation [See also 'The Narcissistic Neuroses']=!al("944")
5 Behaviour of the libido in the Id and super-ego=!al("939")
5 Knowledge of libido gained from study of the sexual function=!al("309")
5 <(more particularly, from its manifestations as object-libido in the transference neuroses)=!al("309")
5 Difficult to get to know much about narcissistic libido=!al("5326")
5 The question of narcissistic satisfaction=!al("938")
4 Development of The Sexual Instinct In Childhood
5 In general=!al("1615")
5 The Primary Narcissistic Phase
6 Ego and Id as yet poorly differentiated=!al("1644")
6 Primary narcissism=!al("1643")
6 <All the libido stored in primitive ego-id.=!al("1643")
6 Auto-erotism=!al("3896")
5 The Oral Phase
6 In general=!al("2636")
6 The first erotogenic zone - the mouth.=!al("1606")
6 Oral erotism=!al("5350")
6 Sexual manifestations during this phase. Detachment from need for nourishment.=!al("2648")
6 <Pleasure from mouth. Thumb-sucking. Auto-erotism.=!al("2648")
6 Relation to objects. Object-choice. The first object-cathexis - the mother's breast.=!al("1605")
6 <Choice of object attached to a vital need.=!al("1605")
6 Satisfaction at the breast as prototype for all later forms of sexual satisfaction.=!al("5255")
6 Psychological development. Ego begins to be differentiated from Id.=!al("1597")
6 The oral organization of the libido=!al("5277")
5 The Anal-Sadistic Phase
6 In general=!al("2637")
6 A new erotogenic zone - the anal orifice.=!al("1607")
6 Anal erotism=!al("5351")
6 Return to auto-erotism=!al("5333")
6 Sexual manifestations during this phase. Holding back stools.=!al("5264")
6 Other meanings attaching to the contents of the bowels - `gift', `baby'.=!al("5265")
6 Manifestations of cruelty/sadism during this phase=!al("5274")
6 Pity as mental barrier against cruelty=!al("5273")
6 The sadistic-anal organization of the libido=!al("5278")
7 Ambivalence as being characteristic of this phase=!al("5279")
5 Narcissism
6 In general=!al("5669")
5 The Phallic Phase
6 In general=!al("5280")
6 A new erotogenic zone - the genitals=!al("5267")
6 No distinction made as yet between the sexes=!al("625")
6 Genital erotism=!al("5352")
6 Sexual manifestations during this phase.=!al("5268")
6 <Initially associated with micturition. Early infantile masturbation.=!al("5268")
6 The phallic organization of the libido\; subordination to primacy of genitals.=!al("5072")
6 Infantile sexuality reaches its peak=!al("2054")
6 Paths of the two sexes begin to diverge=!al("963")
5 The Oedipus Complex
6 In general=!al("329")
6 Origin of name=!al("331")
6 The legend itself=!al("4489")
6 The concept of aim-inhibited sexual impulses=!al("965")
6 Choice of object in=!al("5282")
6 Content of, in general=!al("1664")
6 Content, in boys=!al("332")
6 The boy's relationship to his mother, in particular=!al("5130")
6 The boy's relationship to his father, in particular.=!al("4483")
6 Content, in girls=!al("333")
6 The girl's relationship to her father, in particular=!al("5131")
6 The girl's relationship to her mother, in particular=!al("4484")
6 As being comprised of both positive and negative aspects=!al("631")
6 Note on the explicitly sexual nature of the impulses involved=!al("5133")
6 The Oedipus complex as being a universal complex=!al("4491")
6 As, under conditions of civilization, being inevitably doomed to come to an end=!al("1665")
6 Mastery of the Oedipus complex, in general=!al("409")
6 Repression of the Oedipus complex. Reasons for.=!al("1771")
6 Role played by castration complex in its mastery=!al("995")
6 Mastery of the Oedipus complex in boys=!al("410")
6 Mastery of the Oedipus complex in girls [See also under 'Female Sexuality']=!al("411")
6 Role played by its mastery in the formation of the super-ego=!al("412")
6 Role of brothers and sisters in (sibling rivalry)=!al("2250")
6 The concept of death-wishes against loved-ones=!al("2369")
6 Role in neurosis - as forming the core complex of the neuroses [See also under 'Neurosis]=!al("632")
6 Importance in other areas (religion, morality)=!al("1702")
6 The Oedipus complex in creative writing (Hamlet, Macbeth)=!al("4492")
5 The Castration Complex
6 In general=!al("334")
6 Discovery of the anatomical distinction between the sexes=!al("3891")
6 Consequences . . .=!al("3893")
6 In boys=!al("335")
6 In girls (penis envy) [See also under 'Female Sexuality']=!al("336")
6 Differing roles of castration complex vis a vis the Oedipus Complex in boys and girls=!al("2044")
6 Castration complex as bring development to a close and ushering in the latency period in boys=!al("964")
6 Phylogenetic reinforcement=!al("1680")
6 Role played by castration complex in other areas=!al("5529")
6 <(neurosis, myths, legends, fairy tales, men's sense of superiority over women, anti-semitism)=!al("5529")
6 Circumcision as a symbolic substitute for castration=!al("1681")
6 Other castration symbols=!al("2840")
5 Latency Period
6 In general=!al("163")
6 Certain component instincts need to undergo suppression, as being unserviceable,=!al("2651")
6 <or undergo transformation before being included in final organization=!al("2651")
6 Erection of barriers of shame, disgust, pity, morality, reaction-formation, sublimation=!al("4821")
6 <(at cost of perverse components of sexuality)=!al("4821")
6 Erection of the barrier against incest=!al("5339")
6 Sexual manifestations during this period=!al("5251")
5 Puberty. The Genital Phase.
6 Concept of diphasic onset of sexuality=!al("322")
6 The transformations of puberty (physiological, anatomical, changes in aim, object)=!al("5291")
6 Physiological and anatomical changes in particular=!al("5307")
6 Sexual instincts reach their full height=!al("2659")
6 Attainment  of a final organization under the  primacy of the  genital zone=!al("1610")
6 <The genital organization of the libido.=!al("1610")
6 <Characteristics of this final organization=!al("1610")
6 The leading zones in men and women=!al("3870")
6 <The concept of the vagina taking over the role of the clitoris in females=!al("3870")
6 Appearance of new aims=!al("5302")
6 Aims as differing in the two sexes=!al("5299")
6 The new sexual aim in males [men]=!al("5300")
6 The new sexual aim in females=!al("5301")
6 The sexual development of females as actually undergoing a kind of involution=!al("5303")
6 Requirement for objects, in general=!al("5334")
6 Revival of the Oedipus Complex (and associated object-choices)=!al("2660")
6 The concept of diphasic choice of object.=!al("1532")
6 <The need for new objects to replace the earlier ones. Problems associated therewith.=!al("1532")
6 Finding of a substitute object=!al("5297")
6 Note that it actually represents a *refinding* of the object=!al("5332")
6 Role played by phantasy in the finding of an object during this phase=!al("5341")
6 Sexual manifestations during this period (masturbation)=!al("5295")
6 Distinctions from infantile sexuality=!al("5292")
6 Directions taken by sexual life in later life determined by sexual development in childhood=!al("2662")
6 Differentiation between men and women=!al("5329")
6 Necessity for the convergence of the affectionate and sensual currents=!al("5304")
6 Role of phylogeny in development=!al("5245")
5 Reasons For Having Gone Into Sexual Development In Such Detail
6 In general=!al("1633")
6 <Why the importance of infantile sexuality and its development?=!al("1633")
6 <Relevance of this early period of development for later health/neurosis.=!al("1633")
6 Certain erotogenic zones have been renounced as unserviceable=!al("3801")
6 What becomes of these perverse components of sexuality?=!al("5100")
6 Possible outcomes=!al("2624")
6 <   (i)    suppression. =!al("2624")
6 <  (ii)    diversion to higher, asexual aims - sublimation.=!al("2624")
6 < (iii)    fixation on original aims and objects - perversion.=!al("2624")
6 < (iv)    repression - *unconscious* fixation on original aims and objects - neurosis=!al("2624")
4 Further Discussion Of Certain Topics
5 The Developmental Process
6 Our knowledge of infantile sexuality and its development initially obtained=!al("2612")
6 <from the analyses of the phantasies of adult neurotics=!al("2612")
6 Development usually proceeds smoothly and goes unnoticed=!al("2614")
6 The phases do not necessarily always follow each other in strict succession.=!al("337")
6 <Development takes place gradually and a certain degree of overlap may occur.=!al("337")
5 The Possibility of Fixation
6 The process of development as not always proceeding smoothly=!al("627")
6 <The possibility of fixation on earlier aims and objects=!al("627")
6 Factors which may exercise an influence on the developmental process=!al("5354")
6 Heredity and constitution=!al("5355")
6 Accidental experience=!al("5366")
6 Trauma=!al("5502")
6 Seduction=!al("5271")
6 Temporal factors=!al("5368")
6 Sexual Precocity=!al("5367")
6 Increased pertinacity of early impressions=!al("5369")
6 Relationship between repression and fixation=!al("634")
5 Consequences Of Fixation
6 In general=!al("1667")
6 Relationship between fixation and perversion.=!al("345")
6 <Role played by fixation in the perversions.=!al("345")
6 Relationship between fixation and neurosis.=!al("416")
6 <Role played by fixation in the neuroses. [brief]=!al("416")
6 The age at which these fixations occur=!al("5196")
6 The possible outcomes of fixation/inhibition in detail ...=!al("5476")
6 Perversion
7 Relationship between adult and childhood sexuality=!al("1154")
7 Relationship between perversion and childhood sexuality=!al("380")
7 <Origins of the perversions in childhood sexuality=!al("380")
6 Neurosis
7 Reasons having gone into the perversions in such detail=!al("628")
7 <Relationship between neurosis and perversion.=!al("628")
7 <Neuroses as the negative of the perversions=!al("628")
7 The neuroses as thus, too, having intimate links with childhood sexuality=!al("5116")
7 Summary of the above relationships=!al("971")
7 Role played by particular fixation points in later pathology=!al("699")
7 <Relationship between fixation points and particular forms of neurosis=!al("699")
7 Fixation at narcissistic phase=!al("700")
7 Fixation at oral phase=!al("701")
7 Fixation at anal-sadistic phase=!al("702")
7 Fixation at phallic phase=!al("703")
7 Fixation need not necessarily be an all or none affair=!al("987")
7 <Importance of quantitative relations.=!al("987")
7 Role played by fixation points in later regression of the libido=!al("990")
5 Female Sexuality. Female Psychology.
6 In general=!al("3472")
5 Miscellaneous topics
6 The Phenomenon Of Infantile Amnesia. The Whole Question Of Memory And Remembering.
7 Mnemic material as in general being subject to distortion.=!al("323")
7 <The tendentious nature of  memory.=!al("323")
7 <Role played by the pleasure principle in.=!al("323")
7 <Nothing ever really forgotten.=!al("323")
7 <Reasons for infantile amnesia. As being due to the sexual content of this early sexual period.=!al("323")
7 <The nature of childhood memories in general. Their unreliability=!al("323")
7 <The untrustworthiness of our memory [in general]=!al("323")
7 Practical applications=!al("5002")
7 <Implications, in the light of the above (testimony in courts of law, legends of a people).=!al("5002")
6 Further Characteristics Of The Sexual Instinct
7 Diphasic onset of sexual development=!al("2664")
7 <As being a biological peculiarity of human species=!al("2665")
7 Other peculiarities of the sexual instinct in the human species=!al("5496")
7 <(More strongly developed, constant, no longer periodic)=!al("5496")
7 Diphasic onset as the determining factor in man's predisposition to the neuroses=!al("2666")
6 Further Notes On Aim
7 Aims working independently of each other=!al("2776")
7 Possibility of the aims working together toward a common goal=!al("2775")
7 Possibility of one aim replacing another (displacement)=!al("2777")
7 Possibility of aim being replaced by non-sexual one - sublimation=!al("2779")
7 Possibility of activity being replaced by passivity=!al("2773")
6 Further Notes On Object-Choice
7 In general=!al("3861")
7 The instinct (the need) as having been there before the object.=!al("910")
7 <Instinct less closely tied to the object than was formerly thought.=!al("910")
7 <Objects capable of being exchanged.=!al("910")
7 <Possibility of choice of self as object - narcissism=!al("910")
7 The significance of early object-choices=!al("1285")
7 The after-effects of infantile object-choice=!al("5344")
7 Other factors from childhood exercising an influence on object-choice=!al("5345")
7 Types of object-choice (`anaclitic' or `attachment', narcissistic)=!al("1283")
6 Other
7 Resistance to notion of sexuality in children=!al("617")
7 The notion of the child being `polymorphously perverse'=!al("3860")
7 Masturbation in childhood=!al("4576")
7 Early sexual researches. The sexual theories of children.=!al("328")
7 <Role played by in symptomatology of later neurotic illness=!al("328")
7 The notion of erotogenic zones serving a dual purpose=!al("5258")
7 Ramifications for the neuroses. Pathways of mutual influence.=!al("5289")
7 The question of sexual excitation.=!al("5308")
7 The question of sexual tension=!al("5309")
7 Sexual excitation as being of a continuous character=!al("1650")
7 Sexuality as an endogenous source of excitation from which the organism cannot escape =!al("3756")
7 Sexuality as a recurring need=!al("678")
7 Sources of sexual excitation=!al("4495")
7 <(mechanical agitation, thermal stimuli, contact with the skin of the sexual object, =!al("4495")
7 <visual stimuli, muscular activity, affective processes, intellectual work)=!al("4495")
7 Fore-pleasure. Foreplay.=!al("5312")
7 The question of sexual satisfaction\; how achieved\; factors standing in the way of sexual satisfaction.=!al("806")
7 Conditions under which changes in the distribution of the libido may occur (sleep, illness, psychosis)=!al("1230")
7 A chemical basis for sexuality.=!al("3753")
7 <The concept of a specific sexual substance or substances lying being the sexual process.=!al("3753")
7 Constitutional factors=!al("5288")
7 Ego vs. Id as the great reservoir of the libido=!al("1927")
7 The ego-instincts (instincts of self-preservation) as, too, as being libidinal in nature=!al("2791")
7 Modification of views required, in the light of the above,=!al("2794")
7 <as to nature of conflict in the transference neuroses=!al("2794")
7 Secondary narcissism - a return of the libido to the ego as implying a desexualization of aims=!al("2793")
4 Adult Sexuality
5 The  Perversions
6 Introduction
7 In general.=!al("474")
7 Earlier theories for the perversions (degeneracy, disease)=!al("5207")
7 Attempted definition of normal sexuality=!al("3716")
7 Attempted definition of perversion=!al("3859")
7 Re-iteration of infantile roots of sexuality=!al("5243")
7 The disposition to perversion as being present in everyone=!al("5233")
7 Perversion as being part and parcel of normal sexual life=!al("887")
7 <The presence of perversion in even the most normal sexual life=!al("887")
7 <The question of what distinguishes the normal from the abnormal=!al("887")
7 As being traceable to infantile sexuality=!al("3250")
7 As being traceable to component instincts=!al("5223")
7 The sexual instinct as breaking up into its component parts in the perversions=!al("2619")
7 Relationship of the perversions to specific erotogenic zones (oral orifice, anal orifice, the eyes)=!al("5224")
7 These zones then behaving like a portion of the sexual apparatus=!al("5225")
6 Factors Playing A Role In
7 In general=!al("5213")
7 As representing failures in the developmental process=!al("5377")
7 Role played by constitutional factors=!al("5194")
7 Role played by accidental factors=!al("5195")
7 Role played by fixation in=!al("5347")
7 Role played by frustration in (thereby reinforcing the perverse elements of sexuality)=!al("5200")
7 Role played by regression in=!al("5356")
7 Role played by phantasy in=!al("5478")
7 Forces opposing the perversions (disgust, shame, pain, morality, aesthetic and moral ideals)=!al("5209")
7 Role played by disgust in interfering with the libidinal overvaluation of the sexual object=!al("5192")
7 The phenomenon of perversions manifesting themselves as pairs of opposites (active and passive forms)=!al("623")
7 We are in the habit of regarding the connection between the sexual instinct=!al("5181")
7 <and sexual object as being closer than it really is=!al("5181")
7 Relationship to neuroses. Neuroses as the negative of the perversions [See also under 'Neurosis']=!al("5099")
7 Three possible outcomes of the development process - manifest perversion, neurosis or normal sexual life.=!al("5235")
6 Classification Of The Perversions
7 In general=!al("889")
7 Deviations with respect to aim=!al("722")
7 Anatomical extensions=!al("5186")
7 Sexual use of the mucous membrane of the lips and mouth=!al("5190")
7 Sexual use of the anal orifice=!al("5191")
7 Overvaluation of the sexual object=!al("5187")
7 Fixations on preliminary sexual aims=!al("5199")
7 Touching=!al("5202")
7 Looking (scopophilia, voyeurism, exhibitionism)=!al("5203")
7 Deviations with respect to object=!al("723")
7 Deviation with respect to both aim and object=!al("724")
5 Selected Perversions
6 Homosexuality
7 Introduction
8 In general=!al("316")
8 Sexual aims (male and female)=!al("5180")
8 Is homosexuality congenital (inborn) or acquired?=!al("2263")
8 Attempted definitions of `masculinity' and `femininity'=!al("2297")
8 Universal bisexuality. Relationship of homosexuality to bisexuality.=!al("2141")
8 All human beings capable of making a homosexual object-choice=!al("5171")
8 Considerable amount of latent homosexuality present in normal people=!al("2294")
8 Presence of homosexuality in childhood=!al("5523")
8 Presence of homosexuality in puberty.=!al("2280")
7 Commonly Held Views On Homosexuality
8 In general=!al("2291")
8 As being due to degeneracy=!al("5165")
8 As being congenital (inborn)=!al("2311")
8 As being organically determined=!al("5628")
8 Theories of a `third sex'=!al("2292")
8 A woman's brain trapped in man's body, and vice versa=!al("2305")
8 The distinguishing of a special homosexual instinct.=!al("5537")
8 Not an homogenous group. Get different forms and degrees of homosexuality=!al("2293")
8 Popular definition of homosexuality far too narrow=!al("2301")
8 <Based solely on choice of object=!al("2301")
8 <Should also include physical and mental characteristics of the subject=!al("2301")
8 Male homosexuals as at some stage having been susceptible to the charms of women=!al("5170")
7 Factors Playing A Role In
8 In general=!al("5172")
8 Role played by constitutional factors=!al("5174")
8 Role played by accidental factors=!al("5175")
8 Frustration=!al("5176")
8 Forces working against a permanent inversion of the sexual object=!al("5346")
7 Male Homosexuality
8 Factors playing a role in, in general=!al("983")
8 Constitutional factors. Inherited disposition. The organic factor.=!al("978")
8 Psychical (developmental, accidental) factors, in general=!al("2433")
8 Role played by fixation in=!al("972")
8 Role played by the mother in=!al("2295")
8 Identification with a member of the opposite sex in=!al("2261")
8 Fixation on early homosexual objects in=!al("979")
8 Narcissism (narcissistic fixation) in. Tendency toward narcissistic object-choice.=!al("523")
8 Anal erotism in (retention of the erotic significance of anal zone)=!al("2155")
8 Primacy of phallus in. Retention of high value placed on male organ.=!al("1142")
8 <Inability to tolerate its absence in the sexual object.=!al("1142")
8 Role played by the castration complex in=!al("986")
8 <Fear of castration.=!al("986")
8 <Horror of genitals of opposite sex.=!al("986")
8 <Depreciation of women because of discovery of their lack of a penis.=!al("986")
8 Role played by the father in=!al("2444")
8 <Fear of the father. Renunciation of aggression/hostility toward the father.=!al("2444")
8 <Retiring in favour of the father.=!al("2444")
8 <Absence of strong father-figure in childhood to identify with=!al("2444")
8 The aggressive instinct, in general=!al("524")
8 Renunciation of aggression in. Reaction-formation.=!al("2442")
8 <Taken to its extreme, transformation of hate into love.=!al("2442")
8 <Exaggeration of process which leads to birth of social instincts.=!al("2442")
8 <[See also under 'Civilization And Society']=!al("2442")
8 Retiring in favour of a brother=!al("2450")
8 Occurrence of this mechanism in other spheres as well=!al("2266")
8 Traumatic factors (early seduction leading to premature fixation of libido)-=!al("2458")
7 Female Homosexuality
8 In general=!al("5169")
8 Constitutional factors=!al("2288")
8 Narcissism=!al("2289")
8 Castration complex. Penis envy. Unwillingness to renounce desire for penis.=!al("2047")
8 Fixation on (revival of the original love for) the mother=!al("2284")
7 Conclusion
8 In general=!al("2312")
8 Distinctions between male and female homosexuality=!al("1409")
7 Therapeutic Considerations
8 In general=!al("2299")
5 Exhibitionism and voyeurism (scopophilia)=!al("1655")
5 Sadism and masochism=!al("326")
5 Fetishism=!al("133")
5 Sexually immature persons as sexual objects (paediophilia]=!al("5184")
5 *Fellatio*=!al("5625")
5 Animals as sexual objects (bestiality)=!al("5185")
5 Coprophilia=!al("5198")
5 Necrophilia=!al("5210")
5 Other=!al("1658")
3 The Death Instinct
4 Existence of=!al("5011")
4 In general=!al("41")
4 As being opposed to the aims of the sexual instinct=!al("2113")
4 Question of nomenclature=!al("300")
4 Nature and characteristics of:-=!al("274")
4 Originally directed inward=!al("1292")
4 Silent while it works internally=!al("879")
4 Later diverted outward=!al("2809")
4 Only comes to our notice when diverted outward as `aggression'=!al("880")
4 Necessity for diversion outward.=!al("881")
4 Association with muscular apparatus.=!al("1961")
4 Certain measure of aggressiveness necessary if aims of libido to be attained=!al("5206")
4 Vicissitudes [See also under 'Civilization And Society' > 'The Aggressive Instinct']=!al("1116")
4 Vicissitudes harder to follow than those of the libido=!al("1117")
4 Role in neurosis, in general=!al("489")
4 Role in the Super-ego. Unconscious sense of guilt.=!al("302")
4 Dangers holding it back poses to health=!al("882")
4 Mention that some portion of it always remains directed inward=!al("883")
4 Proofs for the existence of a death instinct=!al("2179")
4 Aggression as being an intrinsic part of human nature=!al("2182")
4 Must manifest itself  somewhere=!al("2945")
4 The problem of masochism=!al("2249")
4 The sense of self-esteem. Origins of. Dependencies.=!al("1234")
4 Role of the death instinct in wars/strife.=!al("2151")
4 <[See also under 'Civilization And Society' > 'The Aggressive Instinct']=!al("2151") 
3 The Two Instincts As A Whole
4 In general=!al("297")
4 The aims of the two contrasted=!al("1000")
4 As only being interested in satisfaction=!al("1722")
4 Physiological aspects=!al("1962")
4 Origins in specific organs of the body=!al("1723")
4 Correspondence with physiological processes of anabolism and catabolism=!al("2807")
4 Psychological aspects=!al("1963")
4 Not confined to any particular province of the mind=!al("298")
4 <Both instincts or energies as present and active in all three agencies=!al("298")
4 Possibility of their fusion/defusion=!al("2150")
4 Never found in pure form=!al("1721")
4 Interaction between the two instincts=!al("294")
4 May co-operate or stand in opposition to each other=!al("2149")
4 The possibility of co-operation between the two instincts=!al("907")
4 Opposition/conflict between the two=!al("2086")
4 The one instinct as modifying the effects of the other=!al("2162")
4 The concept of the libido serving to neutralize the destructive instinct=!al("299")
4 All the variegated phenomena of life can be explained in terms of=!al("874")
4 <the interaction of these two basic instincts=!al("874")
4 Harder to follow the vicissitudes of the death instinct than of the libido=!al("301")
4 Other characteristics ...=!al("2821")
4 The conservative nature of the instincts=!al("868")
4 The concept of a compulsion to repeat. The repetition compulsion.=!al("2194")
4 How definition of libido fits in with conservative nature of instincts=!al("873")
4 How definition of death instinct fits in with conservative nature of instincts=!al("872")
4 Short summaries of the development of Freud's views on the instincts=!al("2753")
4 As always having held to a dualistic view of the instincts.=!al("2257")
4 <Distinction between sexual and other non-sexual instincts.=!al("2257")
4 <The ego-instincts. The self-preservative instincts.=!al("2257")
4 Initially the exact nature of the ego-instincts was unclear=!al("2755")
4 Initially only the sexual instincts were accessible to investigation=!al("2756")
2 Neurosis
3 Introduction
4 In general=!al("619")
4 A common model for all the phenomena.=!al("2192")
4 <Same mechanisms at work in as in dreams, parapraxes and jokes=!al("2192")
4 Definitions of neurosis=!al("817")
4 A  psychology for the neuroses=!al("4939")
4 Distinctions between our and other views on neurosis=!al("4194")
4 The layman's view of neurosis=!al("5087")
3 The Normal State
4 In general. The state of affairs when things are going smoothly.=!al("26")
4 Health as being defined in terms of dynamic relations between the agencies=!al("1868")
3 The Neurotic State
4 In general. The state of affairs when things go wrong.=!al("1425")
4 Characteristics of the neurotic state=!al("27")
4 The unconscious mental life of neurotics, in general=!al("4567")
4 Distinction between normal and neurotic state not all that great, nor absolute.=!al("4258")
4 <Fine dividing line, no fundamental distinction between the two.=!al("4258")
4 <Same mechanisms at work in neurotics as in normal people.=!al("4258")
4 <Neurosis as not being due to the operation of pathological influences.=!al("4258")
4 <Distinctions quantitative rather than qualitative=!al("4258")
3 The Psycho-Analytic View Of The Neuroses
4 The metapsychological approach=!al("1897")
4 Overview of factors playing a role in the neuroses=!al("2669")
4 Division of the mind into conscious and unconscious parts (ego and Id)=!al("3841")
4 The notion of unconscious mental forces being at work in the neuroses.=!al("3330")
4 <The unconsciousness of the whole process.=!al("3330")
4 <The unconsciousness of the mental processes at work in the neuroses.=!al("3330")
4 Neuroses as manifestations of the repressed, in general=!al("2517")
4 Our theories of neurosis based on the instincts=!al("3298")
4 Role played by sexuality in, in general=!al("3108")
4 Role played by childhood in, in general=!al("3109")
4 Role played by the infantile factor in, in general=!al("5533")
4 Role played by infantile sexuality in, in general=!al("5536")
4 The neuroses as involving a conflict of sorts=!al("5014")
4 <Basic conflict is between the ego and the Id (claims of sexuality)=!al("2673")
4 The neuroses as having a hidden meaning=!al("5526")
4 Commonness of the neurotic state=!al("2170")
4 Distinction from psychosis=!al("1435")
3 Defence Mechanisms
4 Defence mechanisms available to the ego, in general=!al("1984")
4 Broad comparison of defence mechanisms=!al("1996")
4 Dangers of defence mechanisms=!al("2006")
4 <Damage caused by defence mechanisms=!al("2006")
4 <Defence measures instituted in childhood carried forward and repeated in adult life=!al("2006")
4 <Internal reality cannot ever be completely escaped.=!al("2006")
4 <As calling for a constant expenditure of energy on the part of the ego for their maintenance/upkeep.=!al("2006")
4 <This expenditure as resulting in a weakening of the ego=!al("2006")
4 <As bringing about a loosening of ego's tie with the external world.=!al("2006")
4 <As bringing about alterations in ego.=!al("2006")
4 Relationship between innate strength of instincts and damage done to ego=!al("1847")
4 The unnecessity (superfluity) of early defence mechanisms adopted in later life=!al("2048")
4 <(One of the principles on which psycho-analytic treatment is based)=!al("2048")
4 No ego makes use of all the available defence mechanisms.=!al("2039")
4 Pathology as lying within the ego rather than within the Id=!al("2424")
4 Role played by heredity in determining the defence measures adopted by the ego=!al("2129")
4 Reaction-formation
5 In general=!al("98")
5 Mechanism=!al("1985")
5 Purpose served by=!al("5361")
5 Comparison with repression=!al("2005")
5 Role played by in obsessional neurosis [See also under 'The Neuroses' > 'Obsessional Neurosis']=!al("1988")
5 Role played by in everyday life=!al("1989")
5 Role played by in character-formation [See also under 'Miscellaneous Disorders' > 'Character Formation']=!al("5364")
3 Repression and Symptom Formation
4 Introduction
5 In general=!al("42")
5 A common model for all the phenomena (neurotic symptoms, dreams, parapraxes, jokes)=!al("808")
5 Broad definition of a symptom=!al("744")
5 Overview of the process of symptom-formation=!al("430")
5 Unwanted impulses=!al("791")
5 Impulse made up of two components - its affective cathexis and the idea representing it=!al("3147")
5 Defence against unwanted impulses. Repression.=!al("3146")
5 Attempts by repressed to return=!al("797")
5 The defensive struggle.=!al("798")
5 Censorship. Necessity for distortion before entry into conscious (inadmissibility to consciousness).=!al("816")
5 Necessity for roundabout paths to satisfaction=!al("2068")
5 Return of the repressed in distorted form as the symptom=!al("799")
4 Repression
5 In general=!al("1588")
5 Analogies for repression (the copying of a book, the burial of Pompeii)=!al("1990")
5 The repressed. Its being unconscious (and a particular type of unconscious)=!al("220")
5 The psychological mechanism of repression, in general.=!al("2235")
5 Repression as being a normal process (as occurring in normal people as well).=!al("4006")
5 The unconsciousness of the process=!al("745")
5 Central role played by repression in the neuroses and symptom formation=!al("269")
5 Reasons for undertaking repression. Motives for defence.=!al("362")
5 <(Unacceptability of impulse to the ego, avoiding unpleasure,=!al("362")
5 <avoiding danger, avoiding conflict, deference to super-ego)=!al("362")
5 Defence as being tendentious in nature.=!al("1998")
5 <Ego as being under the sway of the pleasure principle.=!al("1998")
5 A censorship function in mental life=!al("2829")
5 The ego as the agency responsible for repression=!al("4184")
5 Role played by the super-ego in repression=!al("1160")
5 Role played by the pleasure principle in the process of repression=!al("4857")
5 Unwanted impulses. The nature of the impulses undergoing repression. Reasons for unacceptability. =!al("746")
5 <Surprising frequency of sexual impulses.=!al("746")
5 As explaining why it is mainly impulses of a sexual nature=!al("4924")
5 <that provide the motive force for neurotic symptoms=!al("4924")
4 Mechanism Of Repression
5 How effected, in general=!al("215")
5 <(Denial of entry of the idea to consciousness. Dissociation of affect from idea.)=!al("215")
5 As being internal correlate of flight from dangers in the external world=!al("4809")
5 Institution of an anti-cathexis=!al("4830")
5 Note that it is not only the `push' exercised by the forces of repression=!al("4680")
5 <but also the `pull' (attraction) exercised by previously repressed material=!al("4680")
5 Relationship between repression and fixation=!al("5684")
5 Role played by civilization in repression. Phylogenetic reinforcement. `Organic' repression.=!al("5417")
4 Types Of Repression
5 Primary repression. Secondary (after-) repression. Distinctions between them.=!al("3331")
5 Primary repression. All the primary repressions take place in early childhood.=!al("3399")
5 Secondary repression=!al("1976")
5 Only repressed (infantile sexual) impulses can give rise to a symptom=!al("4778")
5 Impulses, wishes and memories, rather than perceptions, as undergoing repression=!al("4860")
4 Latency Period
5 In general=!al("795")
4 Consequences Of Repression. Return of The Repressed. Symptom Formation.
5 In general=!al("838")
5 What becomes of the impulse following its repression?=!al("471")
5 Repression as rendering/keeping the unwanted impulse unconscious=!al("5217")
5 The repressed impulse as remaining very much alive in the Id=!al("567")
5 The repressed impulse as retaining its upward urge (drive)=!al("216")
5 <As continuing to press for satisfaction in the Id=!al("216")
5 The repressed impulse has simply been isolated psychically=!al("3639")
5 The repressed impulse as acquiring a certain measure of independence=!al("5793")
5 <from the ego in consequence of its repression=!al("5793")
5 The repressed idea as forming a nucleus or centre of crystallization for=!al("3644")
5 <a second psychical group divorced from the ego=!al("3644")
5 Dissociation of cathexis (affect) from the idea to which it properly belongs=!al("4026")
5 Displacement of the cathexis on to a substitute idea=!al("2922")
5 <(an idea with a passport [an entree] into consciousness and activity)=!al("2922")
5 <Association of the cathexis with / attachment of the cathexis to a substitute idea=!al("2922")
5 <The repressed impulse can only become conscious by coming into association with (through the medium of)=!al("2922")
5 <a (trivial/nonsensical) preconscious idea which is acceptable to consciousness=!al("2922")
5 <The concept of a `false connection' =!al("2922")
5 Attempts on the part of the repressed to return=!al("4827")
5 Resistance to the return=!al("218")
5 Compromise. Return of the repressed in distorted form as the symptom.=!al("2696")
5 Failure of repression=!al("1691")
5 Repression as an ongoing process, =!al("572")
5 <requiring a constant expenditure of energy (`anti-cathexis' ) on the part of the ego for its maintenance=!al("572")
5 <Ego now faced with an ongoing defensive struggle with derivatives of the repressed=!al("572")
5 <Feelings of unpleasure now attached to the substitutes=!al("572")
5 Economic considerations. Increase in the strength (reinforcement) of the impulse. Reasons for.=!al("796")
5 <[eg repressed impulse/wish receives organic reinforcement]=!al("796")
5 The case of successful repression=!al("4825")
5 Characteristics of the repressed=!al("3661")
4 Conclusions
5 Repression as resulting in the preservation, rather than the hoped-for annihilation, of the repressed material=!al("5566")
5 The indestructibility (immortality) of the repressed=!al("4694")
5 The timelessness of the repressed=!al("5041")
5 The material as having become pathogenic precisely on account of its repression=!al("5067")
5 Repression as being particularly prone to failure in the case of the sexual instincts=!al("2678")
5 Repression as being a *sine qua non* for symptom-formation=!al("1178")
5 The importance of the dynamic viewpoint=!al("720")
5 Repression in early childhood. Dangers faced by the young ego.=!al("3938")
5 Repression as, at the time, having served a useful purpose but later failing in its function=!al("4858")
5 Justification for repression (as being a defence mechanism [readily] available [on hand] to the ego)=!al("3641")
5 Affect in the neuroses, in general=!al("4627")
5 Relationship between instinct and affect=!al("3094")
5 The question of why something which should lead to pleasure instead produces/leads to unpleasure=!al("3867")
5 Relationship between symptoms (neurosis) and gaps in the patient's memory (amnesia)=!al("532")
5 Question of a name for the process responsible for the formation of symptoms=!al("697")
4 Arriving At The Meaning Of Symptoms
5 In general=!al("4559")
5 Similarity to the procedure adopted in arriving at the meaning of dreams=!al("4663")
5 Nature and characteristics of the repressed material which emerges=!al("4191")
5 <(May appear alien to the subject, but no different to normal waking thought)=!al("4191")
5 Role played by words in the formation of symptoms=!al("4560")
5 The concept of a `language' of the neuroses=!al("5552")
4 Symptoms
5 In general=!al("5091")
5 Symptoms as a return of the repressed, in general=!al("552")
5 Symptoms as the return of a repressed (unwanted) impulse=!al("2998")
5 Symptoms as a return of the repressed in distorted form.=!al("2071")
5 Symptoms as distorted representatives of the repressed=!al("5771")
5 Symptoms as distorted derivatives of the repressed=!al("610")
5 Symptoms as distorted expressions of the repressed=!al("785")
5 Symptoms as distorted expressions of repressed impulses=!al("3531")
5 Symptoms as distorted expressions of repressed wishes=!al("1105")
5 Symptoms as distorted expressions of repressed ideas=!al("1113")
5 Symptoms as substitutes, in general=!al("1112")
5 Symptoms as substitutes for the repressed=!al("5698")
5 Symptom as substitutes for repressed impulses=!al("728")
5 Symptoms as substitutes for repressed ideas=!al("570")
5 Symptoms as representatives of repressed ideas=!al("2999")
5 Symptoms as substitutive satisfactions=!al("600")
5 Symptoms as substitutive pleasures=!al("891")
5 Symptoms as products of a conflict between two opposing forces or agencies=!al("721")
5 Symptoms as the outcome of a conflict between ego and Id=!al("3610")
5 Symptoms as representing part satisfaction for both parties to the conflict=!al("3001")
5 Symptoms as providing part satisfaction for a repressed impulse in the Id=!al("3434")
5 Symptoms as representing satisfactions, but in roundabout fashion=!al("3015")
5 Symptoms as substitute actions=!al("2918")
5 Symptoms as substitute forms of employment for repressed impulses=!al("3014")
5 Symptoms as wish-fulfilments=!al("3120")
5 Symptoms as manifestations of the repressed, in general=!al("2849")
5 Symptoms as mnemic residues - symbols - of the repressed=!al("530")
5 Note that there are two parties to the conflict\; two parties to be satisfied=!al("3222")
5 Symptoms as partial wish-fulfilments, in general=!al("2699")
5 Symptoms as  partial fulfilments of repressed wishes=!al("3018")
5 Symptoms as providing part satisfaction to both parties to the conflict=!al("2699")
5 Symptoms as also representing defensive efforts on the part of the ego=!al("2065")
5 <Symptoms as also serving purposes of defence.=!al("2065")
5 Symptom as comprised not only of the repressed impulse but also the ego's defensive efforts against its return=!al("2065")
5 Symptoms as representing, at the same time, partial victory for the impulses in the Id =!al("2931")
5 <and partial failure of the ego's defensive efforts=!al("2931")
5 Symptoms must provide satisfaction for both parties to the conflict=!al("4720")
5 Symptoms as products of a compromise. Symptoms as compromise-formations.=!al("3000")
5 <Symptoms as compromise structures.=!al("3000")
5 Symptoms as representing partial failures of repression=!al("521")
5 Repression in the neuroses as only being partially successful=!al("5454")
5 Reasons for the unintelligibility of symptoms-=!al("2693")
5 <(content as having been subject to the primary process, censorship, distortion before entry into consciousness)=!al("2693")
5 Role played by the primary process in symptom-formation (displacement, condensation)=!al("3299")
5 Role played by displacement in symptom formation=!al("4428")
5 Role played by condensation in symptom-formation=!al("3875")
5 Role played by the censorship in symptom-formation. Necessity for distortion before entry into consciousness.=!al("573")
5 Symptoms as psychopathological structures=!al("4940")
5 Symptoms as being determined=!al("3409")
5 Symptoms as being overdetermined=!al("2425")
5 Symptoms as having significance=!al("2069")
5 Symptoms as having a sense=!al("5721")
5 Symptoms as having meaning=!al("809")
5 Symptoms as having a hidden meaning=!al("5702")
5 Symptoms as being capable of interpretation=!al("5701")
5 Symptoms as having more than one meaning (and can hence be `over-interpreted' )=!al("4407")
5 The various meanings of a symptom need not necessarily be compatible each other=!al("5124")
5 The intimate nature of the material involved in the formation of symptoms=!al("5447")
5 The material lying behind symptoms usually being of a sexual nature=!al("5449")
5 At least one of a symptom's meanings will be found to be a sexual one=!al("5136")
5 Sexual origin of symptoms not always easy to see at first=!al("4049")
5 Symptoms as substitutive (*ersatz*) sexual satisfactions=!al("520")
5 Symptoms as constituting the person's sexual activity=!al("637")
5 Symptoms as representing the realization of a sexual phantasy=!al("5092")
5 Symptoms as having a bisexual meaning=!al("5484")
5 Symptoms as reflections of frustrated libido=!al("784")
5 Symptoms as possessing a compulsive, daemonic character.=!al("180")
5 <Symptoms as possessing an independence from the ego.=!al("180")
5 Symptom as being in the nature of unwelcome guests=!al("5085")
5 Symptoms as, in general, being alien to waking thought=!al("4869")
5 Symptoms as distorted (watered-down) expressions / versions of repressed impulses=!al("3016")
5 Symptom as distorted substitutes for  the original impulses=!al("3017")
5 Symptom as the mere tip of the iceberg=!al("1249")
5 The unconsciousness of the processes involved in symptom formation=!al("3137")
5 Conditions under which the repressed may return=!al("217")
5 Analogy with pressure of water against a dam wall.=!al("1864")
3 Aetiological Factors
4 Aetiology In General
5 Aetiological factors in the neuroses=!al("3283")
5 The requirement for the necessary motive force for the formation of symptoms=!al("4792")
5 Predisposing factors. Precipitating factors. Distinctions between them.=!al("1511")
5 Necessary preconditions=!al("3303")
5 Predisposing factors=!al("1501")
5 Precipitating factors (releasing causes)=!al("509")
5 Specific and non-specific aetiological factors=!al("4111")
5 Requirement for specific aetiological factors=!al("3292")
5 Non-specific (contributory) factors=!al("4141")
5 Concurrent (auxiliary) causes [See also under 'Stock Noxae']=!al("3308")
5 Relationship between concurrent factors and specific factors .Relative roles played by each.=!al("3392")
5 Distinction between preconditions and specific causes=!al("4138")
5 The question of a specific aetiological factor (or factors) for the neuroses=!al("3362")
5 Importance of early period of life and sexuality in the neuroses, in general=!al("1493")
4 The Importance Of Childhood
5 In general=!al("1562")
5 Importance of the past in, in general=!al("4996")
5 Importance of  early childhood. Reasons for.=!al("994")
5 <Presence and development of sexuality during this period.=!al("994")
5 <Immortality of wishful impulses dating from this period.=!al("994")
5 <Traumas with greatest effect as occurring during this period.=!al("994")
5 <The neuroses as having their origins in childhood.=!al("994")
5 <The concept of childhood neuroses.=!al("994")
5 <Neuroses can only be acquired in early childhood.=!al("994")
5 <Adult neuroses always a revival of a preceding childhood neurosis.=!al("994")
5 <Repressed impulses playing a role in the neuroses always of an infantile character=!al("994")
5 <Consequent necessity for an analysis to go back to this early period=!al("994")
5 The presence and development of sexuality in childhood=!al("2934")
5 Role played by repressed infantile sexual impulses in, in particular=!al("4935")
5 Role played by infantile sexual researches in=!al("5512")
5 Analogies illustrating the importance of this early period of life=!al("4254")
5 What others put down to heredity we can explain in terms of =!al("3425")
5 <damage done / inhibitions formed / traumas experienced in early childhood=!al("3425")
5 Dangers faced by young ego (the instincts). Defence mechanisms adopted by the ego (repression).=!al("1768")
5 The concept of the ego not being able to take flight from certain internal dangers=!al("3910")
5 <(endogenous stimuli - hunger, thirst, respiration, sexuality)=!al("3910")
5 <These endogenous stimuli as arising continuously but only manifesting themselves (psychically)=!al("3910")
5 <periodically through principle of summation=!al("3910")
5 <Need for a `specific action' to bring about their satisfaction=!al("3910")
5 Damage done to ego by early defences mechanisms adopted=!al("1769")
5 Fixation=!al("483")
5 All the most important repressions instituted during childhood=!al("1759")
5 Repressions instituted during this period cannot be remembered. Reasons for (sexual content)=!al("3483")
5 Early repressions later prove to be unsuccessful. Reasons for (resurgence of sexuality at puberty).=!al("1772")
5 Could neurosis be avoided if the child weren't  forced to institute these repressions?=!al("1778")
5 Necessity for these early repressions (from the point of view of civilization)=!al("1780")
5 Note that ego sides with reality, even at this early age=!al("1782")
5 The concept of the development of the ego lagging behind that of the instincts=!al("1781")
5 Early development as determining the  later course taken by the libido=!al("1600")
5 Trauma in childhood=!al("355")
5 Trauma as being comprised of both positive and negative aspects=!al("171")
5 Fixation to trauma. Role of sexuality in trauma. =!al("177")
5 The Oedipus complex, as relevant to neurosis=!al("189")
5 <The Oedipus complex as the core complex of the neuroses=!al("189")
5 <[See also  'The Sexual Instinct' > 'The Development Of Sexuality In Childhood' > 'The Oedipus Complex']=!al("189")
5 The castration complex, as relevant to neurosis=!al("190")
5 <[See also  'The Sexual Instinct' > 'The Development Of Sexuality In Childhood' > 'The Castration Complex']=!al("190")
5 The father-complex=!al("192")
5 Ambivalence=!al("284")
5 Seduction, sexual abuse during childhood=!al("1599")
5 Infantile amnesia as being due to early efflorescence of sexuality=!al("158")
5 <[See also  'The Sexual Instinct' > 'The Development Of Sexuality In Childhood' > 'Infantile Amnesia']=!al("158")
5 Infantilism in mental life, in general=!al("5017")
4 The Importance Of Sexuality
5 In general=!al("383")
5 <Sexuality as an essential need, like any other biological function.=!al("383")
5 <A sexual aetiology (basis) for the neuroses. Always something sexual involved.=!al("383")
5 <Sexuality as the specific aetiological factor for the neuroses.=!al("383")
5 <Psycho-analytic theory of the neuroses based on the libido and its vicissitudes.=!al("383")
5 Why the sexual instinct and no other?=!al("4594")
5 <Sexuality as the least easily controlled (most unruly) of the instincts=!al("4594")
5 Sexuality as an imperative need which the ego cannot escape=!al("3115")
5 Role played by perverse sexuality in=!al("429")
5 Relationship between neurosis and perversion.=!al("429")
5 <Neuroses as the negative of the perversions.=!al("429")
5 Role played by (latent) homosexuality in=!al("4589")
5 Accounting for the situation in manifest homosexuals=!al("5220")
5 Reasons for increased strength of perverse sexuality in the neuroses. Frustration. Regression.=!al("5143")
5 Analogy with stream of water which, when it meets with an obstacle in its path,=!al("5118")
5 <is dammed up and flows back and fills old channels which had formerly run dry=!al("5118")
5 Link with infantile sexuality=!al("2058")
5 Symptoms as substitutive sexual satisfactions=!al("2671")
4 Economic Considerations
5 Importance of the economic factor=!al("427")
5 <At the end of the day, quantitative disharmonies to blame.=!al("802")
5 An economic theory for the neuroses=!al("2543")
5 Neurosis as being primarily an economic problem.=!al("1297")
5 The economic problem vis a vis the ego. Expenditure on repression.=!al("1689")
5 Frustration
6 In general=!al("586")
6 Sexual frustration, in particular=!al("814")
6 Reinforcement  of the libido during certain periods of life (puberty, menopause, loss of object/spouse)=!al("2929")
6 Frustration as leading to a damming up of the libido=!al("44")
6 Frustration as leading to a reinforcement of the perverse components of sexuality=!al("1965")
6 Types of frustration, in general=!al("1692")
6 External frustration, in general=!al("45")
6 Internal frustration, in general=!al("46")
6 Factors which may bring about a revival of (stir up) the repressed=!al("3822")
6 An `hydraulic model'.=!al("3963")
6 (Analogies: Interconnecting pipes, pressure on dam wall, filling of subsidiary channels=!al("3963")
6 <Cathexes in one direction lowering those in another).=!al("3963")
6 Principle of `collateral reinforcement'=!al("2256")
6 Principle of summation=!al("3201")
6 Role played by civilization in frustration of the libido [See also under 'Civilization And Society']=!al("1596")
6 The highest achievements of mankind at the expense of the sexual instinct=!al("1784")
6 The problem with a purely quantitative approach.=!al("1492")
6 <The question of the ability to tolerate frustration.=!al("1492")
6 <[See also under 'Treatment' > 'Economic Considerations']=!al("1492")
4 Regression
5 Role played by regression in the neuroses, in general=!al("5730")
5 Forms of regression, in general=!al("1954")
5 Regression of the libido=!al("1955")
5 Regression of the ego=!al("1956")
5 Developmental regression=!al("1957")
5 Role played by frustration in regression=!al("2008")
5 Relationship between repression and regression=!al("4683")
5 Relationship between fixation and regression=!al("2009")
5 <Role played by fixation in determining the point to which regression will return=!al("2009")
5 <(and, possibly, the type of illness of which the person will fall ill)=!al("2009")
5 Consequences of regression, in general=!al("5729")
5 Regression as leading to a defusion of instinct. Consequences of defusion.=!al("1879")
4 The Death Instinct
5 In general=!al("1564")
5 Note that the sexual instinct never found in pure form.=!al("1595")
5 <Always found in various alloys with the death instinct.=!al("1595")
5 Both instincts intimately involved in the aetiology of the neuroses=!al("998")
5 Vicissitudes of the death instinct=!al("1012")
5 <(Initially turned inward. Later turned outward as aggression. Renunciation of. Made over to the super-ego.=!al("1012")
5 <Unconscious sense of guilt. Need for punishment. Need for suffering.)=!al("1012")
5 Role played by the unconscious sense of guilt in the neuroses [See also under 'Treatment']=!al("3100")
5 Role in played by the death instinct in the need to remain ill=!al("1983")
5 Self-injury in the neuroses. Suicide in the neuroses.=!al("5010")
5 Death-wishes against parents, siblings, rivals=!al("3830")
5 Role in played by the death instinct in the resistances ['See also under 'Treatment']=!al("1983")
5 Death instinct as the possible source of all conflict=!al("2142")
5 Heterosexuality will not tolerate homosexuality, and vice versa=!al("2180")
5 Relationships between libido, anxiety, aggression and the unconscious sense of guilt=!al("1223")
5 Relationship between anxiety and guilt=!al("1122")
4 Anxiety
5 In general=!al("116")
5 Neurotic anxiety, in general=!al("1507")
5 Infantile anxiety, in general=!al("5338")
5 Views on, in general.=!al("3590")
5 Relationship to sexuality, in general=!al("3998")
5 The original theory=!al("364")
5 <Anxiety as a straightforward transformation (and discharge) of frustrated (pent up ) (dammed up) libido=!al("364")
5 Anxiety as being physiologically similar to processes occurring, and affects experienced, at birth=!al("3218")
5 Anxiety attack as being physiologically similar to (as a surrogate for)=!al("3220")
5 <the processes taking place in the act of copulation=!al("3220")
5 Shift in views. The later amended theory.=!al("365")
5 <Anxiety as a signal generated by the ego in response to a situation of danger.=!al("365")
5 Dangers faced by the ego, in general=!al("4749")
5 External and internal dangers. Distinctions between.=!al("3225")
5 Neurotic anxiety as being in response to internal dangers=!al("4100")
5 Explanation of neurotic anxiety, using the ego's response to external dangers as a starting point=!al("4099")
5 Internal dangers, in general=!al("4097")
5 The different types of internal danger, and the different types of anxiety to these=!al("1045")
5 Anxiety in relation to the instincts=!al("1756")
5 Anxiety in relation to the super-ego (moral anxiety)=!al("1757")
5 Castration-anxiety=!al("4759")
5 Tie up  between the two views of anxiety=!al("1046")
5 Why the particular affective state of anxiety?=!al("3762")
5 Anxiety as the central problem in the neuroses=!al("4076")
5 As being an invariable accompaniment of most neuroses=!al("382")
5 Role played by anxiety in repression, symptom formation and the neuroses, in general=!al("842")
4 Heredity and Constitution
5 In general.=!al("1490")
5 <Relationship between the inherited disposition and current (accidental) factors.=!al("1490")
5 <The concept of a `complemental series' (aetiological series, aetiological equation)=!al("1490")
5 Electrical analogy for=!al("4144")
4 Motives For Illness
5 Motives for illness. Gain from illness.=!al("5082")
5 <The concept of illness serving a definite purpose (having a definite aim, end in view)=!al("5082")
5 <Primary gain from illness. Secondary gain from illness. Distinctions between them.=!al("5082")
4 The Repetition Compulsion
5 In general=!al("167")
5 Justification for (e.g. children's play, religion)=!al("2253")
4 Phylogenetic Influences
5 In general The question of inherited memory traces. The archaic heritage.=!al("580")
4 Stock Noxae
5 In general (non-sexual factors - tiredness, overwork, exhaustion)=!al("3196")
4 Other Factors Playing A Role In The Neuroses
5 In general=!al("1508")
5 Prolonged period of dependency in childhood=!al("2937")
5 Diphasic onset of sexuality=!al("2938")
5 Withdrawal from reality in neurosis=!al("1567")
5 Flight into illness=!al("636")
5 Role played by phantasy in the neuroses=!al("643")
5 Role played by symbolism in the neuroses. The symbolic content of symptoms.=!al("3584")
5 Role played by masturbation in=!al("4585")
5 Role played by organic repression of pleasure in smell in=!al("5602")
5 Types of onset of neurosis=!al("1123")
5 Period of onset=!al("182")
5 Choice of neurosis=!al("360")
5 Relationship between the perverse disposition and the form of neurosis of which the person falls ill=!al("5231")
5 Differences between our and other views on the role played by sexuality in the neuroses=!al("3309")
5 Neurosis as an attempt at cure=!al("186")
5 Relationship between the neuroses and higher productions of mind=!al("641")
5 Most of what we know we have learned from the study of abnormal states=!al("1215")
5 The notion that we can, in general, learn more from severe cases than from simple ones=!al("5037")
5 Wherein does the essence of neurosis lie?=!al("3835")
5 Where does the blame ultimately lie?=!al("2936")
2 The Neuroses
3 Introduction
4 In general=!al("1964")
3 Classification
4 Great division into neuroses and psychoses (narcissistic neuroses)=!al("47")
4 Division of neuroses into actual neuroses and psychoneuroses (transference neuroses)=!al("3481")
4 Division of actual neuroses into neurasthenia and anxiety neurosis.=!al("3486")
4 Division of transference neuroses into hysteria and obsessional neurosis.=!al("3493")
4 Distinction between neurosis and psychosis=!al("3482")
4 In practice most neuroses are of mixed aetiology=!al("2185")
4 The problem of diagnosis - distinguishing between the various neuroses=!al("3492")
3 The Actual Neuroses
4 Introduction
5 In general. Absence of a psychical mechanism. Sexual aetiology for.=!al("1420")
5 <Due to specific sexual noxae rather than psychological factors.=!al("1420")
5 <The nature of the sexual noxae involved.=!al("1420")
5 <Distinction from psychoneuroses.=!al("1420")
5 <The whole question of harmful sexual practices.=!al("1420")
5 <Direct relationship found to exist between specific sexual noxae=!al("1420")
5 <and the form of actual neurosis of which the person falls ill=!al("1420")
5 <Distinction between neurasthenia and anxiety neurosis=!al("1420")
5 Often possible to understand fluctuations in the course of illness in terms of=!al("3501")
5 <changes which have taken place in the sexual life of the person concerned=!al("3501")
4 Neurasthenia
5 In general. The symptomatic picture.=!al("3170")
5 Aetiology, mechanisms at work in=!al("3215")
5 An acquired disorder. Specific sexual aetiology for. No psychical mechanisms involved.=!al("3215")
5 <Nature of the sexual noxae involved  (male and female forms).=!al("3215")
5 The question of masturbation, in general.=!al("3175")
5 <Relationship of masturbation to addictions=!al("3175")
5 Role played by heredity in=!al("3498")
5 Particular symptoms=!al("4084")
4 Anxiety Neurosis
5 Introduction
6 In general. The symptomatic picture.=!al("3169")
6 Anxiety neurosis as an independent clinical entity.=!al("3228")
6 <Reasons for separation off from neurasthenia=!al("3228")
5 Aetiology. Mechanisms At Work In.
6 In general=!al("4060")
6 An acquired disorder. As having a purely physiological basis.=!al("3178")
6 <No psychical mechanism involved.=!al("3178")
6 <A specific sexual aetiology for.=!al("3178")
6 <The sexual noxae involved (male and female forms).=!al("3178")
6 <Sexual theory as accounting for  periodic nature of attacks=!al("3178")
6 Counter-arguments to sexual aetiology for=!al("3192")
6 <Refutations of counter-arguments. Proofs of sexual aetiology.=!al("3192")
6 Mechanism behind anxiety=!al("4094")
6 Displacement in=!al("4127")
6 Role of heredity in=!al("3285")
5 Particular Symptoms
6 In general=!al("3184")
6 Acute symptoms=!al("4086")
6 Anxiety attacks=!al("4061")
6 Respiratory (dyspnoea)=!al("3647")
6 Cardiac (angina-like pains, palpitations)=!al("3648")
6 Gastrointestinal disturbances=!al("3183")
6 Glandular (sweating)=!al("4063")
6 Vascular (congestion)=!al("4065")
6 Paraesthesias=!al("3185")
6 Locomotor system (vertigo, fainting)=!al("4064")
6 *Pavor nocturnus*=!al("4066")
6 Chronic symptoms=!al("4087")
6 Other=!al("3187")
5 Relationship To Other Neuroses
6 In general=!al("3227")
6 Points in common with neurasthenia=!al("4112")
6 Distinctions from neurasthenia=!al("3168")
5 Mixed forms. Often found in conjunction with neurasthenia. Reasons for.=!al("4110")
5 Relationship to psychoneuroses, in general=!al("5370")
5 Relationship to anxiety hysteria [See also under 'Anxiety Hysteria']=!al("5656")
5 Relationship to conversion hysteria =!al("3265")
5 Relationship to phobias=!al("3167")
5 Relationship to hypochondria=!al("3677")
4 Therapeutic Considerations
5 In general=!al("3505")
5 <Benefits which flow from recognition of sexual aetiology for neuroses.=!al("3505")
5 Neurasthenia, in particular=!al("3520")
5 Anxiety neurosis, in particular=!al("3514")
5 Concluding remarks on actual neuroses=!al("3258")
5 Relationships between actual neurosis and psychoneurosis=!al("3521")
5 Importance of sexuality in both=!al("3478")
3 Traumatic Neurosis
4 In general=!al("1502")
3 The Transference Neuroses
4 Introduction
5 In general. Distinction from actual neuroses.=!al("2173")
5 Psychological basis for.=!al("4114")
4 Phobias
5 Introduction
6 The symptomatic picture=!al("2959")
5 Aetiology. Mechanisms At Work In.
6 In general=!al("176")
6 Role played by anxiety in.=!al("3166")
6 <Relationship to anxiety neurosis. Distinctions from anxiety neurosis.=!al("3166")
6 Symptoms in as  exaggerations of normal fears=!al("4570")
6 Displacement (transposition of affect, `false connection') in=!al("4080")
6 Role played by condensation in=!al("5535")
6 Role played by trauma in=!al("4075")
6 Role played by sexuality in=!al("3282")
6 Role played by the castration complex (castration anxiety) in.=!al("4050")
6 Role played by words in=!al("4561")
6 Role played by projection (externalization of the danger) in=!al("5781")
6 Secondary protective measures.=!al("4081")
6 <Secondary symptoms (defensive measures) overlaying or replacing the original phobia=!al("4081")
5 Typical Phobias
6 Typical and atypical (specialized) phobias=!al("4068")
6 Two distinct classes of phobia - those relating to physiological dangers and those relating to locomotion=!al("4070")
6 Physiological dangers (heights, snakes, vermin)=!al("4072")
6 Locomotion=!al("4073")
6 Railway phobia=!al("5149")
6 Agoraphobia=!al("3195")
6 Animal phobias=!al("5774")
5 Relationship To Other Neuroses
6 Place in classificatory system=!al("5542")
6 Relationship to obsessional neurosis.=!al("4117")
6 Relationship to hysteria.=!al("5541")
6 Hysterical phobias.=!al("5455")
5 Therapeutic Considerations
6 In general=!al("5525")
4 Anxiety-Hysteria
5 In general=!al("5543")
5 Mechanisms at work in=!al("5773")
5 Role played by constitutional factors in=!al("5546")
5 Relationship to anxiety neurosis=!al("5655")
5 Relationship to phobias=!al("5547")
5 Therapeutic considerations=!al("5548")
4 Conversion Hysteria
5 Introduction
6 In general.=!al("493")
6 Characteristics of the hysterical state=!al("3606")
6 The symptomatic picture=!al("100")
6 Pre-psycho-analytic views on (medieval times, Charcot)=!al("2871")
6 Origin of the term 'Hysteria' =!al("5147")
5 Aetiology. Mechanisms At Work In.
6 In general=!al("5073")
6 As having little to do with intellect=!al("3719")
6 A purely psychological theory for=!al("5064")
6 Psychical meaning behind the symptoms.=!al("3668")
6 Original views on - trauma-based theory for {See also 'Historical' section]=!al("2191")
6 Role played by unconscious memories in. Hysterics as suffering from reminiscences.=!al("3408")
6 <Hysterical symptoms as mnemic symbols from the past=!al("3408")
6 Role played by early childhood in=!al("4449")
6 <Timelessness of memories involved in=!al("4449")
6 A psychosexual aetiology for=!al("5060")
6 Role played by sexuality in=!al("5051")
6 Role played by fixation at the phallic stage in=!al("5593")
6 Role played by perverse sexuality in=!al("3804")
6 Role played by the component instincts in=!al("5480")
6 Role played by the erotogenic zones in.=!al("5226")
6 <These zones behaving as though they were a portion of the sexual apparatus.=!al("5226")
6 Role played by bisexuality in=!al("5481")
6 Displacement of sensation in.=!al("4590")
6 <The concept of `displacement upwards'.=!al("4590")
6 The concept of hysterogenic zones=!al("5263")
6 Economic considerations=!al("2407")
6 Role played by repression in=!al("5078")
6 Repression as affecting mainly the genital zones=!al("5262")
6 Return of the repressed in=!al("4675")
6 Role played by regression in=!al("5775")
6 The conversion mechanism.=!al("1115")
6 Reasons for unintelligibility of symptoms=!al("5515")
6 Role played by the primary processes in=!al("5514")
6 Role played by reaction-formation in=!al("4486")
6 Transformation of an element into its opposite in=!al("5516")
6 Reversal of chronological order in=!al("5517")
6 Role of objects in=!al("3897")
6 Role played by phantasy in=!al("2406")
6 These unconscious phantasies as corresponding in every detail=!al("5121")
6 <with the recorded actions of perverts=!al("5121")
6 These unconscious phantasies as corresponding with=!al("5374")
6 <the imaginary creations of paranoics (which become conscious as delusions)=!al("5374")
6 Role played by the Oedipus Complex in=!al("3809")
6 Role played by the aggressive instinct in=!al("5591")
6 Role played by the super-ego in (guilt-related symptoms)=!al("4718")
6 Symptoms as self-punishments (self-injury)=!al("5151")
6 Gaps in memory in=!al("3598")
6 Affect in=!al("4628")
6 Phobias in=!al("5456")
6 Precipitating causes, in general=!al("5574")
6 Exciting causes in something apparently innocent=!al("5153")
6 Constitutional factors=!al("5065")
6 The question of a hysterical disposition=!al("3669")
6 The concept of `somatic compliance'=!al("5079")
6 The concept of hysteria exploiting a genuine organic complaint for its own ends=!al("3611")
6 Role played by symbolization of thoughts in=!al("3657")
6 <The symbolic content of symptoms.=!al("3657")
6 Role played by words (and their double meanings) in=!al("5571")
6 The concept of a language of hysteria=!al("5554")
6 The concept of hysterical symptoms `joining in the conversation'=!al("3656")
6 Role played by identification in.=!al("3833")
6 Role played by masturbation in=!al("3872")
6 The unconsciousness of the mental processes at work in=!al("3670")
6 <The whole conversion process as being involuntary and unconscious=!al("3670")
5 Typical Symptoms
6 In general=!al("3405")
6 Overreactivity=!al("3406")
6 *Belle indifference*=!al("3650")
6 Hysterical attacks=!al("3797")
6 Hysterical amnesia=!al("3556")
6 Hysterical paralyses=!al("3605")
6 Hysterical pains=!al("3607")
6 Motor phenomena (tics)=!al("3608")
6 Visions=!al("4674")
6 Hysterical phobias=!al("4747")
6 Hysterical vomiting=!al("5069")
6 Loss of appetite=!al("5148")
6 Avoiding company=!al("5074")
6 Aphonia=!al("5076")
6 Hysterical blindness [See also "Miscellaneous Topics' > 'Disturbances Of Vision']=!al("5650")
5 Hysterical Symptoms
6 In general=!al("5216")
6 As the expression (and realization) of the patient's most secret and repressed (sexual) wishes=!al("5052")
6 As the realization of an unconscious phantasy=!al("5479")
6 As having a (hidden) sexual meaning=!al("5137")
6 As wish-fulfilments.=!al("3894")
6 As compromise formations=!al("5482")
5 Therapeutic Considerations
6 In general. [See also 'Historical' section]=!al("3721")
6 Interpretation of the symptoms. Translation of the symptoms into what they really mean.=!al("3649")
6 Diagnosis. The problem of distinguishing hysterical symptoms from genuine organic illness.=!al("494")
6 Absence of expected auxiliary signs (e.g. pain)=!al("3654")
6 Physical manifestations often do not correspond  what would be expected on purely neuro-anatomical grounds=!al("3454")
6 The characteristic indefiniteness with which hysterics describe their symptoms=!al("3652")
6 Distinction of hysteria from malingering=!al("5081")
4 Obsessional Neurosis
5 Introduction
6 A psychical basis for=!al("4203")
6 The symptomatic picture. Typical symptoms. Characteristics of persons suffering from obsessional neurosis.=!al("99")
6 Characteristics of obsessional symptoms=!al("3985")
6 <(illogical, nonsensical, cannot be suppressed, inamenable to reason/influence,=!al("3985")
6 <alien, like intruders/unwanted guests)=!al("3985")
6 Distinction of obsessional symptoms from the normal (where reasons for the compulsion are known)=!al("3987")
5 Aetiology. Mechanisms At Work In.
6 In general=!al("1003")
6 Elucidation of mechanism on the basis of how psycho-analytic treatment brings about a cure=!al("3988")
6 Obsessions with a traumatic aetiology=!al("3150")
6 Role played by repression in=!al("3992")
6 Role played by the primary processes in, in general=!al("5560")
6 Role played by displacement (transposition) in. The `false connection'.=!al("3398")
6 Role played by substitution in=!al("3766")
6 Role played by condensation in=!al("3876")
6 Role played by objects in=!al("3901")
6 Role played by the instincts in, in general=!al("4188")
6 Role played by sexuality in=!al("4043")
6 Role played by the component instincts in=!al("5559")
6 Role played by perverse sexuality in=!al("5558")
6 Role played by latent (repressed) homosexuality in=!al("5557")
6 Role played by the scopophilic and epistemophilic instincts in=!al("5600")
6 Role played by childhood in=!al("5372")
6 Role played by the infantile in=!al("5565")
6 Role played by the aggressive (sadism) instinct in=!al("118")
6 Regression  to anal-sadistic phase in=!al("119")
6 Role played by fixation at the anal-sadistic stage in=!al("3173")
6 <Role played by (repressed) anal erotism / anal-sadism in=!al("3173")
6 Role played by defusion of instinct in=!al("5590")
6 Transformation of love into hate in=!al("5221")
6 Role played by hostile/death-wishes against loved ones [parents, siblings, spouse) in=!al("3831")
6 Role played by the unconscious sense of guilt in=!al("554")
6 Role played by the super-ego in=!al("553")
6 Secondary defensive symptoms (measures) in, in general=!al("3340")
6 Role played by the censorship and distortion in=!al("4227")
6 Role played by reaction-formation in=!al("450")
6 Role played by the affects in, in general=!al("4186")
6 Role played by reversal/transformation of affect in=!al("2400")
6 Role played by ambivalence in=!al("568")
6 Role played by anxiety in. Relationship to anxiety neurosis.=!al("451")
6 Role played by the castration complex in=!al("4579")
6 Role played by phantasy in=!al("5569")
6 Role played by (infantile) masturbation in=!al("3851")
6 Role played by words in (double meanings, ambiguity) (`verbal bridges')=!al("3921")
6 Use of external associations in. Looseness of these associations.=!al("5570")
6 Role played by symbolism in=!al("5446")
6 Diphasic nature of certain symptoms in=!al("5572")
6 Precipitating causes in=!al("5575")
5 Typical Symptoms
6 Categories of obsessional symptoms, in general=!al("4059")
6 Obsessional ideas (*idees fixes*)=!al("3152")
6 Obsessional thinking=!al("3240")
6 Obsessional thoughts=!al("5127")
6 Excessively intense (supervalent) trains of thought=!al("5126")
6 Obsessional brooding and speculating (`brooding mania')=!al("4055")
6 Obsessional counting (arithmomania)=!al("4056")
6 Obsessional affects=!al("4204")
6 Obsessional fears=!al("5562")
6 Obsessional impulses=!al("5441")
6 Obsessional wishes=!al("5583")
6 Obsessional temptations=!al("5584")
6 Obsessional commands=!al("5582")
6 Obsessional reflections=!al("5585")
6 Obsession for understanding=!al("5605")
6 Compulsive talking=!al("5608")
6 Obsessional actions=!al("2370")
6 Protective measures=!al("3581")
6 Precautionary measures=!al("4210")
6 Preventative measures=!al("3432")
6 Obsessional touching (and not touching) of objects=!al("3714")
6 Obsession for protecting=!al("5607")
6 Compulsive collecting=!al("4207")
6 Isolation=!al("5598")
6 Obsessional cleanliness (fear of dirt, mysophobia). Obsessional washing. Hand-ceremonials.=!al("4057")
6 Obsessional rituals/ceremonials=!al("3153")
6 Obsessional deliria=!al("5581")
6 Avoidances=!al("4167")
6 Hindrances. Inhibitions (abulias).=!al("5442")
6 Symptoms designed to handle affect . . .=!al("4212")
6 Guilt-related symptoms, in general=!al("4205")
6 Obsessional doubt (*folie du doute*, `doubting mania').=!al("3182")
6 <Uncertainty. Self-distrust. Hesitation. Indecision.=!al("3182")
6 Conscientiousness=!al("3343")
6 Self-reproaches=!al("4175")
6 Obsessional (self-)prohibitions.=!al("5146")
6 Self-punishments=!al("3932")
6 Renunciations=!al("4168")
6 Compulsive abstinence=!al("5603")
6 Reparations=!al("3433")
6 Penitential measures/acts=!al("4208")
6 Penances=!al("5471")
6 Undoing what has already been done=!al("3241")
6 Measures undertaken to prevent betrayal=!al("4211")
6 Phobias=!al("4215")
6 Tics=!al("3582")
6 `Omnipotence of thoughts'=!al("248")
6 Other=!al("4214")
5 Miscellaneous Topics
6 The phenomenon of two kinds of knowledge in=!al("5578")
6 Reason why obsessional ideas do not meet with belief=!al("3344")
6 The fact that obsessional ideas, and everything derived from them,=!al("4217")
6 <meet with belief in obsessional neurosis=!al("4217") 
6 Reasons for the obsessional/compulsive character of the symptoms.=!al("4185")
6 <Reasons for inamenability to influence of symptoms.=!al("4185")
6 <(Due to origins in, and hence reinforcement received from, the repressed).=!al("4185")
6 Reasons for persistence of the emotional state (affect) in=!al("4058")
6 Reasons for absurdity, unintelligibility of the symptoms in=!al("4054")
6 Relationship between primary and secondary symptoms (defensive measures) in=!al("4216")
6 The symptoms as, after interpretation, possessing a meaning=!al("5445")
6 The intimate nature of the material finding expression in the symptoms=!al("5450")
6 The concept of a language of obsessional neurosis=!al("5553")
6 The unconsciousness of the mental processes at work in the neurosis=!al("4772")
6 Return of the repressed in=!al("5510")
6 The tendency to failure of the repressions/reaction-formations in=!al("5510")
6 <The neurosis as eventually attaining its goals in a roundabout manner=!al("5510")
6 Relationship to religion [See also under 'Cultural Issues' > 'Religion']=!al("2985")
5 Therapeutic Considerations
6 In general=!al("3347")
4 Relationships Between The Various Neuroses
5 Similarities and distinctions, in general=!al("3235")
5 What the various neuroses share in common=!al("3232")
5 <All the neuroses as sharing a common mechanism up to a certain point=!al("3232")
5 Differences=!al("3233")
5 Distinctions between the actual neuroses and the psychoneuroses=!al("2841")
5 Relation between anxiety neurosis and hysteria=!al("3238")
5 Points in common between obsessional neurosis and hysteria=!al("4113")
5 Distinctions between obsessional neurosis and hysteria=!al("2698")
5 Relationship between obsessional neurosis and phobias=!al("3073")
5 Distinctions between hysteria and phobias=!al("5540")
5 Distinctions in the chain of events following repression in the psychoneuroses.=!al("3077")
5 <Advantages and disadvantages of the distinctions.=!al("3077")
3 The Narcissistic Neuroses
4 Introduction
5 The theory of narcissism=!al("2785")
5 The narcissistic nature of these disorders.=!al("479")
5 Distinction from transference neuroses=!al("3244")
5 Difficulties presented by the narcissistic nature of these disorders=!al("5320")
5 Characteristics of, in general=!al("54")
4 Aetiology. Mechanisms At Work In.
5 In general=!al("1437")
5 Withdrawal from reality in=!al("1227")
5 Withdrawal of the libido into the ego in. Megalomania in=!al("4149")
5 Kinship with the state of sleep and dreams. [See also under 'Practical Applications' > 'Dreams']=!al("2980")
5 Suspension of reality-testing in=!al("5800")
5 Disintegration of the psyche in=!al("3088")
5 Disorder as lying within the ego=!al("3087")
5 Ego as approximating to the Id in=!al("1794")
5 Inroads made by the Id into the ego in=!al("4774")
5 <Presence of primary process near the surface=!al("1794")
5 Id as overpowering the ego in=!al("4710")
5 Role played by wish-fulfilment in=!al("4362")
5 Hallucinatory (wish-fulfilling) psychosis (delusional insanity)=!al("3134")
5 <Commonness of this type of disorder=!al("3134")
5 Remodelling of reality in=!al("4247")
5 Role played by phantasy in=!al("5432")
5 Economic considerations. Importance of the economic factor.=!al("4711")
5 <A question of the relative strengths of the various forces at the time=!al("4711")
5 Weakening  of ego in=!al("4713")
5 Role played by the super-ego in=!al("3777")
5 Role played by censorship in (`Russian censorship')=!al("3880")
5 Role played by defence in, in general=!al("4148")
5 Role played by repression in=!al("4678")
5 Return of the repressed in=!al("4673")
5 Repressed never succeeds in breaking through *as is* (without distortion)=!al("3844")
5 Regression in=!al("1688")
5 Role played by childhood in=!al("4677")
5 Predisposing factors=!al("2971")
5 <Fixation at primary narcissistic stage of libidinal development=!al("2971")
5 Precipitating factors (painful reality, increase in strength of instincts, relative weakening of ego)=!al("1798")
5 Alterations of the ego in, in general=!al("1903")
5 Splitting of the ego in=!al("1800")
5 Consequences of a such a split in the ego, in general=!al("1805")
5 Such a split as being invariably present in the psychoses=!al("1804")
5 The possibility of an abnormal ego co-existing alongside a normal one=!al("1853")
5 Splitting of the ego found elsewhere=!al("1807")
5 Splitting of the ego in fetishism=!al("1814")
5 Splitting of the ego in religion=!al("1818")
5 Role played by disavowal of reality in splitting of the ego=!al("1815")
5 The unconsciousness of the whole process=!al("3132")
4 Typical Symptoms
5 In general=!al("2976")
5 Peculiarities of speech [See also under 'Schizophrenia']=!al("3055")
5 Delusions. Delusions as always having a core of truth to them.=!al("2975")
5 Hallucinations (auditory, visual).=!al("2977")
5 <Conditions required for formation of.=!al("2977")
5 <Connection with the state of sleep and dreams.=!al("2977")
5 <Role played by memories in.=!al("2977")
4 Miscellaneous Topics
5 The symptomatic picture easily [can be] explained in terms of our theories=!al("3053")
5 The concept of `psychosis of defence'=!al("3140")
5 The concept of `flight into psychosis'=!al("3127")
5 The concept of `psychosis of overwhelming'=!al("3098")
5 Acute hallucinatory confusion (Meynert's `amentia')=!al("3771")
5 The ego's break with reality never really complete=!al("1799")
5 Symptoms as representing an attempt at reconstruction=!al("387")
5 Multiple personalities. Role played by identification in.=!al("3816")
5 Distinction  between neurosis and psychosis. Distinction not absolute.=!al("55")
5 Comparison of defence mechanisms used in the neuroses and in the psychoses=!al("3772")
5 A certain amount of resistance as a *sine qua non* of normalcy=!al("1080")
5 What was learnt from the psychoses=!al("2787")
5 <(behaviour of the libido in the ego, the ego-instincts as being libidinal in nature)=!al("2787")
4 Therapeutic Considerations
5 In general=!al("4018")
4 Melancholia
5 In general=!al("278")
5 Early theories for (including relationship to neurasthenia)=!al("3754")
5 Mechanisms at work in=!al("408")
5 The concept of normal prototypes of the pathological=!al("3929")
5 Mourning as the normal prototype for melancholia=!al("3930")
5 Melancholia as involving the loss of an object=!al("3370")
5 The work of mourning=!al("3660")
5 The mechanism of identification=!al("3045")
5 Identification with the lost object in melancholia=!al("593")
5 Role played by the super-ego in.=!al("478")
5 Super-ego's criticisms as in fact applying to the lost object=!al("3042")
5 Mechanism at work in melancholia as possibly the only way in which an object-attachment=!al("3043")
5 <can be overcome=!al("3043") 
5 Role played by the aggressive instinct in=!al("4315")
5 Role played by regression in=!al("5808")
5 Role played by ambivalence in=!al("5809")
5 The unconsciousness of the whole process=!al("5812")
5 Periodic forms of the disorder.=!al("3339")
5 Turnaround into mania. Explanations for.=!al("507")
5 Melancholic attacks following the suppression of a large amount of affect=!al("1278")
5 A possible organic basis in certain cases=!al("506")
5 Suicide in=!al("5811")
5 Therapeutic considerations=!al("5392")
4 Paranoia
5 Introduction
6 In general. Typical symptoms.=!al("1254")
5 Aetiology. Mechanisms At Work In.
6 In general=!al("3355")
6 Projection in=!al("640")
6 Delusions in=!al("198")
6 <Delusions as serving the purposes of defence.=!al("198")
6 <Delusions as serving the purposes of wish-fulfilments=!al("198")
6 <Reasons for strength of delusions ('false connection')=!al("198")
6 <A core of truth in every delusion=!al("198")
6 Economic factors in=!al("759")
6 Withdrawal libido from objects in. Narcissism in.=!al("2876")
6 Predisposing factors. Fixation at the stage of narcissism in.=!al("5737")
6 Regression in. Regression to stage of narcissism in.=!al("5739")
6 Forward surge of auto-erotic current in=!al("3900")
6 Role played by the super-ego in=!al("3397")
6 Hypercathexis of super-ego in=!al("2879")
6 Hypercathexis of thought processes in=!al("1186")
6 Role played by repression in=!al("4231")
6 Return of the repressed (in distorted form) in. =!al("4226")
6 Role played by censorship in=!al("4222")
6 Paramnesia in=!al("5005")
6 Over-attention to (hypercathexis of) manifestations of the unconscious in other people=!al("2379")
6 Role played by sexuality in=!al("3785")
6 Role played by perverse sexuality in, in general=!al("3806")
6 Role played by (latent, repressed) homosexuality in=!al("657")
6 Reversal of affect in [See also under 'The Psychoneuroses' > 'Obsessional Neurosis']=!al("2389")
6 Role played by the aggressive instinct in=!al("3786")
6 Role played by reaction-formation in=!al("5592")
6 The transformation of love into hate in [See also under 'The Perversions' > 'Homosexuality']=!al("2469")
6 Role played by death wishes against parents, siblings, rivals in=!al("3832")
6 Role of played by objects in.=!al("3898")
6 Role played by the Oedipus complex in=!al("3810")
6 Role played by the father-complex in=!al("5663")
6 Role played by phantasy in (alienation of parentage, exaltation of parentage, systematic nature of)=!al("3826")
6 Role played by identification (and their dissolution) in=!al("3899")
6 Suspension of reality testing in=!al("4159")
6 Precipitating causes=!al("1803")
6 Certain symptoms as representing attempts at reconstruction=!al("5752")
5 Typical Symptoms
6 Jealousy, in general (different grades of,  role played by projection in) =!al("1801")
6 Delusions of jealousy (delusional jealousy, jealous paranoia)=!al("2382")
6 Delusions of reference=!al("2380")
6 Delusions of being followed, watched, observed, criticized=!al("3193")
6 Delusions of persecution (persecutory paranoia)=!al("2365")
6 Delusions of grandeur. Megalomania.=!al("1255")
6 Delusions of world-catastrophe. Delusions of `the end of the world'.=!al("5731")
6 Religious delusions.=!al("5659")
6 Erotomania=!al("5679")
6 Eating disorders. Delusions of being poisoned.=!al("3846")
6 Assimilatory delusions=!al("3787")
6 Auditory hallucinations. Voices.=!al("2386")
6 Visual hallucinations.=!al("2387")
6 Olfactory hallucinations=!al("4158")
6 Hypochondriacal symptoms=!al("5667")
5 Miscellaneous Topics
6 Further Notes On Delusions
7 In general=!al("2398")
7 The work of delusion-formation=!al("5660")
7 Certain delusions as representing a return of the repressed, but in distorted form=!al("4228")
7 The content of delusions as being determined=!al("5666")
7 Delusions as having a meaning=!al("5668")
7 Delusions as being residing within the ego=!al("1802")
7 Alterations undergone by the ego in order to accommodate the primary delusions=!al("3356")
7 Secondary delusions as being designed to fit in with the primary delusions=!al("3357")
7 The concept that the delusion may have been present in the unconscious=!al("2396")
7 <long before its emergence into conscious=!al("2396")
7 The uninfluencibility of delusions. Reasons for.=!al("4232")
7 Distinctions between obsessional ideas and delusions=!al("3131")
6 Further Notes On Hallucinations
7 In general=!al("4652")
7 Role played by economic factors in=!al("4655")
7 Content as being determined=!al("4653")
6 The concept of `organ-speech' (hypochondriacal speech)=!al("5788")
6 Weakness of memory in=!al("3358")
6 Characteristic indefiniteness of the voices and people involved. Reasons for.=!al("3807")
6 Absurdity in as expressing ridicule and derision=!al("5664")
6 Splitting of the ego in=!al("1806")
6 Presence of the same (repressed) material in normal and neurotic people=!al("5027")
6 Distinction from other psychoses=!al("3359")
6 Comparison of defence mechanisms used with those in other neuroses=!al("3769")
5 Therapeutic Considerations
6 In general=!al("2376")
4 Schizophrenia
5 Introduction
6 In general. Typical symptoms.=!al("444")
6 Usual period of onset at puberty or early adult life. Reasons for.=!al("3191")
5 Aetiology. Mechanisms At Work In.
6 In general=!al("3224")
6 Narcissistic nature of the disorder.=!al("2962")
6 <Turning away from the external world in.=!al("2962")
6 <Withdrawal of the libido from objects in.=!al("2962")
6 Fixation at the stage of narcissism in=!al("5673")
6 Role played by regression in. Regression to stage of narcissism in.=!al("2963")
6 Role played by repression in=!al("5749")
6 Return of the repressed in distorted form in=!al("5748")
6 Delusional formations as representing attempts at reconstruction, restitution, recovery=!al("426")
6 The predominance of what has to do with words over what has to do with things in=!al("5789")
6 Role played by identification in=!al("5807")
5 Typical Symptoms
6 In general=!al("3666")
6 Peculiarities of speech (neologisms)=!al("3667")
6 <Words, rather than the thing-presentations themselves, as being subjected to primary process=!al("3667")
6 Hallucinations=!al("5750")
5 Miscellaneous Topics
6 Resemblance of some philosophical writings to those of schizophrenics=!al("1261")
6 Relationship between schizophrenia and paranoia=!al("5674")
6 Origins of the designations for=!al("5744")
6 Suggestion of the alternative designation `paraphrenia' for=!al("3881")
5 Therapeutic Considerations
6 In general=!al("5751")
3 Miscellaneous Disorders
4 Inhibitions
5 In general=!al("2722"")
4 Hypochondria
5 In general=!al("3179")
4 Disorders Of The Sexual Function
5 In general=!al("357")
5 Anaesthesia (frigidity)in females=!al("5330")
5 Impotence, *ejaculatio praecox* in males=!al("4967")
4 Character Formation
5 Character in general=!al("5008")
5 Factors playing a role in formation of, in general=!al("265")
5 Role of defence mechanisms in=!al("2042")
5 Role played by the super-ego in=!al("2043")
5 Role played by the aggressive instinct in=!al("1707")
5 Role played by sexual instinct in=!al("5623")
5 Role played by identification in=!al("1410")
5 Role played by sublimation in=!al("5493")
5 Role played by repression in=!al("5637")
5 Role played by reaction-formation in=!al("2177")
5 The perverse sexual disposition of childhood as, through the reaction-formation it stimulates,=!al("5362")
5 <being the source of a number of our virtues=!al("5362")
5 Role played by fixation in=!al("5636")
5 Role played by trauma, especially negative reaction to, in=!al("172")
5 Role played by repetition compulsion in=!al("169")
5 Character types=!al("3239")
5 Relationships between particular erotogenic zones (component instincts)=!al("5359")
5 <and certain character traits, in general=!al("5359")
5 Character traits having their origin in (repressed) anal erotism=!al("5630")
5 Relationship between anal erotism and money (gold)=!al("3805")
5 The triad of orderliness, miserliness (parsimony, thrift) and obstinacy often being found together=!al("1809")
5 The relationship between urethral erotism (micturition, bed-wetting, nocturnal enuresis) and ambition=!al("4446")
5 The concept of a man's attitude in sexual matters acting as a template for his attitude in other areas=!al("5595")
4 Other
5 `Housewife's psychosis'=!al("5066")
2 Practical Applications
3 Introduction
4 General Introduction=!al("582")
4 The common model.=!al("2187")
4 <Similar mechanisms at work in and responsible for dreams, parapraxes, jokes and neurotic symptoms.=!al("2187")
4 Determinism in mental life.=!al("581")
3 Dreams
4 Introduction
5 Introduction=!al("2573")
5 Same mechanisms at work in dreams as in parapraxes, jokes and neurotic symptoms=!al("1635")
5 Early views on the nature of dreams\; attempts at interpretation\; use of in treatment\;=!al("3596")
5 <realization of their importance.=!al("3596")
5 <How he came upon dream-interpretation=!al("3596")
5 The state of sleep=!al("288")
5 Why conditions prevailing during the state of sleep allow for the formation of dreams=!al("1306")
5 Broad definition of dreams=!al("341")
5 Earlier literature dealing with dreams=!al("2422")
5 The layman's view of dreams=!al("680")
5 The creative writer's view of dreams=!al("5431")
5 Various questions relating to dreams.=!al("1210")
5 <Why the need to dream? Do they have any value? What purpose do they serve?=!al("1210")
5 The psychological characteristics of dreams=!al("110")
5 <(nonsensical, absurd, childish, long/fleeting, alien, strange)=!al("110")
5 <Suspension of reality-testing in.=!al("110")
5 <Belief attaching to dream-content=!al("110")
5 <Hallucinatory nature of=!al("110")
5 <Lack of moral sense in=!al("110")
5 <Tendency to condensation, displacement\; replacement of one element by another.=!al("110")
5 <Generally forgotten soon after waking=!al("110")
5 Unconscious mental processes at work in=!al("4845")
5 Dreams as having a disguised/hidden/concealed meaning=!al("4344")
5 Concept of the dream being the dreamer's response to certain internal or external disturbing stimuli=!al("4916")
5 Dreams as having the same underlying basis as neurotic symptoms.=!al("445")
5 <As, too, representing a return of the repressed, but whose form is determined by=!al("445")
5 <the psychical conditions prevailing during the state of sleep=!al("3420")
5 Distinction between manifest and latent content.=!al("128")
5 Manifest content as being only a facade=!al("1218")
5 Manifest dream as being negligible portion of total dream content=!al("2325")
5 Nature of the psychical forces at work in the formation of dreams=!al("4276")
5 Conclusions reached, in general=!al("2563")
5 As constituting a return of the repressed, but in distorted form=!al("113")
5 Dreams as wish-fulfilments=!al("111")
5 Wish-fulfilment not always clear or obvious. Dreams as *disguised* wish-fulfilments.=!al("3983")
5 Replacement of a thought expressed in the optative by representation in the present tense=!al("4885")
5 Dreams as valid psychical phenomena=!al("4382")
5 Dreams as being significant mental acts=!al("2601")
5 Dreams as having relevance to the person's everyday life=!al("137")
5 As being capable of interpretation=!al("4274")
5 As, after interpretation, being seen to occupy an assignable place in the person's mental life=!al("4275")
5 Factors contributing to the dream's strangeness/unintelligibility=!al("585")
5 <(Nature of underlying material, censorship, distortion, primary process, pictorial form of representation)=!al("585")
5 The notion of an object evading the censorship under cover of something else=!al("4645")
5 Differences from neurotic symptoms=!al("3525")
4 Types of Dreams
5 Division of dreams into those where wish-fulfilment is clear and those where it is not=!al("4685")
5 Simple dreams. Dreams in which the wish-fulfilment is relatively clear (undisguised wish-fulfilments).=!al("4387")
5 Children's dreams (dreams of the simple infantile type) (frank wish-fulfilments)=!al("595")
5 Reasons why this is so (no great distinction yet between Id and ego)=!al("4693")
5 Transition from children's dreams to adult dreams=!al("4392")
5 <(Further development of psyche, censorship, necessity for distortion)=!al("4392")
4 Dream Instigators
5 In general. Possible sources of disturbance to sleep.=!al("1302")
5 Non-psychical stimuli=!al("4334")
5 External stimuli, in general=!al("1304")
5 External (objective) sensory stimuli=!al("4320")
5 Internal stimuli, in general=!al("4330")
5 Internal somatic (organic) stimuli=!al("1305")
5 <(Natural bodily functions and needs\; hunger, thirst, voiding of bladder,=!al("1305")
5 <need for warmth, sexual needs)=!al("1305")
5 Internal (subjective) sensory stimuli=!al("4321")
5 Internal psychical stimuli=!al("2392")
5 Recent events and experiences, in general=!al("4425")
5 Waking interests, events, preconscious wishes carried over from waking life.=!al("4378")
5 <Previous day's residues.=!al("4378")
5 Non-wishful instigators in particular=!al("4695")
5 <(thoughts, worries, intentions, unsolved problems, distressing anticipations)=!al("4695")
5 Note on whether it *must* be events and experiences from the preceding day=!al("4418")
5 Events and experiences from the recent past=!al("4424")
5 Wishes as dream-instigators=!al("dummy")
5 Types of wishes seeking fulfilment in adult dreams=!al("4687")
5 Repressed wishes as dream-instigators, in general=!al("4439")
5 Repressed wishes as providing the major motive force for the formation of dreams=!al("1308")
5 Repressed sexual wishes as dream-instigators, in particular=!al("4538")
5 Role played by perverse sexual wishes, in particular=!al("4921")
5 Role played by repressed homosexual impulses, in particular=!al("4539")
5 Repressed wishes generally from the past=!al("4482")
5 Role played by repressed infantile sexual wishes, in particular=!al("4932")
5 Repressed infantile wishes as constituting the main dream-instigators=!al("4452")
5 <(Indestructibility of these wishes)=!al("4452")
4 The Dream-Work
5 Definition of. Function of. Aims and goals.=!al("604")
5 Mechanisms involved in the formation dreams, in general.=!al("695")
5 <Overview of the process of dream-formation.=!al("695")
5 <Components of the dream-work (condensation, displacement).=!al("695")
5 The Dream-Work - Further Discussion Of Certain Topics
6 Question of where the dream actually get formed=!al("1323")
6 Logical links holding the material together as being lost in the course of the transformation process=!al("4896")
6 Passage of Id material into the preconscious ego accompanied by a passage of primary process into the ego=!al("1319")
6 Role Played By The Ego In The Formation Of Dreams
7 In general=!al("1332")
7 The state of the ego during sleep=!al("3971")
7 <(withdrawal of perceptual cathexes)=!al("3971")
7 Withdrawal of cathexis never complete=!al("4912")
7 The ego's wish to go on sleeping=!al("1414")
7 Other wishes on the part of the ego which may exercise an influence over the direction taken by the dream=!al("4724")
7 Partial relaxation of censorship during sleep=!al("4909")
7 Censorship. Distortion. Why the need for distortion?=!al("1335")
7 <Censorship and distortion as expression of the same forces which, during the day,=!al("1335")
7 <were responsible for the complete repression of the unconscious wish=!al("1335")
7 Secondary revision [See also below]=!al("1337")
7 Methods used by the dream-work to evade the censorship=!al("3083")
7 <(Use of acceptable preconscious material, condensation, displacement, reversal into the opposite)=!al("3083")
6 Role Played By The Primary Process In The Formation Of Dreams
7 In general=!al("1325")
7 Characteristics of the primary process=!al("1339")
7 *Condensation* (the marked tendency to condensation in dreams)=!al("343")
7 <(Identifications, creation of composite figures/structures, compromise formations)=!al("343")
7 Condensation involving words, in particular=!al("4514")
7 <(Similarity of sound, use of verbal ambiguity, neologisms)=!al("4514")
7 *Displacement*=!al("342")
7 Combined condensation and displacement=!al("4893")
7 Substitution. Replacement of one object with another=!al("1150")
7 Representation by the opposite [See also under 'Considerations of Representability']=!al("1214")
6 Role Played By The Id In The Formation Of Dreams
7 In general=!al("3996")
7 The question of a necessary force for the formation of dream=!al("2570")
7 <Requirement for reinforcement from a repressed wish for the formation of a dream=!al("2570")
7 Relationship between preconscious material and the repressed wish=!al("4701")
7 Analogy with *entrepreneur*.=!al("3854")
4 The Content Of Dreams
5 In general=!al("126")
5 Relationship to waking life. Material from the present.=!al("4280")
5 Material provided by external and internal sensory stimuli=!al("4455")
5 Preconscious material, in general=!al("2430")
5 Recent material (including requirements of)=!al("4303")
5 The previous day's residues, in particular=!al("344")
5 <(Inevitable appearance of residues from the previous day in dreams)=!al("344")
5 Memory and knowledge=!al("4285")
5 Material from the past, in general=!al("4415")
5 Memory far more extensive in dreams than in waking life (Dreams as being hypermnesic)=!al("1310")
5 <(Dream-work as having access to material from early childhood)=!al("1310")
5 Material from childhood (infantile material), in particular=!al("268")
5 Role played by infantile sexual researches in dreams=!al("5342")
5 *Prehistoric* material=!al("1312")
5 <Dream-work as having access to archaic/phylogenetic material=!al("1312")
5 *Choice* of material, and the *way* in which it is chosen=!al("4299")
5 <Apparent preference for indifferent material. Reasons for.=!al("4299")
5 <Content of dreams as being overdetermined.=!al("4299")
5 <Relationship between manifest and latent content of dreams=!al("4299")
5 *Repressed* material in dreams=!al("1311")
5 <The emergence in dreams of impulses and desires we didn't know we harboured=!al("1311")
5 Sexual material in dreams=!al("4512")
5 <The great majority (but not necessarily all) dreams as having an underlying sexual content=!al("4512")
5 Bisexuality in dreams. Satisfaction of homosexual impulses in dreams.=!al("4596")
5 Seemingly innocent dreams may contain crudely sexual content=!al("4597")
5 <Sexual content not always obvious or apparent=!al("4597")
5 Affects in dreams=!al("4351")
5 Mood in dreams=!al("4636")
5 Phantasy in dreams=!al("4510")
5 Representation through the opposite=!al("3570")
5 <Reversal into its opposite=!al("3570")
5 Reversal of chronological relations=!al("5518")
5 Use of indirect modes of representation, in general in=!al("4936")
5 Use of allusion in=!al("4441")
5 Use of hints in=!al("4937")
5 Use of symbols [See also 'Symbols' below].=!al("127")
5 Representation of logical relations in dreams.=!al("4527")
5 Analogy with the task faced by the painter/sculptor=!al("4529")
5 The representation of time in dreams=!al("4531")
5 The representation of causal relations in dreams=!al("4532")
5 Representation of contraries in dreams=!al("4533")
5 A note on `the antithetical meaning of primal words' (K Abel)=!al("4534")
5 Representation of similarity in dreams=!al("4535")
5 Doubt and uncertainty in dreams=!al("4656")
5 The `either-or' relationship in dreams (both in text of dream and in reporting the dream)=!al("4899")
5 Variations in the degree of intensity in various portions of the dream. Reasons for.=!al("4543")
5 Representation of events from childhood in dreams=!al("4608")
5 Pathological material in dreams (See also under 'Typical Dreams')=!al("2429")
5 Death-wishes in dreams [See also under `Typical Dreams']=!al("4403")
5 Dreams in which part of the content (and often the most important part) is only remembered later=!al("4657")
5 Dreams which are forgotten, or cannot be recalled in their entirety,=!al("4659")
5 <but can be recalled after certain resistances have been overcome=!al("4659")
4 Considerations of Representability
5 In general=!al("4564")
5 The move over from an essentially verbal form of expression to a pictorial (hallucinatory) one=!al("4548")
5 <Modes of expression at the dream-work's disposal=!al("4548")
5 Archaic modes of thought in dreams, in general.=!al("5489")
5 <(As found in ancient civilizations, myths, fairy tales, superstitions,=!al("5489")
5 <unconscious thinking, dreams and the neuroses.)=!al("5489")
5 Regression in dreams. As providing an explanation for the hallucinatory character of dreams.=!al("4668")
4 Characteristics Of Dreams
5 Broad descriptions of what dreams are and the mechanisms behind them=!al("2272")
5 Dreams as  being simply another form of thinking=!al("2414")
5 The dream as a substitute for the thought-processes=!al("4871")
5 The concept of a preconscious thought-process being `drawn down into=!al("4777")
5 <and being subject to the workings of  unconscious'=!al("4777")
5 Dream-work as being an unconscious working-over of preconscious thought processes=!al("1330")
5 <Strangeness/unintelligibility of dreams explainable in terms of this.=!al("1330")
5 Dreams as representing a regression to earlier, more primitive, infantile=!al("4705")
5 <modes of operation of the psychical apparatus=!al("4705")
5 The concept of the latent and manifest content being two different versions=!al("4497")
5 <(a transcript) of the same material=!al("4497")
5 As adhering to a dynamic theory of dream-formation=!al("2569")
5 Temporary suspension of reality-testing in=!al("4301")
5 Egoistic nature of dreams=!al("4494")
5 The looseness of the basis on which associations are be formed=!al("4513")
5 The feeling of reality in dreams=!al("4580")
4 Technique Of Interpretation
5 Aims/goals of dream interpretation. What dream interpretation sets out to achieve. Its task.=!al("122")
5 <Approaches to dream interpretation (including older/earlier methods)=!al("122")
5 <Our approach - free association to each of the elements of the dream.=!al("122")
5 <Justification for free association.=!al("122")
5 <General technical rules.=!al("122")
5 <The dream's manifest content as being strictly determined by the latent content.=!al("122")
5 <Necessity for dreamer's own associations (except where symbols employed)=!al("122")
5 <Note on the quantity of material which emerges relative to the sparsity of the manifest dream.=!al("122")
5 <Significance of glosses, comments, judgements passed by dreamer regarding the dream.=!al("122")
5 The possibility of interpreting one's own dreams=!al("3886")
5 Interpretation of dreams as the counterpart to the dream-work=!al("4873")
5 <As proceeding in the reverse direction and undoing the transformations bought about by the dream-work=!al("4873")
5 The concept of a language of dreams=!al("5580")
4 Symbolism In Dreams
5 Knowledge and use of symbolism as being something primitive and inborn rather than learned.=!al("2335")
5 <Used from an early age=!al("2335")
5 <Symbols used - male (phallic) and female=!al("2335")
5 <Typical dreams - birth dreams, dreams of falling, flying, being naked,  glued to the spot, tooth dreams=!al("2335")
5 Experiments involving symbolism in dreams=!al("4586")
5 Use of symbolism elsewhere=!al("2515")
5 <(myths, legends, fairy-tales, folklore, popular customs, superstition,  jokes, psychoneuroses, =!al("2515")
5 <fetishism,  in unconscious mental life in general)=!al("2515")
4 Further Discussion Of Certain Topics
5 Motives for censorship=!al("4426")
5 Distortion in dreams=!al("2346")
5 Reversal into its opposite [See also above]=!al("4396")
5 Analogies for distortion in dreams taken from everyday life=!al("4398")
5 <(Need for distortion, censorship, need to adopt indirect mode of expression)=!al("4398")
5 Linguistic expression, verbal transformations in dreams-=!al("4366")
5 <(play on words, use of puns, similar-sounding words, verb ambiguity)=!al("4366")
5 Words, speeches in dreams=!al("4431")
5 Intellectual activity in dreams=!al("4530")
5 Numbers and calculations in dreams=!al("4613")
5 Periods of time in dreams=!al("5152")
5 Judgements in dreams=!al("4621")
5 The drawing of conclusions in dreams=!al("4630")
5 The expression of astonishment/surprise in dreams=!al("4626")
5 Expressions of criticism in dreams (annoyance, repulsion)=!al("4637")
5 Feeling of satisfaction in dreams=!al("4631")
5 Interpolations in dreams=!al("4638")
5 Absurdity, nonsense in dreams=!al("4615")
5 Dead people coming alive again in dreams=!al("4617")
5 Proper names in dreams=!al("4616")
5 Repetition in dreams. Significance thereof.=!al("4581")
5 Characteristics of the latent dream-content (the dream-thoughts arrived at by interpretation)=!al("598")
5 <As being completely logical and rational. As being no different to our waking thoughts.=!al("598")
5 <Although some may seem alien, we are forced to acknowledge them as our own.=!al("598")
5 The forgetting of dreams. Most dreams as being forgotten soon after waking. Explanations for.=!al("3978")
5 <Doubts as to accuracy of what is remembered after waking.=!al("3978")
5 Secondary revision=!al("109")
5 Role played by external and internal sensory stimuli in the content of dreams=!al("4459")
5 <(as providing material for the dream-work, how woven into the dream, =!al("4459")
5 <the way in which it is deliberately misinterpreted in the interests of preserving sleep)=!al("4459")
5 Miscellaneous Technical Questions
6 How a dreams instigated by external sensory stimuli are created in so short a space of time=!al("4323")
6 <The ingenuity which the dream-work displays, considering how quickly the dream was formed=!al("4323")
6 <Possibility of the dream having already been partially formed in the day-time=!al("4323")
6 <Use of phantasies by the dream work=!al("4323")
6 Miscellaneous questions relating to external sensory dream-instigators=!al("4326")
6 Miscellaneous questions relating to internal somatic dream-instigators=!al("4328")
6 Detailed discussions of what constitutes a wish=!al("4801")
6 How dream succeeds in doing away with the disturbing wish, seeing that the wish=!al("4729")
6 <retains its cathexis, and hence its upward drive, right through the night=!al("4729")
6 The concept that it is far more expedient for the ego to lift its repressions during sleep=!al("4732")
6 <and allow dreams to be formed, rather than maintaining a high-level expenditure on repression=!al("4732")
6 <Reasons why the sleeping ego feels safe in lowering its expenditure on repression=!al("4732")
6 <(Access to consciousness and voluntary movement cut off during sleep)=!al("4732")
6 The question of whether the material which emerges in association to the dream-elements=!al("4503")
6 <was present at the time of the formation of the dream=!al("4503")
6 Analysis vs. synthesis=!al("4524")
6 All the processes involved in the formation of dreams as being unconscious=!al("4506")
6 Dreams occurring on successive nights,=!al("4620")
6 <successive dreams on the same night as working over the same material=!al("4620")
4 Summary. Conclusions Reached.
5 Recap of what dreams are. Overview of the process of dream-formation.=!al("1341")
5 Dreams as wish-fulfilments=!al("1638")
5 Dreams as guardians of sleep=!al("405")
5 As binding unconscious excitations by allowing them to become preconscious=!al("4740")
5 Other possible functions of dreams (eg biological)=!al("4868")
5 Refutation of notion that dreams may have other `secondary' functions=!al("4743")
5 Other ways in which the dreamer could have reacted to a dream-instigator (e.g. woke up)=!al("4457")
5 Dreams as significant mental acts (no insignificant dreams)=!al("4430")
5 The manifest dream as being the tip of the iceberg=!al("1248")
5 Dreams as giving expression to repressed material=!al("5024")
5 Dream as being in the nature of a compromise=!al("1333")
5 Relationship of dreams to mental processes in infants (wishful-cathexes, hallucinatory wish-fulfilment)=!al("3973")
5 Summary of factors responsible for the unintelligibility of dreams=!al("3248")
5 Summary of factors giving dreams their final form (condensation, displacement, censorship)=!al("4517")
5 The value of dreams (both from a theoretical and practical point of view)=!al("472")
5 <[Theoretical:] Dreams as falling into the category of psychopathological structures.=!al("472")
5 <Their understanding as helping to explain the neuroses/psychoses.=!al("472")
5 <Because dreams occur in normal people as well,=!al("472")
5 <their understanding throws light on unconscious mental processes in general.=!al("472")
5 <An understanding of dreams throws light on other=!al("472")
5 <structurally-related psychical phenomena - parapraxes, jokes.=!al("472")
5 <Dreams as the royal road to a knowledge of the unconscious=!al("472")
5 <[Practical:] Their interpretation as giving access to unconscious psychical material=!al("472")
5 <Serves as a useful analytic tool =!al("472")
5 [See also under 'Treatment' > 'Tools At The Analyst's Disposal' > 'Interpretation Of Dreams']<=!al("472")
5 Possible diagnostic value - may serve as premonitors of physical or mental illness=!al("4327")
5 Summary of distinctions between our and other views on dreams=!al("2560")
5 <(the ancients, scientific, lay views)=!al("2560")
5 Reasons why dreams are held in such low esteem (e.g. by scientific community)=!al("4890")
5 <Apparently deal with trivialities=!al("4890")
5 The purported ability of dreams to foretell the future (premonitory dreams, prophetic dreams)=!al("4346")
5 Overviews of the process of dream-formation=!al("2580")
5 <(unwanted impulse> repression> partial failure of repression> compromise >=!al("2580")
5 <return of the repressed in distorted form)=!al("2580")
5 As being compromise-formations=!al("4742")
5 A note that all psychical activity set in motion by a wish=!al("4708")
5 A note that the censorship function also the guardian of mental health=!al("4709")
4 Relationship To Other Phenomena
5 In general=!al("3614")
5 Relationship to neurotic symptoms=!al("726")
5 Distinctions from neurotic symptoms=!al("1300")
5 Relationship to psychosis. Dream as a brief psychosis.=!al("1419")
5 Relationship to day-dreams=!al("4342")
5 Relationship to jokes=!al("4515")
5 Relationship to myths, legends, creative writing=!al("1313")
4 Problem Areas
5 In general=!al("1260")
5 Types of dreams apparently running counter to the wish-fulfilment theory of dreams=!al("2245")
5 Dreams occurring in the traumatic neuroses=!al("2247")
5 Dreams that appear to be the reverse of a wish-fulfilment=!al("4405")
5 Anxiety-dreams=!al("123")
5 Masochistic dreams (including role played by super-ego in)=!al("4411")
5 Replies to criticisms of wish-fulfilment theory=!al("4393")
5 Necessary distinction hasn't been made between manifest and latent content of dream=!al("4394")
5 What is pleasurable for one agency need not necessarily represent pleasure for the other=!al("4462")
5 Need for slight revision of wish-fulfilment theory of dreams=!al("1417")
5 <in the light of anxiety and masochistic dreams=!al("1417")
5 Role played by super-ego in the formation of dreams=!al("4696")
5 Analogy of role of ego with that of the town's night-watchman=!al("1418")
5 The question of the distinction, if any, between dreams of normal people and neurotics=!al("4583")
5 Role played by the repetition-compulsion in dreams=!al("4434")
5 Can a dream ever be completely interpreted?=!al("4499")
5 The possibility of there being two or more meanings for a dream (the possibility of `over-interpretation')=!al("2352")
5 More than one wish may be fulfilled in a dream=!al("4422")
5 Difficulties facing the expositor=!al("4375")
5 <(underlying material usually of an extremely intimate nature, volume of material involved)=!al("4375")
5 A note on the fact that dreams with an obviously sexual content noticeably absent from=!al("4834")
5 <early editions of *The Interpretation of Dreams*. Reasons for.=!al("4834")
5 Ethical/moral significance of our findings in relation to dreams=!al("4866")
5 Significance of our findings, in general=!al("4867")
4 Typical Dreams
5 In general=!al("4475")
5 Dreams of the infantile type in adults=!al("4880")
5 Dreams of convenience (e.g. as prompted by internal organic stimuli)=!al("4384")
5 <(As undisguised wish-fulfilments/simple satisfactions of the need)=!al("4384")
5 Arousal dreams=!al("4723")
5 Dreams of being naked/in a partial state of undress=!al("4473")
5 Dreams of being inhibited, glued to the spot, paralysed=!al("4471")
5 Dreams of flying, falling through the air, floating, swimming=!al("4472")
5 Dreams of the death of persons of whom the dreamer is fond=!al("4481")
5 Examination dreams=!al("4496")
5 Oedipus dreams=!al("4578")
5 Dreams of missing a train=!al("4587")
5 Dreams with a dental stimulus (tooth-dreams)=!al("4588")
5 Dreams of fire=!al("4592")
5 Dreams of passing through narrow spaces or of being in water (birth dreams)=!al("4600")
5 Recurrent dreams (which may undergo distortion over time)=!al("2343")
5 Lying dreams=!al("2270")
5 Dreams of paranoiacs (persecutory dreams)=!al("2393")
5 <(including the topic of the inclusion of pathological thought-material in the dream-content in general)=!al("2393")
5 Hypocritical dreams=!al("4402")
5 Dreams of impatience=!al("4437")
5 `Biographical' dreams=!al("4571")
5 Dreams in which one has a feeling of having been there once before (*deja vu*)=!al("4599")
5 Dreams with a urinary stimulus=!al("4602")
5 Dreams with an intestinal stimulus=!al("4603")
5 Rescue dreams=!al("4604")
5 Dreams in which robbers, burglars, ghosts play a part=!al("4606")
5 Dreams during analytic treatment. The ability of analysis to influence a dream's content.=!al("4610")
5 <Transference-dreams.=!al("4610")
3 Parapraxes
4 Introduction
5 Introduction of concept.=!al("120")
5 <Broad listing of phenomena in this category.=!al("120")
4 Mechanisms At Work In
5 In general=!al("4949")
5 Relationship to neurotic symptoms.=!al("3530")
5 <Same mechanisms at work in as in the dreams, jokes and neurotic symptoms.=!al("3530")
5 Role played by repression in=!al("3553")
5 Role played by the primary process in (displacement, condensation)=!al("4974")
5 Role played by displacement in, in particular=!al("4976")
5 Role played by condensation in, in particular=!al("4977")
5 The unconsciousness of the mental processes at work in=!al("4950")
5 As, too, being disguised wish-fulfilments=!al("4803")
5 As, too, representing a return of the repressed in distorted form=!al("4953")
5 As, too, representing partial failures of repression=!al("5044")
5 As, too, being compromise formations=!al("4782")
5 As having a hidden content and meaning=!al("3095")
5 As being significant=!al("1262")
5 As being relevant in the context of the person's unconscious mental life=!al("2081")
5 As being motivated=!al("937")
5 The motivation as being unconscious=!al("1001")
5 As having a hidden intent=!al("3276")
5 As having a hidden purpose=!al("3968")
5 <(as serving an unconscious purpose, as being purposive acts)=!al("3968")
5 As being the truth coming out=!al("2165")
5 As betraying our innermost thoughts, feelings, intentions and wishes=!al("2166")
5 As representing part-fulfilments of repressed wishes=!al("3080")
5 As representing part satisfactions for repressed impulses=!al("3266")
5 As giving the impression of having been carefully planned and skilfully executed=!al("2181")
5 As being almost deliberate=!al("3097")
5 As being a manifestation of the interfering influence of the repressed=!al("1040")
5 Their nature and content as being strictly determined=!al("1225")
5 As representing the outcome of a conflict between two opposing forces or agencies=!al("3529")
5 As representing a part satisfaction for both parties to the conflict=!al("3527")
5 As being capable of interpretation=!al("3096")
5 Distinction from neurotic symptoms.=!al("5047")
4 Categories Of Parapraxis
5 General examples=!al("1405")
5 Bungled actions (breaking of objects)=!al("469")
5 Slips of the tongue=!al("389")
5 More general disturbances of speech (in rhythm, execution of whole speech)=!al("4992")
5 Slips of the pen=!al("400")
5 Misreading=!al("466")
5 Mishearing=!al("390")
5 Mis-seeing=!al("655")
5 Failures (lapses) of memory=!al("468")
5 The mechanism of forgetting (inability to recall things) in general. Psychological basis for.=!al("1228")
5 The forgetting words=!al("4960")
5 Forgetting of proper names, names of places with which one is familiar=!al("467")
5 <Related phenomenon of paramnesia - remembering names incorrectly=!al("467")
5 Other parapraxes relating to proper names=!al("4540")
5 <Deliberate or unintentional distortion (mutilation) of proper names. Significance of.=!al("4540")
5 The disagreeable feeling when one comes across someone with the same name as oneself=!al("4966")
5 The contagiousness of name-forgetting=!al("4968")
5 The forgetting of words of a foreign language=!al("4957")
5 The forgetting of sets of words (phrases) from one's own language=!al("4985")
5 The deliberate or unintentional distortion of sets of words=!al("4986")
5 The forgetting of impressions and experiences (knowledge)=!al("4997")
5 Paramnesias in relation to impressions and experiences=!al("5004")
5 Disowning (disavowal)=!al("5001")
5 The forgetting of intentions (forgetting to carry out intended actions)=!al("391")
5 Errors=!al("5021")
5 Errors of memory (unaccompanied by paramnesia)=!al("5022")
5 Mislaying of objects=!al("433")
5 Leaving objects behind=!al("2021")
5 Losing objects=!al("434")
5 Unintentionally carrying off objects=!al("5016")
5 Self-injuries (including suicide)=!al("2692")
5 Bungled actions with potentially serious consequences=!al("5012")
5 <(as seriously endangering the health or lives of others)=!al("5012")
5 Errors of judgement=!al("5023")
5 Perseverations=!al("5631")
5 Combined parapraxes=!al("1004")
5 Same motive as finding expression in different parapraxes=!al("1005")
4 Symptomatic Acts. Chance Actions.
5 In general=!al("435")
4 Technique Of Interpretation
5 In general=!al("436")
5 Role played by symbolism in=!al("5141")
5 Role played by `verbal bridges' (switch-words, associative bridges) in=!al("4993")
5 The looseness (superficiality) of the basis on which verbal associations are formed=!al("4955")
5 <(but there usually being  a deeper connection)=!al("4955")
4 Further Discussion Of Certain Topics
5 The phenomenon of an element undergoing intensification, being ultra-clear=!al("4959")
5 Role played by secondary factors in (tiredness, lack of attention, distraction)=!al("4964")
5 The concept that actions which are performed automatically are performed better than=!al("5035")
5 <those to which attention is paid=!al("5035")
5 Analogies for role played by secondary factors in=!al("4965")
5 The nature of the repressed material lying behind parapraxes=!al("4994")
5 Problems facing the expositor (intimate nature of the underlying material)=!al("2691")
5 As being common, both in normal people and in neurotics=!al("2183")
5 The popular view of parapraxes and symptomatic acts.=!al("917")
5 <As being generally overlooked.=!al("917")
5 As being soon forgotten=!al("2013")
5 People as generally being reluctant to acknowledge the significance of their own parapraxes.=!al("4982")
5 <As experiencing distress when their attention is drawn to their parapraxes.=!al("4982")
5 Role played by in inter-personal relations, in general=!al("1")
5 All human beings as possessing the ability to interpret manifestations of the unconscious in other persons=!al("3329")
5 As attaching psychological significance to the parapraxes of others=!al("4990")
5 As being an important source of information of what is going on in the unconscious mind of the other person=!al("1011")
5 Parapraxes (and their interpretation) as an important source of misunderstandings in human relations=!al("5019")
5 The study of one's own parapraxes and symptomatic acts as the road to self-knowledge=!al("5018")
5 As serving as a warning for the future. As a forerunner of things to come.=!al("996")
5 The meaning and significance of a parapraxis may only become clear months or years later=!al("2172")
5 The value of parapraxes, in general (theoretical and practical)=!al("2557")
5 Employment as a therapeutic tool [See also under 'treatment' > 'Tools At The Analyst's Disposal']=!al("1265")
5 Possible objections to theory for=!al("5033")
5 Relationship between parapraxes and dreams=!al("5026")
5 Relationship between parapraxes and jokes=!al("4980")
5 Employment of parapraxes by creative writers=!al("4987")
5 Superstition=!al("4614")
5 Telepathy. Occultism. Belief in the supernatural.=!al("930")
5 *Deja vu*=!al("5031")
5 *Deja raconte*=!al("5032")
3 Jokes
4 In general=!al("2")
4 Characteristics, typical features of=!al("5395")
4 The tendency to economy in=!al("5404")
4 Same mechanisms at work in as in neurotic symptoms=!al("371")
4 Joke techniques=!al("5397")
4 Mechanisms at work in, in general-=!al("819")
4 The joke-work. Analogy with the dream-work.=!al("498")
4 Role played by primary process in (condensation, displacement)=!al("4784")
4 Role played by condensation in, in particular=!al("4954")
4 Role played by displacement in,  in particular=!al("5405")
4 Role played by repression in=!al("5416")
4 Role played by the censorship in=!al("3429")
4 Necessity for distortion before entry into consciousness=!al("5410")
4 <Necessity for indirect forms of expression in.=!al("5410")
4 <The various forms of indirect expression used.=!al("5410")
4 Explanations for the pleasure derived from jokes, in general=!al("5400")
4 Explanation of the pleasure derived from jokes along economic lines, in general=!al("4833")
4 Explanation of the pleasure derived from innocent jokes=!al("5425")
4 Explanation of the pleasure derived from tendentious jokes along purely economic lines=!al("5413")
4 Return of the repressed in=!al("5409")
4 Jokes as allowing for a temporary lifting of repression=!al("5396")
4 Jokes as enabling a circumvention of the censorship=!al("5419")
4 The joke as a facade for something deeper behind it=!al("5421")
4 Categories of joke, in general=!al("497")
4 Jokes characterized by condensation=!al("5399")
4 <(either *via* the formation of composite words or accompanied by modification) (condensation jokes)=!al("5399")
4 Role played by words, verbal transformations in, in general=!al("4556")
4 <(play on words, use of double meanings of words, puns)=!al("4556")
4 Role played by allusion in=!al("4726")
4 Role played by symbolism in=!al("4938")
4 Purposes served by jokes, in general=!al("5412")
4 Tendentious jokes. Purposes served by.=!al("5414")
4 The psychogenesis of jokes=!al("5427")
4 Role played by subjective determinants in appreciating a joke (having a `sense of humour')=!al("5428")
4 Laughter. Mechanism behind.=!al("5429")
4 Relationship of jokes to repartee=!al("5403")
4 Relationship of jokes to irony.=!al("5408")
4 The comic=!al("5406")
4 Relationship between jokes and the comic=!al("5407")
4 Humour=!al("5430")
4 Relationship between jokes and riddles=!al("5402")
4 Analogy of jokes with dreams=!al("372")
4 Distinction from dreams=!al("4558")
2 Treatment
3 Introduction
4 Psychotherapy, in general=!al("3691")
4 Psycho-analytic treatment, in general. The approach. What goes on.=!al("647")
4 Distinction from conventional psychiatry (makes no use of medicine).=!al("1877")
4 <Distinction from other therapeutic approaches.=!al("1877")
3 Theoretical Background
4 Review of fundamental premisses=!al("1168")
4 <(Unconscious mental processes, importance of childhood,=!al("1168")
4 <important role played by instincts, importance of sexuality, dynamic view of mental functioning]=!al("1168")
4 Review aetiological factors=!al("1666")
4 Possibility of mixed neurosis (actual neurosis along with a psychoneurosis) =!al("1845")
4 The normal state of affairs=!al("1427")
4 The state of affairs when things have gone wrong=!al("1428")
4 Cognisance of the fact that it is only acquired (accidental, sexual) factors=!al("3494")
4 <that we can exercise an influence over.=!al("3494")
4 <Cannot influence heredity, disposition, demands of civilization=!al("3494")
4 Suitability for treatment.=!al("1461")
4 <Only neuroses suitable.=!al("1461")
4 <Requirement for a relatively normal ego with which one can deal.=!al("1461")
4 Cases not suitable. Reasons for.=!al("1899")
3 Aims and Goals Of Treatment.
4 In general=!al("1432")
4 Strengthening the patient's ego.=!al("512")
4 <Extending the  ego's domain of control over the Id. To replace Id with ego.=!al("512")
4 To arrive at a knowledge of the unconscious material=!al("1280")
4 The insufficiency of anamnestic methods for arriving at a knowledge of such material=!al("3414")
4 <Distinction of psycho-analysis from anamnestic methods=!al("3414")
4 The material we are looking for=!al("1444")
4 Making the patient aware of his repressions=!al("3114")
4 The undoing of repressions. Making the repressed material (pre-)conscious.=!al("1161")
4 Making the patient aware of, and overcoming, his resistances=!al("1926")
4 The recalling of  traumatic experiences of childhood=!al("161")
4 Implications
5 The necessity for an analysis to go back to early childhood=!al("1841")
5 <The  necessity to analyse the childhood neurosis upon which the later adult neurosis is based=!al("1841")
5 The necessity to go into the patient's sexual life=!al("2480")
5 <As being almost impossible to understand a neurosis=!al("2480")
5 <without going into the sexual life of the person concerned=!al("2480")
5 <As, in fact, being the physician's obligation and duty to do so=!al("2480")
5 Tendencies to secretiveness, prudery and hypocrisy when it comes to matters in sexual life=!al("3476")
5 The fact that there are things which one keeps hidden not only from others but also from oneself=!al("4443")
3 The Therapeutic Task
4 The technique, in general=!al("2078")
4 The concept of the analyst as an ally. As forming a pact with the patient's ego.=!al("1426")
4 The intellectual task=!al("1442")
4 How treatment proceeds, in general=!al("3699")
4 The nature and volume of the material which emerges=!al("3365")
4 The way in which the material emerges=!al("3696")
4 The order in which the material emerges=!al("4246")
4 The ego's attitude toward the emerging material=!al("3700")
4 Note that we don't overlook the role played by the ego in the pathological process.=!al("2091")
4 <Work equally divided between ego-analysis and Id-analysis.=!al("2091")
4 Screen memories (childhood memories)=!al("2324")
4 Corroboration of interpretations by close family members, relatives=!al("5817")
4 The concept of `acting out' (instead of remembering)=!al("203")
4 Tools at the Analyst's Disposal
5 In general=!al("614")
5 Free Association
6 The method, in general.=!al("455")
6 <Theoretical basis of. Justification for. Rationale behind.=!al("455")
6 <Determinism in mental life=!al("455")
6 <All mental events determined (or even over-determined).=!al("455")
6 <Necessary preconditions. The psycho-analytic pact.=!al("455")
6 <The fundamental rule of psycho-analysis.=!al("455")
6 <The attitude required on the part of  the patient.=!al("455")
6 <Technical aspects and rules.=!al("455")
6 Why the technique is called *free* association=!al("4242")
6 Demands made on the analyst=!al("5521")
6 Attitude required of the  analyst while employing the free association technique=!al("2547")
6 As the most important of the tools=!al("2558")
5 Interpretation of Dreams
6 In general=!al("102")
5 Interpretation Of  Parapraxes, Symptomatic Acts, Chance Actions.
6 In general=!al("103")
5 Interpretations And Constructions
6 In general=!al("1445")
6 The question of timing. The need for correct timing in imparting our knowledge to the patient.=!al("1445")
6 <The need to distinguish between *our* knowledge and the patient's knowledge.=!al("1445")
6 <Not sufficient to make content known to patient.=!al("1445")
6 <Patient must accept and work through it for it to become *his* knowledge.=!al("1445")
6 The question of incorrect constructions=!al("1445")
5 The Transference
6 In general=!al("2706")
6 Its inevitable appearance in the course of psycho-analytic treatment=!al("3693")
6 <(or any other form of medical treatment, for that matter)=!al("3693")
6 The positive transference [See also below 'Factors Working In Our Favour']=!al("1542")
6 The negative transference [See also below 'Factors Opposing Our Efforts']=!al("1543")
6 Distinction between the positive and negative transference=!al("5767")
6 Role played by in treatment. Handling of, in general.=!al("1843")
6 <As constituting an indispensible therapeutic tool.=!al("1843")
6 Cure as being obtained through resolution (mastery) of the transference neurosis=!al("4143")
6 Transference phenomenon as constituting proof of the role played by=!al("2703")
6 <the sexual instincts in the neuroses=!al("2703")
6 The counter-transference=!al("1577")
3 Factors Affecting The Outcome
4 Relative Factors
5 In general=!al("1546")
5 Suitability for treatment. Patient's capacity to form a transference.=!al("86")
5 Patient doesn't initially come to us with a conviction of the truth of psycho-analytic theories=!al("2115")
5 or of the curative powers, of psycho-analysis=!al("2115")
5 The patient's intellectual capacity=!al("1483")
5 Ability to arouse intellectual interest in the theories of psycho-analysis in the patient=!al("1536")
5 Condition of the patient's ego (alterations in, split in)=!al("1579")
5 <The fiction of a normal ego.=!al("1579")
5 The extent to which the aetiology is a traumatic one=!al("1856")
5 Constitutional factors. Innate strength of the instincts. Genetic predisposition.=!al("1578")
5 Quantitative relations [See below under `Factors Opposing Our Efforts']=!al("1878")
5 The possibility of actual satisfaction of the instincts in real life=!al("1547")
5 Capacity for sublimation=!al("1482")
4 Factors Working In Our Favour
5 In general=!al("2117")
5 Upward drive of the repressed=!al("1537")
5 The positive transference=!al("1539")
5 Any intellectual interest in psycho-analysis which we may have aroused in the patient=!al("3690")
4 Factors Opposing Our Efforts
5 In general=!al("3702")
5 Resistances
6 Resistance, in general.=!al("616")
6 Reasons for resistance.=!al("2675")
6 <Forms the resistance may assume=!al("2675")
6 <Relationship of resistance to repression.=!al("2675")
6 <Resistances as being an expression of the self-same forces which initially instituted the repressions.=!al("2675")
6 <Same forces responsible for repression and resistance=!al("2675")
6 Distortion of the material coming forward as being due to the resistance=!al("5385")
6 Resistance as a quantifiable force=!al("1073")
6 <Resistance as being measured by the amount of effort required to make the repressed material conscious.=!al("1073")
6 The resistances as opposing our efforts=!al("1450")
6 <Treatment as proceeding in the face of a resistance, in general=!al("2157")
6 The resistances as opposing the patient's own recovery=!al("5390")
6 The sources of resistance as being unconscious=!al("1462")
6 Role played by the repressing ego, the forces of repression in the neuroses.=!al("1925")
6 <The uncovering and overcoming of resistances as at least half the work,=!al("1925")
6 <if not the primary task, of analysis =!al("1925")
6 <Handling of the resistances=!al("1925")
6 Factors affecting the strength of the resistances=!al("3953")
6 The resistances as being more easily recognized than material in the Id=!al("2114")
6 The concept of resistance to the uncovering of the resistances=!al("2105")
6 Role of resistances in the therapeutic outcome=!al("2122")
6 Analogies for resistance=!al("5617")
6 Forms Of Resistance
7 In general=!al("1451")
7 <Sources of resistance other than those emanating from the ego=!al("1451")
7 The concept of resistance to recovery.=!al("638")
7 Resistances emanating from the patient's ego (ego-resistances)=!al("1476")
7 <Resistances emanating from the ego's wish to maintain (hold on to)=!al("1476")
7 <(the ego's clinging to) its repressions=!al("1476")
7 Resistances emanating from the super-ego (unconscious sense of guilt)=!al("2492")
7 Resistances emanating from the patient's need to suffer, the patient's need to remain ill=!al("1464")
7 Resistances attributable to the death instinct=!al("1466")
7 Fundamental characteristics of the instincts themselves.=!al("2133")
7 <Masochistic trends within ego.=!al("2133")
7 The transference as a source of resistance, in general=!al("1555")
7 The positive transference as a source of resistance=!al("3705")
7 The negative transference as a source of resistance=!al("2707")
7 The counter-transference as a source of resistance=!al("104")
7 The castration complex (in males)=!al("1677")
7 Penis envy (main source of resistance in females)=!al("1704")
7 The relative absence of resistances, up to a certain point, in the psychoses.=!al("3593")
7 <Their absence as being pathognomic for the psychoses.=!al("3593")
5 Economic Considerations
6 Importance of the economic factor=!al("911")
6 <Neurosis as being first and foremost an economic problem.=!al("911")
6 <All a question of quantitative relations -=!al("911")
6 <the relative strengths of the various forces playing a role in the neurosis.=!al("911")
6 <Need for satisfaction of the instincts in real life.=!al("911")
6 <Importance, in particular, of the sexual instinct.=!al("911")
6 <The ego's ability to tolerate frustration.=!al("911")
6 <The ego's capacity for sublimation.=!al("911")
6 A note on the libido's reluctance to give up a form of satisfaction it has once enjoyed=!al("3507")
5 Other Factors
6 Constitutional factors. Innate strength of instincts.=!al("515")
6 <Relative strength of the instincts at the time of falling ill=!al("515")
6 <Reinforcement of the instincts at certain times of life (puberty, menopause, loss of sexual object)=!al("515")
6 The periodic nature of the libido (which may account for the periodic nature of symptoms)=!al("4753")
6 Role played by Fate (marriage, loss of spouse)=!al("5142")
6 Motives for illness. Primary gain from illness. Secondary gain from illness.=!al("1076")
6 Unfavourable fixations of the libido=!al("1002")
6 <Unsuitablity of the narcissistic disorders for treatment=!al("1002")
6 Age. Psychical inertia. Adhesiveness of the libido.=!al("513")
6 Secondary factors which may cause a relative weakening of the ego=!al("1866")
6 <[See under 'Neurosis' > 'Aetiological Factors' > 'Stock Noxae']=!al("1866")
3 Analysis As . . .
4 In general=!al("5387")
4 The concept of neurosis being due to lack of insight=!al("3595")
4 Analysis as involving the elucidation of symptoms=!al("5057")
4 Analysis as a form of after-education, as an extension of self knowledge=!al("1438")
4 Analysis as the making conscious of  what is unconscious (repressed) in the patient=!al("3322")
4 Analysis as the undoing of repressions, in general=!al("1714")
4 Analysis as the undoing of repressions instituted (and hence damage done) in early childhood=!al("1760")
4 <As the undoing of infantile (and now unnecessary) repressions=!al("1760")
4 Analysis as replacing repression with suppression (or sublimation)=!al("4644")
4 Analysis as enabling / bringing about the resolution of the patient's conflicts=!al("5013")
4 Analysis as the overcoming of resistances=!al("1453")
4 Analysis as the filling in of gaps in the patient's memory (removing amnesias).=!al("1713")
4 <As the making conscious of what has been forgotten.=!al("1713")
4 Analysis as the uncovering, and working through, of past traumas.=!al("1712")
4 <(The material emerges, symptoms are analysed, in the reverse order to which the traumas occurred).=!al("1712")
4 Analysis as a taming of the instincts=!al("1859")
4 <(Note that we don't aim to do away with the instincts - merely to tame them.=!al("1859")
4 <(How such taming accomplished - based on antithesis between primary and secondary process).=!al("1862")
3 Achievements Of An Analysis
4 What an analysis sets out to achieve=!al("4756")
4 What an analysis achieves and how it achieves it.=!al("267")
4 <Possible outcomes of treatment.=!al("267")
4 The undoing of repressions. Makes repressed material (pre-)conscious.=!al("1226")
4 <Brings processes in the Id under the domination of the ego=!al("4731")
4 Repression replaced by something better -  by a condemning judgement (suppression)=!al("648")
4 Broadens of the compass of the ego=!al("1454")
4 Frees the patient from the reigns of sexuality=!al("2743")
4 Overcomes resistances. Benefits thereof.=!al("1457")
4 Enables sublimation of the instincts=!al("576")
4 Enables direct satisfaction for the instincts=!al("649")
4 The distinction between `repression' and `suppression'=!al("3882")
4 Relationship between sublimation and repression. Distinction from reaction-formation.=!al("2394")
4 Analogies for what analysis achieves=!al("5618")
4 Analogy with the finding of the solution to a parapraxis=!al("3555")
3 Technical Matters
4 When may an analysis be considered complete?=!al("517")
4 <Is there any natural end to the treatment?=!al("517")
4 Bringing the treatment to an end=!al("2156")
4 Is a complete cure possible?=!al("3845")
4 When may a treatment be considered to have been successful?=!al("2154")
4 Variability of results obtained. Reasons for.=!al("1872")
4 Spontaneous cures. Is a spontaneous cure possible? Explanations for.=!al("1296")
4 Instant cures=!al("2351")
4 The concept of one neurosis (or symptom) being replaced another=!al("3300")
4 Limitations of analytic treatment, in general.=!al("5154")
4 People's expectations in relation to an analysis=!al("3680")
4 <(underestimation of the severity and depth of the neuroses) =!al("3680")
4 The value of an analysis, in general=!al("3681")
4 Prophylactic value of an analysis. Permanency of the cure.=!al("1855")
4 <Can a successful treatment prevent a person from falling ill later?=!al("1855")
4 Is it possible to stir up, and hence influence, a conflict which is not currently active? =!al("1882")
4 Ways of making a latent conflict active=!al("1886")
4 The problem of inaccurate amanuenses=!al("3269")
4 The same material (associations, dreams) as being open to over-interpretation=!al("2355")
4 Attempts at speeding up the treatment (setting a time limit).=!al("1839")
4 The dangers of getting results too soon=!al("1840")
4 Modifications in technique called for by the various neuroses=!al("5639")
4 Problems associated with making case histories public=!al("3597")
4 <(medical confidentiality, intimate nature of material involved, mass of material involved)=!al("3597")
4 Problems people may have with the free association technique (adopting of the required psychical attitude)=!al("4372")
4 Technical Rules
5 In general=!al("4241")
5 Anything which interrupts the progress of analytic work should be regarded as a resistance=!al("4650")
5 Analysis should be carried out in a state of frustration=!al("1885")
5 We do not concern ourselves with individual symptoms *per se*.=!al("2729")
5 <Their resolution comes about as a by-product of the analysis.=!al("2729")
5 The taking of notes during an analytic session=!al("5055")
3 Pros and Cons Of Psycho-Analytic Therapy
4 Pros
5 As being powerful, and possibly dangerous, in the wrong hands. Analogy with surgery.=!al("2720")
5 As the most thorough-going of the therapeutic modalities=!al("2481")
5 Distinctions from other forms of therapy=!al("2404")
5 <Simple anamnestic, hypnotic, suggestive)=!al("2404")
5 <Psycho-analysis as a deep therapy=!al("2404")
5 <As being the only means of arriving at a knowledge of the unconscious material=!al("2404")
5 <Analogies for, in general=!al("2404")
5 <Analogies illustrating distinction from other forms of therapy=!al("2404")
5 Archaeological analogy for=!al("3655")
4 Cons
5 Shortcomings, in general=!al("3683")
5 Analysis as a time-consuming (and thus expensive) procedure=!al("3446")
5 Psycho-analysis as being only for the rich.=!al("2724")
5 <Attempts at making analysis accessible to the broad population.=!al("2724")
3 The Practice Of Psychoanalysis
4 Who shall practice psycho-analysis? The question of lay analysis. Requirement for a training analysis.=!al("164")
4 Qualities required of the analyst=!al("5048")
4 The analyst's own resistances=!al("1718")
4 The analyst's individuality=!al("2159")
4 Analysis as not allowing the presence of a third person=!al("3713")
4 The question of sexual relations between patient and analyst=!al("1439")
4 Note that we respect the patient's individuality - don't try and mould him in accordance with our ideals=!al("2734")
3 Miscellaneous Topics
4 Replies to criticisms relating to psycho-analysis as a form of treatment=!al("1888")
4 <Fear of the dangers posed by psycho-analytic treatment=!al("1888")
4 <(may cause break-up of marriages, cause people to lose jobs)=!al("1888")
4 <('Better to let sleeping dogs lie' - the problem is the dogs aren't sleeping)=!al("1888")
4 The question of the role played by suggestion in.=!al("679")
4 Doubts as to the believability of the material which emerges=!al("3384")
4 <(the analyst forces material on the patient\; the patient himself invents the material)=!al("3384")
4 Synthesis vs. analysis (unsatisfactory nature of the former)=!al("2278")
4 The question of self-analysis=!al("404")
4 Psycho-analysis of children=!al("2600")
4 Freud's own views as to psycho-analytic therapy, in general=!al("2403")
4 <Late therapeutic pessimism. Increased emphasis on economic factor.=!al("2403")
4 Therapies in the future.=!al("1485")
2 Cultural Issues
3 Group Psychology
4 In general=!al("652")
4 Critique of the concept of a `herd instinct'=!al("2797")
4 Man as a horde, rather than a herd, animal=!al("282")
4 Group formation, in general=!al("2798")
4 The simple case of two lovers=!al("1617")
4 Role played by aim-inhibited libido in ordinary friendships=!al("2801")
4 Role played by the libido in groups=!al("546")
4 <Groups as being based on libidinal ties=!al("546")
4 Group as being based on (sublimated) homosexual ties, in particular=!al("2499")
4 Role played by the aggressive instinct in groups, in general=!al("3040")
4 Role played by reaction formation against hostile impulse dating from the nursery=!al("2799")
4 The group's management of internal aggression.=!al("207")
4 <Need for an external minority on whom to direct the aggression=!al("207")
4 The `narcissism of minor differences'=!al("208")
4 Role played by the leader in.=!al("247")
4 <Man's need for a powerful figure in authority (father-figure).=!al("247")
4 The group as being based on a common love (and fear) of the leader=!al("457")
4 Role played by identification in=!al("547")
4 Role played by the super-ego in=!al("276")
4 Role played by the ego ideal in=!al("5769")
4 Effect of the group on the intellectual capacity of its members=!al("3740")
4 Nations as a whole as following the same dynamics as the individual=!al("914")
4 Nations as a whole may be neurotic=!al("834")
3 Religion
4 Introduction
5 Religion in general=!al("2023")
5 Characteristics of all religions=!al("420")
5 <(moral injunctions, calls for renunciation, penances, promised rewards)=!al("420")
5 Religion as a psychological problem in need of explanation=!al("4052")
4 Viewpoints
5 In general=!al("393")
5 Infantile aspects of religion=!al("271")
5 <(man's weakness, need for a strong, all-powerful father-figure and protector)=!al("271")
5 <Role played by the father-complex in.=!al("271")
5 Religion as illusion=!al("96")
5 Religion as delusion=!al("13")
5 Religion as neurosis
6 In general=!al("4048")
6 Renunciation of instinct in=!al("5457")
6 Role played by repression in=!al("4045")
6 Return of the repressed in=!al("5461")
6 Wish-fulfilment in=!al("4819")
6 Role played by displacement in=!al("5468")
6 Role played by regression in=!al("2319")
6 Role played by symbolism in=!al("4785")
6 Role played by unconscious sense of guilt in=!al("4047")
6 Role played by super-ego in=!al("1282")
6 Role played by anxiety in (fear of divine punishment)=!al("5458")
6 Role played by projection in=!al("4278")
6 Religion as psychology projected into the external world=!al("5029")
6 Role played by the compulsion to repeat in=!al("4773")
6 Role played by civilization in=!al("1037")
6 Religion as obsessional neurosis, in particular=!al("11")
6 Differences between religion and obsessional neurosis=!al("5443")
6 Religion as a mixed neurosis=!al("480")
6 Religion as offering protection against neurotic illness=!al("5635")
6 Religion as the neurosis of mankind=!al("151")
5 Role Played By The Past In
6 In general=!al("5460")
6 <Origins of religion in the prehistory, the childhood of mankind=!al("5460")
6 <The historical truth in religion=!al("5460")
6 Role played by trauma in, in general=!al("936")
4 The Religions
5 Primitive Religion
6 Ancient origins of religion, in general=!al("5754")
6 The mental lives of primitive people, in general=!al("5589")
6 Animistic view of the universe=!al("5646")
6 Characteristics of primitive religions, in general=!al("558")
6 Totemism=!al("5753")
6 Precepts of, in general=!al("2016")
6 Role played by the Oedipus complex in, in general=!al("2748")
6 Prohibition on incest=!al("263")
6 The father-complex in. Patricide.=!al("12")
6 Sense of guilt in reaction to father-murder=!al("285")
6 Projection in=!al("5647")
6 God as sublimation (elevation to higher sphere) of father=!al("2828")
6 Its two main precepts as constituting origins of mankind's moral and social order=!al("262")
6 Evolution of later religions from totemism=!al("197")
6 The core of truth in religion=!al("150")
5 The Ancient Religions
6 In general=!al("5473")
5 Judaism.    68
6 In general=!al("395")
6 Monotheism=!al("131")
6 The Man Moses
7 In general=!al("115")
7 Moses, an Egyptian ...=!al("70")
7 Facts pointing in favour of this theory-=!al("396")
7 His Egyptian name=!al("107")
7 Interpretation of the myth of his birth=!al("108")
7 Was said to have been `slow of speech'=!al("144")
7 The Exodus from Egypt=!al("418")
7 The murder of Moses=!al("140")
7 Disavowal of the murder. Latency period. Later return of the repressed.=!al("141")
7 Sense of guilt in reaction to the murder=!al("1402")
7 As reinforcing in the Jews the universal sense of guilt from earlier patricide=!al("2017")
7 If Moses was an Egyptian. Ramifications.-=!al("71")
7 Religions prevalent in Egypt at the time=!al("132")
7 Distinctions between Egyptian religions and monotheism=!al("143")
7 The religion which Moses passed on to his followers=!al("142")
7 Monotheism as being of Egyptian origin=!al("1936")
7 Circumcision as being of Egyptian origin.=!al("264")
7 <Circumcision as a symbolic substitute for castration.=!al("264")
7 Moses' motives for doing what he did=!al("130")
7 The Jewish nation, in general=!al("5463")
7 The Jewish nation as being assembled out of a number of different tribes=!al("146")
7 The Levites as originally being Egyptian=!al("147")
7 Moses' role in stamping the Jews with their unique character=!al("246")
7 Summary=!al("145")
5 Christianity    72
6 In general=!al("73")
6 As an offshoot from Judaism, in general=!al("199")
6 The figure of Christ=!al("3850")
6 Role played by disciples (the Apostles) in the establishment of Christianity=!al("419")
6 The psychological logic behind Christianity=!al("202")
6 Points in common with Judaism=!al("2022")
6 Role of sense of guilt in=!al("201")
6 Distinctions from Judaism=!al("421")
6 More correct psychologically than Judaism=!al("397")
6 As providing relief from guilt, but placing heavy moral burden on its followers=!al("2019")
6 Symbolic significance of communion=!al("283")
6 The philosophy of universal love=!al("2306")
5 Other Religions
6 Mahommedanism=!al("210")
6 Buddhism=!al("560")
6 Hinduism=!al("561")
4 Miscellaneous Topics
5 The Archaic Heritage
6 The question of phylogenetic memory=!al("213")
6 Symbolism as an example of=!al("239")
6 The child's reaction to trauma (the Oedipus and castration complexes) as examples of=!al("240")
6 Instinctual (unlearned) behaviour of animals as justification for=!al("242")
6 Importance for group psychology=!al("241")
6 Role played by inherited memory-traces in religion=!al("243")
6 Role played by inherited memory traces in the neuroses=!al("245")
6 How acquired, passed on, later re-activated=!al("244")
4 Other myths and their interpretation=!al("4271")
4 Other religious beliefs and their origin (belief in life after death)=!al("4601")
4 The Jews and anti-semitism=!al("204")
4 Role of religion in society=!al("651")
4 Conclusions=!al("931")
3 Civilization and Society
4 Introduction
5 Definition of=!al("903")
5 As founded upon repression, renunciation of instinct=!al("1176")
4 Origins
5 In general=!al("904")
5 The civilization process=!al("913")
5 Adoption of the upright posture. Atrophy of sense of smell.=!al("900")
5 Abolition of the periodicity of the libido=!al("960")
4 Early Civilization
5 Origins In the darkest past. Father-murder (parricide).=!al("66")
5 <[See also under 'The Religions' > 'Primitive Religions']=!al("66")
5 The sexual lives of primitives=!al("5644")
5 Taboo observances, in general=!al("5645")
5 Taboo on incest and the injunction to exogamy=!al("195")
5 Origins of the sense of morality=!al("3827")
4 The Instincts In General
5 Civilization as being founded on repression, renunciation of instinct=!al("65")
4 The Sexual Instinct
5 Society's suppression of the sexual instinct, in general=!al("3533")
5 Civilization at the expense of the sexual instinct, in particular=!al("368")
5 Civilization as requiring the renunciation of certain erotogenic zones as unserviceable=!al("3803")
5 As a result of repression, the sexual instinct forced to find alternative sources of satisfaction,=!al("1787")
5 <to take *detours*, roundabout paths to satisfaction=!al("1787")
5 Desexualization of the sexual instinct=!al("1786")
5 The possibility of its sublimation=!al("5499")
5 Sexual instinct as making a contribution to mankind's highest achievements=!al("1785")
5 Society's reasons for enforcing sexual repression [See also 'The Instincts' > 'The Death Instinct']=!al("475")
5 Monogamous marriage - general discussion of\; problems associated therewith=!al("2375")
4 The Aggressive Instinct
5 The inborn human tendency toward aggression=!al("3157")
5 Civilization as requiring/being based on a renunciation of aggression=!al("2866")
5 Our relations with our fellow man. Role of the aggressive instinct in inter-personal relations.=!al("2463")
5 <Development of the social instincts through reaction-formation/transformation.=!al("2463")
5 Dangers the aggressive instinct poses to society.=!al("2864")
5 <As being the main reason why society imposes restrictions on the sexual instinct=!al("2864")
5 Role played by religion in the civilization process=!al("5472")
4 The Problem With Society. Reasons For Unhappiness In Society.
5 In general=!al("539")
5 Unhappiness relating to the sexual instinct=!al("2290")
5 The Aggressive Instinct
6 In general=!al("915")
6 <Wars/strife as being inevitable=!al("915")
6 <The aggressive instinct as the main source of human unhappiness=!al("915")
6 <Dangers suppression of the aggressive instinct poses for the individual=!al("915")
6 <Relationships between virtue, turning inward of the aggressive instinct=!al("915")
6 <and the unconscious sense of guilt =!al("915")
6 <Need for aggressive instinct to be turned outward to avoid falling ill=!al("915")
6 <As possible source of all internal conflict=!al("915")
6 <[See also under 'Neurosis']=!al("915")
5 Other sources of human suffering=!al("1918")
4 Paths to Happiness
5 In general=!al("2965")
5 Active pursuit of pleasure=!al("1914")
5 Avoidance of unpleasure=!al("1915")
5 A combination of the above two=!al("2966")
5 The chemical approach. Altered states of consciousness (e.g. alcohol).=!al("1913")
5 Religion=!al("1920")
5 Delusion=!al("1916")
5 Retreat into psychosis=!al("2070")
5 Conclusions=!al("1917")
4 Society's Role In The Genesis Of Neurosis
5 Society and the individual - general discussion of needs of each=!al("1044")
5 Society and its cultural demands as being ultimately responsible for neurosis=!al("67")
5 <Neurotics as those who founder on the civilization process=!al("67")
5 <Neurosis as a by-product of the civilization process=!al("67")
5 Normal person as, too, being a product of repression, sublimation and reaction-formation=!al("2014")
5 The role played by the repressed in mental life in general=!al("4995")
5 Relationship between the father and other / higher / later forms of authority=!al("4448")
5 Relationship between neurosis and higher productions of human mind=!al("642")
2 Historical
3 Freud
4 Personal=!al("2313")
4 Early pre-psycho-analytic influences. Charcot, Brucke, Bernheim.=!al("2317")
4 <Visits to Saltpetriere, Nancy. What learnt.=!al("2317")
4 Wilhelm Fliess=!al("612")
4 Other figures  who exercised and influence on Freud's thought. Opponents (e.g. Meynert).=!al("3739")
4 Persons admired by Freud. Goethe. Schopenhauer. Lichtenberg.=!al("2824")
4 Works regarded by Freud as being important=!al("2844")
3 Psycho-analysis
4 Overview Of Development Of Views, Theories And Techniques
5 In general=!al("366")
5 Pre-psycho-analytic views on neurosis (Medieval times, Middle Ages, Charcot)=!al("2858")
5 <Everything put down to heredity=!al("2858")
5 <Other views on neurosis (Janet). =!al("2858")
5 <Over-emphasis on role played by heredity, degeneracy, chemical factors. Critique thereof.=!al("2858")
5 <Freud's early views on the role played by heredity=!al("2858")
5 <The possibility of the neuroses having an acquired basis.=!al("2858")
4 Breuer and the Case History of Anna O.
5 Introduction=!al("1277")
5 Case history=!al("492")
5 Breuer's method=!al("2893")
5 What Breuer's method made possible=!al("4155")
5 Breuer's findings=!al("500")
5 Importance of  this case history=!al("4033")
4 Freud enters the scene=!al("2898")
5 Freud's early employment of Breuer's method=!al("2900")
5 <A new technique for arriving at a knowledge of unconscious material=!al("2900")
5 <Freud's extensions of the technique=!al("2900")
5 The goal of treatment at this stage=!al("4157")
5 Freud's findings=!al("511")
5 Subsequent confirmation of findings on other patients=!al("2478")
4 Original Joint Statement Of Findings
5 Hysteria as an acquired disorder, having a psychical basis with a traumatic aetiology=!al("522")
5 <Unconscious mental processes at work in=!al("522")
5 <Defence on the part of the patient's ego=!al("522")
5 Suppression of affect. Strangulated affect finds employment in symptom through conversion.=!al("522")
5 <Causal link between trauma and symptom=!al("522")
5 <Aims/goals of therapy=!al("522")
5 <Therapy aimed at re-establishing causal link between trauma and symptom=!al("522")
5 <thereby allowing abreaction of strangulated affect.=!al("522")
5 <Treatment essentially of a cathartic nature=!al("522")
5 <Use of hypnosis as a therapeutic tool=!al("522")
5 <Analogy with `traumatic neuroses' =!al("522")
5 <Traumas must have occurred in early childhood=!al("522")
5 <Role played by memories in. Hysterics as suffering mainly from reminiscences.=!al("522")
5 <Role played by sexuality in. Traumatic experiences usually of a sexual nature.=!al("522")
5 <Nature of the sexual traumas (seduction)=!al("522")
5 <Mechanism of symptom formation. The conversion process=!al("522")
5 <Symptoms as a return of the repressed=!al("522")
4 Technical matters
5 In general=!al("3348")
5 Similarities/differences between hysteria and obsessional neurosis=!al("3319")
5 Other of Freud's theories of the time=!al("4172")
5 Early views on obsessional neurosis. =!al("3316")
5 <Also traumatic aetiology but event experienced of an active/aggressive nature=!al("3316")
5 Explanation of symptoms in terms of [a] `counter-will'=!al("3586")
5 The concept of `the putting into effect of antithetic ideas'=!al("3609")
5 Reasons for the perseveration of memories long after the event=!al("2956")
5 <The question of an adequate reaction to a psychical trauma=!al("2956")
5 Adequate reaction not occurring in hysterics. As reason for retention and consequent=!al("2982")
5 <pathogenicity of their memories. Hysterics as suffering from reminiscences.=!al("2982")
5 Explanation for the deferred action of early traumas=!al("3337")
5 <How early experiences of a sexual nature are able to exert their pathogenic effect=!al("3337")
5 <Through the re-activation of their memory-traces in later life=!al("3337")
5 <Deferred action of memories=!al("3337")
5 Requirement for pathogenic memories to be in an unconscious state=!al("3394")
5 <Pathogenicity of memories of traumatic events due precisely=!al("3394")
5 <to fact of their not having been remembered (of their having been repressed)=!al("3394")
5 Distinction of views from other earlier views on the aetiology of the neuroses=!al("2904")
5 <(acquired, psychical mechanism, traumatic aetiology, defence, the sexual factor)=!al("2904")
4 Parting Of The Ways
5 Breuer's theory of hypnoid states. Freud's criticisms thereof. =!al("533")
5 <Other differences in views.=!al("533")
5 Acknowledgements to Breuer. Later retractions of these.=!al("2490")
5 Breuer's theoretical contribution=!al("3671")
5 The question of how much of the theoretical contribution is due to Breuer and how much due to Freud=!al("3673")
5 The value of Breuer's findings=!al("3312")
5 Importance of the case history of Anna O.=!al("2897")
5 <Value of Breuer's method.=!al("2897")
5 Reasons for Breuer's abrupt withdrawal from the case and cessation of all further involvement=!al("3579")
5 <in psycho-analysis=!al("3579")
4 Freud's Early Views On The Neuroses
5 In General
6 In general=!al("3003")
6 <The neuroses as having an acquired basis=!al("3003")
6 <The actual neuroses as having a discrete physical mechanism=!al("3003")
6 <The psychoneuroses as having a psychical basis=!al("3003")
6 <Dynamic mechanism, based on conflict between opposing forces=!al("3003")
6 <Defence-based theory for the neuroses, with the mechanism of repression as its nucleus=!al("3003")
6 <Repression not necessarily a pathological phenomenon=!al("3003")
6 <Found in healthy people as well=!al("3003")
6 <Distinction of normal defence from pathological defence.=!al("3003")
6 <A common mechanism for the psychoneuroses=!al("3003")
6 <Paths taken by repressed material in the formation of the symptom=!al("3003")
6 <Dissociation of affect from idea=!al("3003")
6 <Conversion in hysteria, attachment to surrogate idea in obsessional neurosis=!al("3003")
6 The concept of a `false connection'.=!al("3003")
6 Symptoms as representing a return of the repressed=!al("3003")
6 <Symptoms as representing failures of repression=!al("3003")
6 <Mechanism of repression=!al("3003")
6 Greater appreciation of the role played by the instincts in=!al("3003")
6 A sexual aetiology for the neuroses=!al("3003")
6 <Ideas of a sexual nature as being main motive for defence=!al("3003")
6 <Importance of childhood=!al("3003")
6 <Relationship between sexuality and childhood=!al("3003")
6 <Presence of sexuality in childhood=!al("3003")
6 <The relationship of symptoms to sexuality not always obvious=!al("3003")
6 <The unconscious of the mental processes at work in the neuroses=!al("3003")
6 What treatment called for at this stage=!al("4221")
6 Differences in the aetiology of the various neuroses=!al("3022")
6 Differing chronological requirements=!al("3790")
6 Differences in the way displacement occurs=!al("3821")
6 Distinction in the phantasies=!al("3825")
6 Conversion mechanism in hysteria=!al("3026")
6 Displacement of affect of anxiety on to surrogate object in phobias=!al("3027")
6 Attachment of affect to wrong/surrogate object in obsessional neurosis=!al("3028")
6 The concept of the process which takes place in hysteria being more advantageous=!al("3090")
6 <than that occurring in the other neuroses=!al("3090")
6 Early views on paranoia - as, too, being based on defence=!al("3349")
6 <Symptoms as representing a return of the repressed in distorted form.=!al("3349")
6 Comparison between symptom formation in paranoia and obsessional neurosis=!al("3353")
6 Comparison between symptom formation in paranoia and hysteria=!al("3354")6
5 In Particular
6 Abandonment of traumatic theory for the neuroses. Reasons for.=!al("2169")
6 Shift to dynamic aetiology for neuroses=!al("2111")
6 Greater appreciation of role played by impulses in=!al("3811")
6 <Greater appreciation of role played by the instincts in =!al("5381")
6 Greater appreciation of role played by sexuality in the neuroses=!al("2583")
6 <Greater appreciation of role played by perverse sexuality in the neuroses=!al("2583")
6 <Neuroses as the negative of the perversions=!al("2583")
6 Appreciation of  importance of childhood in=!al("2584")
6 Greater appreciation of role played by ego in=!al("2717")
6 <Greater appreciation of  role played by `defence' in=!al("2717")
6 <Focus shifted away from the repressed to the resistances=!al("2717")
6 Intimation of notion of repression=!al("540")
6 Analogy for - rowdy man in hall.=!al("542")
6 Notion of a censorship function in mental life=!al("2537")
6 The resistance=!al("1043")
5 The Seduction Theory Of Neurosis
6 In general=!al("2860")
6 Criticisms of seduction/trauma-based theory. Replies to these.=!al("3321")
6 The believability of the patients' confessions re=!al("3314")
6 <The unreliability of anamneses in general=!al("3314")
6 Abandonment of seduction theory. Reasons for.=!al("2610")
6 <Greater appreciation of role played by phantasy in mental lives of neurotics.=!al("2610")
6 <Relationship of phantasies to dreams=!al("2610")
4 Early Classification Of The Neuroses
5 In general=!al("3302")
5 Possibility of neuroses without psychical mechanism - the actual neuroses=!al("3123")
5 Separation off of `anxiety neurosis' from neurasthenia=!al("3176")
5 Separation off of obsessional neurosis (and phobias) from neurasthenia=!al("3456")
5 <Obsessional neurosis as an independent entity=!al("3456")
5 Separation off of hysteria from neurasthenia.=!al("3718")
5 Arguments against early theories=!al("3575")
5 Possible forerunners of early theories=!al("3577")
5 Distinctions between Breuer and Freud's technique and other techniques (suggestion)=!al("3615")
4 Therapeutic Technique
5 In general=!al( "3295")
5 Basic requirement: Need for repressed impulses to be made conscious=!al("3372")
5 <before they can be subject to the modifying influence of the ego=!al("3372")
4 Hypnosis
5 The nature of hypnosis. Characteristics of the state.=!al("2529")
5 Views on hypnotic phenomena and use of as a therapeutic technique=!al("3738")
5 Theories for hypnotic phenomena=!al("3741")
5 <Overvaluation of the sexual object. The credulity of love as fundamental source of authority.=!al("3741")
5 Use of hypnosis as a therapeutic tool.=!al("502")
5 <As bringing about a lowering of the resistances.=!al("502")
5 What was learned through the use of hypnosis=!al("528")
5 Practical difficulties associated with the use of hypnosis=!al("503")
5 <Abandonment as a therapeutic tool. Reasons for.=!al("503")
4 Abandonment of cathartic method
5 Shortcomings in the cathartic method=!al("2479")
5 <Inadequate for arriving at knowledge of unconscious material=!al("2479")
5 <Dependence on hypnosis=!al("2479")
5 <As being a symptomatic rather than a causal therapy=!al("2479")
5 <Need for a new method=!al("2479")
5 <Move away from the cathartic technique.=!al("2479")
5 <Realization of role played by transference in therapeutic outcome=!al("2479")
5 Search now on for therapeutic technique, independent of hypnosis.=!al("2526")
5 <The need for an independent means of arriving at a knowledge of unconscious material.=!al("2526")
5 <Starts to work with patients in their normal waking state=!al("2526")
5 First approaches. Remembers experiments he witnessed at Nancy (Bernheim).=!al("536")
5 <Sought-after material there but inaccessible because of repression.=!al("536")
5 <Only apparently forgotten. Can be remembered if sufficient pressure applied.=!al("536")
5 <The inability to remember things as being motivated.=!al("536")
5 <Adopts the 'pressure technique'. Advantages. Problems therewith.=!al("536")
5 <What Freud learned from the technique.=!al("536")
5 Abandonment of the `pressure' technique. Reason for.=!al("5616")
5 Finds other means for arriving at a knowledge of unconscious material=!al("583")
5 Free association=!al("2532")
5 Dream interpretation=!al("519")
5 Interpretation of parapraxes, symptomatic acts, chance actions=!al("584")
5 Birth of the new technique of psycho-analysis.=!al("2541")
5 <Distinctions from the cathartic procedure.=!al("2541")
5 Psycho-analysis becomes primarily an interpretive art=!al("2540")
5 Analogy with extracting the pure metal from the ore=!al("5386")
5 Summary of changes undergone in therapeutic technique=!al("2736")
3 The Movement
4 In general=!al("377")
4 As working alone in the first few years=!al("2710")
4 Begins to build up a band of followers around him=!al("2711")
4 The Vienna Psychoanalytic Society=!al("139")
4 Cool reception received in Germany. Rejection from scientific world.=!al("2701")
4 Persons whom Freud credits with having made a contribution to psycho-analysis and its theories=!al("2825")
4 The breakaway movements, in general=!al("894")
4 Freud's discussions of the breakaway movements=!al("2714")
4 Freud's definitions of what is and isn't psycho-analysis=!al("2713")
4 Translations and the translators of Freud's works=!al("2846")
4 Leading Figures In The Psycho-Analytic Movement
5 In general=!al("8997")
5 Karl Abraham=!al("6699")
5 Alfred Adler=!al("6676")
5 Lou Andreas-Salome=!al("8100")
5 H Bernheim=!al("6891")
5 Eugen Bleuler=!al("7081")
5 Marie Bonaparte=!al("9002")
5 Josef Breuer=!al("8998")
5 Anthony Brill=!al("7012")
5 Ernst Brucke=!al("6776")
5 Max Eitingon=!al("7694")
5 Havelock Ellis=!al("6638")
5 Paul Federn=!al("6675")
5 Sandor Ferenczi=!al("7013")
5 G. Stanley Hall=!al("7015")
5 Eduard Hitschmann=!al("7156")
5 L. Jekels=!al("7641")
5 Ernest Jones=!al("6590")
5 Carl Gustav Jung (including references to the Zurich School in general)=!al("6890")
5 Liebeault=!al("6892")
5 Oskar Pfister=!al("6706")
5 J.J. Putnam=!al("7155")
5 Otto Rank=!al("6542")
5 W Reich=!al("9000")
5 T Reik=!al("7203")
5 Joan Riviere=!al("9001")
5 Hanns Sachs=!al("6640")
5 Herbert Silberer=!al("6641")
5 Wilhelm Stekel=!al("6508")
5 James Strachey=!al("6513")
5 Viktor Tausk=!al("6540")
5 Anton von Freund=!al("8999")
5 Helmine von Hug-Hellmuth=!al("7817")
5 Others=!al("7014")
2 Miscellaneous Topics
3 Resistances To Psycho-Analysis And Its Theories
4 <In general=!al("607")
4 <Reasons for. Sources of .Guises under  which these resistances may manifest themselves.=!al("607")
4 <Criticisms usually based on ignorance=!al("607")
4 <(criticisms usually made by people not qualified to do so)=!al("607")
4 <Resistances often based on prudery i.e. on ethical/moral rather than on valid scientific grounds.=!al("607")
4 <Resistances arise mainly in response to the emphasis psycho-analysis lays on sexuality=!al("607")
4 Fears of the dangers posed by psycho-analysis to society as a whole=!al("3463")
4 Resistance to assertion of an unconscious portion of the mind=!al("3451")
4 Resistance to a sexual aetiology for the neuroses=!al("3374")
4 Resistance to assertion of a death instinct [even within psycho-analytic circles]=!al("3130")
3 Criticisms Commonly Applied To Psycho-Analysis And Its Theories.
4 Criticisms of the method itself (validity, credibility of its findings)=!al("1216")
4 <Believability/genuineness of what patient tells us.=!al("1216")
4 <That we may perhaps have forced our own ideas on the patient.=!al("1216")
4 <All our findings based on studies of the abnormal=!al("1216")
4 <Over-concern with sexuality. That we put everything down to sexuality.=!al("1216")
4 <(Note that we don't lose sight of the organic factor.)=!al("1216")
4 <That psycho-analysis seeks to cure the neuroses by giving free reign to sexuality=!al("1216")
4 That our notions of sexuality in children are derived from analyses of adults=!al("1216")
4 <Dualistic view of the instincts=!al("1216")
4 <That every dream is the fulfilment of a sexual wish=!al("1216")
4 <Objections to psycho-analysis as a whole . . .=!al("1216")
4 <That we put all criticism down to resistances=!al("1216")
4 <That psycho-analysis is a threat to all that is best and highest in society=!al("1216")
3 Refutation Of Criticisms. Clearing Up Of Misconceptions.
4 Distinction from philosophy.=!al("2195")
4 <Theories arrived at from observation rather than speculation.=!al("2195")
4 <Driven by practical necessity.=!al("2195")
4 Relationship between the normal and the abnormal.=!al("3904")
4 <The one as being able to throw light on the other.=!al("3904")
4 <[See also under 'Neurosis']=!al("3904")
3 Phantasy In Mental Life
4 In general=!al("5006")
4 Family Romances=!al("125")
4 Retrospective phantasies=!al("4511")
4 Phantasy - as repetitions or modified versions of scenes from infancy=!al("4900")
4 Relationship between phantasy and day-dreaming=!al("4640")
4 Transference phantasies=!al("5579")
4 Relationship between the phantasies of the individual and myths=!al("5343")
4 The legends, myths and fairy tales of mankind, in general=!al("4972")
3 Child Psychology. The Mental Lives Of Children.
4 In general=!al("4478")
4 Value of=!al("4391")
4 Children as at first lacking the ability to distinguish between hallucinations/phantasy and reality=!al("4904")
4 Move away from wishing\; abandonment of hallucinatory satisfaction.=!al("4906")
4 <Learning to postpone satisfaction of desires.=!al("4906")
4 <Learning to find satisfaction by bringing about appropriate changes in the external world.=!al("4906")
4 The megalomania of childhood=!al("4447")
4 Exhibitionism in=!al("4477")
4 Nocturnal enuresis\; relationship to masturbation. Urethral erotism\; relationship to ambition.=!al("4593")
4 Fire. Relationship to bed-wetting. Symbolic meaning of in general.=!al("5140")
4 Night terrors (*pavor nocturnus*) accompanied by hallucinations [in children in particular]=!al("4752")
4 Children's play - function of, purpose served by=!al("4744")
4 Observation of sexual intercourse between adults. Effects thereof.=!al("4751")
4 The child's relation to the father [in general][can move]=!al("4619")
4 Parents' relation to their children =!al("4625")
4 Children's  relation to their parents=!al("5150")
4 Sexual abuse (seduction) of children=!al("5254")
4 Relationship between sexuality and educability=!al("5353")
4 A note on how we are blind to shortcomings in the loved object=!al("4998")
3 Future Prospects of Psycho-Analysis
4 Psycho-analysis unlikely to ever become popular or find widespread acceptance.=!al("4302")
4 Prospects for the future (therapy).=!al("654")
3 Attempted Explanations For Other Medical Conditions
4 In general=!al("3277")
4 A neurotic aetiology for many common medical complaints.=!al("403")
4 Insomnia=!al("4067")
4 Neurotic tiredness=!al("601")
4 Nervous breakdowns=!al("1152")
4 Anorexia=!al("1141")
4 Migraine=!al("3773")
4 Disturbances of vision [See also under 'Hysteria' > 'Hysterical Blindness']=!al("5649")
3 Orthodox Medicine
4 Critique of orthodox medical training and practice=!al("398")
4 <(Ignores the sexual factor\; fails to take into account the patient's sexual circumstances)=!al("398")
4 Critique of orthodox psychiatry=!al("1172")
4 Critique of `alternative' medicine=!al("4244")
4 Role played by suggestion in orthodox medical treatment=!al("564")
3 Freud's Views on Various Topics
4 Abstinence=!al("5507")
4 Marriage=!al("918")
4 Fellow human beings=!al("919")
4 Civilized society/morality=!al("5423")
4 Religion=!al("920")
4 Homosexuality=!al("921")
4 Communism=!al("922")
4 Orthodox medicine=!al("923")
4 Orthodox psychiatry.=!al("924")
4 What constitutes normal sexuality=!al("3764")
4 Society's sexual restrictions/greater sexual freedom=!al("925")
4 Contraception=!al("4410")
4 Benefits which would flow from, a safe method which doesn't interfere with sexual enjoyment=!al("4410")
4 Society's need to come to terms with the claims of sexuality=!al("3522")
4 Sexual enlightenment of children.=!al("1893")
4 <Greater openness regarding in regard to sexual matters=!al("1893")
4 Upbringing of children=!al("3602")
4 Education=!al("5246")
4 Scientific/technological advances=!al("926")
4 Philosophers=!al("927")
4 Mysticism=!al("4279")
4 America/Americans=!al("928")
4 Females=!al("929")
4 Shakespeare=!al("1701")
4 Other=!al("2276")
3 Miscellaneous
4 The notion of ontogeny repeating phylogeny=!al("4684")
4 The concept of knowing, and yet not knowing, something at the same time=!al("3632")
4 The *Project*\; lines of thought, theories emanating from it.=!al("3675")
4 On the nature of our thought-processes, in general=!al("3955")
4 <As being in the nature of small experimental cathexes=!al("3955")
4 Our mental life as being governed by three polarities=!al("5770")
4 The ability of wishes and emotions to exercise an influence over=!al("4029")
4 <the direction taken by our though processes=!al("4029")
4 The ability of the pleasure principle to exercise an influence over/disturb our thought processes=!al("4813")
4 Our beliefs as being influenced by our wishes=!al("4902")
4 Man doesn't generally seek the truth - more inclined to seek wish-fulfilment=!al("272")
4 Speech/communication as having its origin in the child's initial helplessness.=!al("4020")
4 <Origins of speech/language in general.=!al("4020")
4 Art and the artist. Art and neurosis.(including creative writing)=!al("449")
4 <Role of phantasy, day-dreams, unconscious mental processes in=!al("449")
4 Roots of the concept of `beautiful'/`beauty' in sexual excitation=!al("5205")
4 Great men=!al("5549")
4 Distinction between our and earlier views on the role played by sexuality in the neuroses=!al("3460")
4 Freud as having had very little to retract in later years=!al("2494")
4 Freud's initial aversion to a sexual aetiology for the neuroses=!al("3678")
4 Freud as never having wavered from his sexual theory for the neuroses=!al("3122")
4 Origins of the name `psycho-analysis' given to the science/procedure=!al("2542")
4 Psycho-analysis as not being a static science - its theories open to change and modification=!al("2845")
4 Application of psycho-analysis in other fields.=!al("2836")
4 <Its value from a broader perspective.=!al("2836")
4 <Psycho-analysis and its findings not confined to field of psychopathology=!al("2836")
4 <Understanding of mental life in general.=!al("2836")
4 <Understanding of human failings\; improvement of humanity=!al("2836")
4 Psycho-analysis as *Weltanschaung* (philosophy of life) [check spelling]=!al("2839")
2 Case Histories And Sample Analyses
3 Neurosis
4 Anxiety
5 Frau J.P. (Opera singer) (Husband a commercial traveller. Had earlier bad experience with tenor.)=!al("6021")
5 The man with a fear of his room being flooded at night=!al("6051")
5 Lady who falls ill of anxiety neurosis, after a (recent) confinement, shortly after her husband takes ill=!al("6207")
5 Man who has first attack of anxiety at news of death of his father=!al("6200")
5 Man who falls ill of anxiety neurosis ostensibly as a result of quarrels between his wife and his mother=!al("6201")
5 Man who has first anxiety attacks during period when he was studying hard for an examination=!al("6203")
5 Woman who falls ill ostensibly as a result of anxiety over the health of a small niece=!al("6205")
5 Woman suffering from a fear of losing her parents,=!al("8850")
5 <behind which lies an unconscious wish with the same content.=!al("8850")
5 Three-year-old boy calls out of a dark room:=!al("8910")
5 <`Auntie, speak to me! I'm frightened because it's so dark.'=!al("8910")
5 <His aunt answers him: `What good would that do? You can't see me.'=!al("8910")
5 <`That doesn't matter,' replies the child, `if anyone speaks, it gets light.'=!al("8910")
5 <[Thus what he is afraid of is not the dark, but the absence of someone he loves\;=!al("8910")
5 <and he can feel sure of being soothed as soon as he has evidence of that person's presence.]=!al("8910")
4 Phobias
5 Girl with a dread (obsessional fear) of being overcome by the need to urinate=!al("6071")
5 <in a public place where there might not be a toilet available=!al("6071")
5 Young lady with agoraphobia=!al("6597")
5 `The Analysis of a Phobia in a Five-Year-Old Boy'. Little Hans.=!al("6472")
4 Hysteria
5 `Case of Successful Treatment by Hypnotism'. Lady who couldn't breastfeed.=!al("6000")
5 Frau Emmy von N.=!al("6002")
5 Frau Cacilie M.=!al("6064")
5 Frau Elisabeth von R.=!al("6068")
5 Miss Lucy R.=!al("6069")
5 Katharina=!al("6095")
5 Anna O. [See under 'Historical' > 'Breuer And The Case History Of Anna O.'=!al("dummy")
5 Role played by identification in formation of hysterical symptoms=!al("6319")
5 Female patient who passes through a variety of psychical conditions.=!al("6483")
5 <Her illness begins with a state of confusional excitement during which=!al("6483")
5 <she displays a quite special aversion to her mother, hitting and=!al("6483")
5 <abusing her whenever she comes near her bed. Later she develops=!al("6483")
5 <hysterical phobias, the most tormenting of which is a fear that=!al("6483")
5 <something might have happened to her mother.=!al("6483")
5 `Fragment of an Analysis of a Case of Hysteria' [Dora]=!al("6543")
5 Fourteen-year-old girl suffering from dangerous hysterical vomiting.=!al("8898")
5 <She cannot bear the person in charge of her to be in the room while=!al("8898")
5 <she is going to bed, and when she is in bed she has a marked cough, of=!al("8898")
5 <which there is no trace in the daytime.=!al("8898")
5 Young girl: Hysterical attack represents the fulfilment of a phantasy which had arisen=!al("6565")
5 <in her (unconscious) after an encounter with someone on the suburban railway.=!al("6565")
5 Forty-year-old woman: One morning she opens her eyes and sees her=!al("6947")
5 <brother in the room, though, as she knows, he is in fact in an insane=!al("6947")
5 <asylum. Her small son is sleeping in the bed beside her. To save the=!al("6947")
5 <child from having a fright and falling into convulsions when he sees=!al("6947")
5 <his uncle, she pulls the sheet over his face, whereupon the apparition vanishes.=!al("6947")
5 Female patient suffering from hysterical vomiting=!al("6967")
5 Intelligent and unembarrassed-looking girl. She is most surprisingly dressed.=!al("6992")
5 <She is wearing one of her stockings hanging down and two of=!al("6992")
5 <the buttons on her blouse are undone. She complains of having pains in=!al("6992")
5 <her leg and, without being asked, exposes her calf. But what she=!al("6992")
5 <principally complains of is, to use her own words, that she has a=!al("6992")
5 <feeling in her body as though there is something `stuck into it' which=!al("6992")
5 <is `moving backwards and forwards' and is `shaking' her through and=!al("6992")
5 <through: sometimes it makes her whole body feel `stiff.'=!al("6992")
5 Fourteen-year-old boy suffering from *tic convulsif*, hysterical=!al("7000")
5 <vomiting, headaches, etc. During a psycho-analytic session, and with=!al("7000")
5 <eyes closed, he communicates the following: He has been playing at=!al("7000")
5 <draughts with his uncle and sees the board in front of him. He thinks=!al("7000")
5 <of various positions, favourable or unfavourable, and of moves that one=!al("7000")
5 <must not make. He then sees a dagger lying on the board - an object=!al("7000")
5 <that belongs to his father but which his imagination places on the=!al("7000")
5 <board. Then there is a sickle lying on the board and next a scythe.=!al("7000")
5 <There then appears a picture of an old peasant mowing the grass=!al("7000")
5 <in front of his distant home with a scythe.=!al("7000")
5 Young woman, previously devotedly fond of the man she is engaged to, who=!al("8857")
5 <suddenly begins to feel a coldness towards him, accompanied by severe depression.=!al("8857")
5 Female patient: Suddenly finds herself in tears in the street.=!al("9014")
5 <She becomes aware of a phantasy to the effect that she has formed a=!al("9014")
5 <tender attachment to a pianist who is well known in the town (though=!al("9014")
5 <she is not personally acquainted with him)\; she has a child by him=!al("9014")
5 <(though she is in fact childless)\; he thereafter deserts her and her child=!al("9014")
5 <and leaves them in poverty.=!al("9014")
5 Patient who presses her dress up against her body with one hand (as the=!al("9020")
5 <woman), while she tries to tear it off with the other (as the man).=!al("9020")
5 A girl, the daughter of a medical man, falls ill of hysteria with local=!al("9176")
5 <symptoms. Her father denies that it is hysteria and arranges for=!al("9176")
5 <various somatic treatments to be initiated, which bring little=!al("9176")
5 <improvement. One day a woman friend of the girl's says to her:=!al("9176")
5 <`Have you never thought of consulting Dr. F.?' To which she replies:=!al("9176")
5 <`What good would that be? I know he'd say to me: "Have you ever had the=!al("9176")
5 <idea of having sexual intercourse with your father?"'=!al("9176")
5 <[It has never been Freud's practice to ask such questions. The girl's words may,=!al("9176")
5 <however, be understood as a revelation of her own pathogenic phantasy.]=!al("9176")
5 Woman with fear of insanity/of going mad=!al("3603")
4 Obsessional Neurosis
5 Girl attending school of needlework plagued with obsessional idea of not=!al("6049")
5 <being *finished*, needing to *make* more.=!al("6049")
5 Girl with guilt over having made counterfeit money/having murdered someone=!al("6070")
5 Woman suffering from obsessional impulses to throw herself off the balcony=!al("6076")
5 <+ (obsessional) fears of stabbing child with any sharp knife she happens to see.=!al("6076")
5 Girl with irrational hatred for servants=!al("6085")
5 Medical student who reproached himself for having killed cousin, for=!al("6086")
5 <having violated sister, for having set fire to house, for having=!al("6086")
5 <possibly killed the last passer-by.=!al("6086")
5 Woman with arithmomania=!al("6091")
5 Woman suffering from attacks of obsessional brooding and speculating=!al("6092")
5 Woman who collected scraps of paper=!al("6093")
5 Woman with mysophobia [fear of dirt]=!al("6094")
5 Eleven year old boy with sleep ceremonial=!al("6218")
5 Young man who is unable to go out into the street because he is tortured=!al("6489")
5 <by the fear that he will kill everyone he meets. He spends his days in=!al("6489")
5 <preparing his alibi in case he might be charged with one of the murders committed in the town.=!al("6489")
5 'From the History of an Infantile Neurosis' (The 'Wolf Man')=!al("548")
5 `Notes Upon a Case of Obsessional Neurosis'. (The `Rat Man'.)=!al("6541")
5 The 'rat man': The day on which his cousin leaves U. he finds a stone=!al("9143")
5 <lying in the roadway and has a phantasy that her carriage might hit up=!al("9143")
5 <against it and she might come to grief. He therefore puts it out of the=!al("9143")
5 <way, but twenty minutes later it occurs to him that this is absurd and=!al("9143")
5 <goes back in order to replace the stone in its position.=!al("9143")
5 Young obsessional neurotic who dreams that his father is scolding him=!al("6563")
5 <for coming home so late. [See also below]=!al("6563")
5 Patient whose obsessions are direct derivatives of infantile masturbation.=!al("8896")
5 Girl who is under a compulsion to rinse round her wash-basin several times after washing.=!al("8985")
5 Woman who is living apart from her husband is subject to a compulsion,=!al("8987")
5 <whenever she eats anything, to leave what is the best of it behind.=!al("8987")
5 Woman who can only sit on one particular chair and can only get up from it with difficulty.=!al("8989")
5 Patient who runs out of her room into another room, in the middle of=!al("8991")
5 <which is a table. She straightens the table-cloth on it in a particular=!al("8991")
5 <manner and rings for the housemaid. The latter has to come up to the=!al("8991")
5 <table, and the patient then dismisses her on some indifferent errand.=!al("8991")
5 Woman who writes down the number of every bank-note before parting with it.=!al("8995")
5 Young girl whose unanswered questions regarding the origin of babies=!al("9011")
5 <leads to obsessional brooding, later giving way to a dementia praecox.=!al("9011")
5 After a quarrel with his brother a man begins brooding over the best=!al("9013")
5 <means of getting rid of his fortune, and declares that he does not want=!al("9013")
5 <to have anything more to do with money, and so on. His brother is=!al("9013")
5 <called Richard, and `*richard*' is the French for `a rich man'.=!al("9013")
5 A patient, while walking in the park, kicks his foot against a branch=!al("9038")
5 <that is lying on the ground. He picks it up and flings it into the=!al("9038")
5 <hedge that borders the path. On his way home he is suddenly seized with=!al("9038")
5 <uneasiness that the branch in its new position might perhaps be=!al("9038")
5 <projecting a little from the hedge and might cause an injury to some=!al("9038")
5 <one passing by the same place after him. He is obliged to jump off his=!al("9038")
5 <tram, hurry back to the park, find the place again, and put the branch back in its position.=!al("9038")
5 The patient, a government official, is troubled by innumerable scruples.=!al("9051")
5 <Freud is struck by the fact that the florin notes with which he pays=!al("9051")
5 <his consultation fees are invariably clean and smooth. The patient=!al("9051")
5 <informs him that his florins are by no means new, but that he has them ironed out at home.=!al("9051")
5 Lady, while going for a walk with her husband, makes him take her into a=!al("9058")
5 <shop, where she purchases various objects for her child and amongst=!al("9058")
5 <them a comb. Her husband, finding that the shopping is too long a=!al("9058")
5 <business for his taste, says that he noticed some coins in an antique=!al("9058")
5 <shop on the way which he is anxious to secure, adding that after he has=!al("9058")
5 <made his purchase he will come and fetch her in the shop in which they=!al("9058")
5 <at present are. But he stays away, as she thinks, far too long. When he=!al("9058")
5 <comes back she accordingly asks him where he has been. He replies that=!al("9058")
5 <he has been at the antique shop. At that instant she is seized by a=!al("9058")
5 <tormenting doubt whether she has not as a matter of fact always=!al("9058")
5 <possessed the comb which she has just bought for her child.=!al("9058")
5 Patient who prohibits herself from wearing any sort of personal adornment.=!al("9069")
5 Lady patient suffering severely from obsessional acts. She has become=!al("9071")
5 <disintegrated into an easy-going and lively personality and into an=!al("9071")
5 <exceedingly gloomy and ascetic one. She puts forward the first of them=!al("9071")
5 <as her official ego, while in fact she is dominated by the second.=!al("9071")
5 <Behind her ascetic personality may be discerned ancient and long-repressed wishful impulses.=!al("9071")
5 Woman patient: before going to sleep she performs a ceremonial in which=!al("9215")
5 <she has to lay her small top pillow diamond-wise on the other ones and=!al("9215")
5 <to rest her head exactly in the long diameter of the diamond-shape.=!al("9215")
5 Other=!al("3342")
3 Psychosis
4 Hallucinatory Wish-Fulfilling Psychosis (Hallucinatory Confusion)
5 Girl who passes into state of hallucinatory confusion when man she loves doesn't arrive.=!al("6082")
4 Paranoia
5 Lady who has `embarrassing' experience with lodger=!al("6016")
5 Paranoia in a thirty-two year old woman (Frau P.)=!al("6219")
5 The paranoiac who concludes that there is a general understanding in his=!al("8771")
5 <environment, because when his train moves out of the station the people=!al("8771")
5 <all make a particular movement with one hand.=!al("8771")
5 The paranoiac who notes the way people walk in the street,=!al("8774")
5 <how they flourish their walking sticks, and so on.=!al("8774")
5 `Psycho-Analytic Notes Upon An Autobiographical Account Of A Case Of Paranoia (Dementia Paranoides)'=!al("8853")
5 <(Schreber)=!al("8853")
5 Young woman asks a lawyer to protect her from the molestations of a man=!al("9209")
5 <who had drawn her into a love-affair. She declares that this man=!al("9209")
5 <abused her confidence by getting unseen witnesses to photograph them=!al("9209")
5 <while they were making love, and that by exhibiting these pictures it=!al("9209")
5 <was now in his power to bring disgrace on her and force her to resign the post she occupied.=!al("9209")
5 Other=!al("6017")
4 Schizophrenia
5 Twenty-year-old patient: During the initial stages of his illness he=!al("9166")
5 <makes a considerable improvement and is removed from the institution by his parents.=!al("9166")
5 <For about a week he is regaled with entertainments of=!al("9166")
5 <every kind to celebrate his supposed recovery. His relapse follows=!al("9166")
5 <immediately upon this week of festivities. On his return to the=!al("9166")
5 <institution, he says that the consulting physician had advised him `to flirt with his mother a little'.=!al("9166")
5 <[In this delusory paramnesia he is giving expression to the excitement=!al("9166")
5 <which was provoked in him by being in his mother's company and which=!al("9166")
5 <was the immediate provocation of his relapse.]=!al("9166")
5 Girl in early stages of schizophrenia who, after a quarrel with her=!al("9190")
5 <lover, complains that *her eyes are not right, they are twisted*.=!al("9190")
5 <Second communication by the patient: She is standing in church.=!al("9190")
5 <Suddenly she feels a jerk\; she has to *change her position, as though=!al("9190")
5 <somebody is putting her into a position, as though she is being put in a certain position*.=!al("9190")
5 Patient who has allowed himself to be withdrawn from all the interests=!al("9196")
5 <of life on account of a bad condition of the skin of his face.=!al("9196")
5 <He declares that he has blackheads and deep holes in his face which everyone notices.=!al("9196")
5 <[Analysis shows that he is playing out his castration complex on his skin.]=!al("9196")
5 Patient of Tausk's who behaves in some respects exactly as though he is=!al("9202")
5 <suffering from an obsessional neurosis\; he takes hours to wash and=!al("9202")
5 <dress, and so on. In putting on his stockings he is disturbed by the=!al("9202")
5 <idea that he must pull apart the stitches in the knitting, i.e. the=!al("9202")
5 <holes, and to him every hole is a symbol of the female genitals.=!al("9202")
5 <[The key to the diagnosis of schizophrenia here is the fact that he is=!al("9202")
5 <able to give the meaning of his inhibitions without any resistance.]=!al("9202")
4 Delusion
5 Wilhelm Jensen's *Gradiva*=!al("8958")
4 Melancholia
5 Woman who has passed the greater part of her life in a state alternating=!al("8920")
5 <between mania and melancholia. Freud takes the case on at the close of=!al("8920")
5 <a period of melancholia and for two weeks things seem to go smoothly\;=!al("8920")
5 <in the third week she is already at the beginning of the next attack of mania=!al("8920")
3 Mixed Neurosis
4 Woman who has insomnia after hears brother being taken away to asylum.=!al("6032")
4 <Later has anxiety in relation to driving. Accident when hears horses bolting.=!al("6032")
3 Miscellaneous
4 `*Tic convulsif*' - man who couldn't help calling out name `Maria'=!al("6006")
4 Girl with fear of picking flowers/pulling up mushrooms=!al("6034")
4 Woman who has multiple orgasms with older man but is anaesthetic with younger man=!al("6053")
4 Man who goes red and sweats every time he meets up with a certain=!al("6057")
4 <category of acquaintance, especially at the theatre.=!al("6057")
4 Emma - Lady unable to go into shops alone.=!al("6025")
4 Case of *pavor nocturnus* in a thirteen-year-old boy=!al("6991")
4 Fourteen-year-old girl, who has already begun to menstruate, arrives=!al("9023")
4 <from the books she has read at the idea that being married consists in=!al("9023")
4 <a `mixing of blood'\; and since her own sister has not yet started her=!al("9023")
4 <periods, she makes an assault on a female visitor who has confessed=!al("9023")
4 <she is just then menstruating, so as to force her to take part in this `blood mixing'.=!al("9023")
4 Woman with `housewife's psychosis'=!al("8856")
4 Other=!al("1854")
3 Motives For Being Ill. Secondary Gain From Illness
4 A bricklayer falls off a house and is crippled. He now earns his livelihood=!al("8861")
4 <by begging at the street-corner. His disability has become his source of income.=!al("8861")
4 A little girl does not enjoy having to share the affection of her=!al("8865")
4 <parents with her brothers and sisters. She discovers that illness is a=!al("8865")
4 <means of enticing out her parents' love.=!al("8865")
4 <Later, as an adult, she finds herself married to an inconsiderate=!al("8865")
4 <husband. Ill-health is her one weapon for maintaining her position.=!al("8865")
4 <It procures her the care she longs for.=!al("8865")
3 Symptoms And The Neuroses In General
4 Symptoms as compromise-structures - as satisfying both parties to the conflict - hysterical vomiting.=!al("6055")
4 Role played by phantasy in=!al("6384")
4 Requirement that both parties to the conflict be satisfied if a neurotic symptom is to come into being=!al("6968")
4 Neurotic symptoms as the outcome of a conflict between two opposing forces or agencies=!al("6971")
3 Dreams
4 Children's Dreams
5 Nineteen-month-old Anna's dream of `Stwawbewwies'=!al("6047")
5 Five-and-a-quarter-year-old son: dreams he is at the Simony Hutte=!al("6282")
5 Eight-and-a-half-year-old daughter: dreams twelve-year-old neighbour's son Emil=!al("6281")
5 <is one of the family. Mother comes in and throws a handful of chocolate bars under their beds.=!al("6281")
5 Eight-year-old girl who dreams she went to the Rohrer Hutte and the Hameau=!al("6285")
5 Three-and-a-quarter-year-old daughter: dreams she went on the lake=!al("6287")
5 Eight-year-old son: Is driving in a chariot with Achilles and Diomede is the charioteer.=!al("6288")
5 Twenty-two-month-old nephew Hermann has to hand Freud a basket of=!al("6293")
5 <cherries congratulating him on his birthday. Reluctantly does so.=!al("6293")
5 <Dreams that night that he has eaten all the cherries.=!al("6293")
5 Little girl, not quite four years old: has been brought to town from the=!al("7023")
5 <country because she is suffering from an attack of poliomyelitis. She=!al("7023")
5 <spends the night with an aunt who has no children, and is put to sleep=!al("7023")
5 <in a large bed - a bed much too large for her. She has a dream in which=!al("7023")
5 <the bed is far too small for her, and that there is been no room for her in it.=!al("7023")
4 Own
5 `You are requested to close the eyes/an eye.'=!al("6022")
5 Casa SECERNO=!al("6024")
5 Over-affectionate dream towards daughter Mathilde (Hella)=!al("6036")
5 Going up staircase semi-clothed. Chased by woman. Finds himself glued to spot.=!al("6037")
5 Old lady who makes him carry off *zehners* and give them to her.=!al("6044")
5 Irma's injection=!al("6049")
5 Pictures of a simple church tower appear in his dreams. Cannot place its=!al("6238")
5 <origin. Later recognizes it as being on a small station on the=!al("6238")
5 <line between Salzburg and Reichenhall=!al("6238")
5 Dreams in which he sees a dark space on his left side out of which=!al("6241")
5 <there glimmer a number of grotesque sandstone figures.=!al("6241")
5 Dream in which a/the picture/image of the town doctor of his childhood=!al("6249")
5 <is merged with that of a schoolmaster [both only have one eye]=!al("6249")
5 Dreams he is drinking water out of an Etruscan cinerary urn which he had given away as a present.=!al("6276")
5 Friend Dr. R. is his uncle. Has great feeling of affection for him.=!al("6301")
5 <His face has changed somewhat - has been drawn out lengthways and has a yellow beard.=!al("6301")
5 Hypocritical dream in which he dreams of reconciliation with friend=!al("6312")
5 Dream of the botanical monograph=!al("6351")
5 Once more working at chemistry in the University laboratory. Hofrat L.=!al("6355")
5 <invites him to come somewhere and walks in front of him along the=!al("6355")
5 <corridor, holding a lamp or some other instrument before him . . .=!al("6355")
5 Dream in which a young doctor friend of his, just starting out in=!al("6366")
5 <practise, is sitting in a fashionable drawing room in a select company=!al("6366")
5 <composed of all the distinguished and wealthy people of Freud's=!al("6366")
5 <acquaintance and is delivering a funeral oration on an old lady.=!al("6366")
5 Dream in which he is looking out of a railway-carriage window at the=!al("6403")
5 <Tiber and the Ponte Sant' Angelo=!al("6403")
5 Dream in which someone led him to the top of a hill and showed him Rome half-shrouded=!al("6405")
5 <in mist\; it was so far away that he was surprised at his view of it being so clear.=!al("6405")
5 Dream in which he at last gets to Rome but is disappointed to find that=!al("6408")
5 <the scenery was far from being of an urban character.=!al("6408")
5 He is in Rome and sees a street-corner before him. He is surprised to=!al("6416")
5 <find so many posters in German stuck up there.=!al("6416")
5 Goes into a kitchen in search of some pudding. Three women are standing in it\;=!al("6435")
5 <one of them is the hostess of the inn and is twisting something=!al("6435")
5 <about in her hands, as though she is making Knodel.=!al("6435")
5 <Dream of the three Fates=!al("6435")
5 A crowd of people, a meeting of students. A count (Thun or Taaffe) is=!al("6438")
5 <speaking. . . It is as though the second problem is to get out of the=!al("6438")
5 <town, just as the first one was to get out of the house. He is driving=!al("6438")
5 <in a cab and has ordered the driver to drive him to a station. `I can't=!al("6438")
5 <drive with you along the railway-line itself,' he says, after the=!al("6438")
5 <driver raised some objection, as though he has overtired him. It is as=!al("6438")
5 <if he has already driven with him for some of the distance one normally travels by train.=!al("6438")
5 Is riding on a grey horse, timidly and awkwardly to begin with, as=!al("6440")
5 <though he is only reclining upon it. He meets one of his colleagues, P.,=!al("6440")
5 <who is sitting high on a horse, dressed in a tweed suit, and who=!al("6440")
5 <draws his attention to something (probably to his bad seat).=!al("6440")
5 Dreams that the Pope is dead=!al("6447")
5 Sees in the window of a book-shop a new volume in one of the series of=!al("6496")
5 <monographs for connoisseurs - monographs on great artists, on world=!al("6496")
5 <history, on famous cities, etc. The new series is called=!al("6496")
5 <`Famous Speakers' or `Speeches' and its first volume bears the name of Dr Lecher.=!al("6496")
5 (Introductory dream:) Man he knows on the staff of the University says to him:=!al("6501")
5 <`My son, the Myops.'=!al("6501")
5 (Followed by main dream:) On account of certain events which have=!al("6819")
5 <occurred in the city of Rome, it has become necessary to remove the=!al("6819")
5 <children to safety, and this is done. The scene is then in front of a=!al("6819")
5 <gateway, double doors in the ancient style (the `Porta Romana' at=!al("6819")
5 <Sienna, as he is aware during the dream itself). . . .The boy refuses=!al("6819")
5 <to kiss her, but, holding out his hand in farewell, says `AUF GESERES'=!al("6819")
5 <to her,and then `AUF UNGESERES' to the two of them (or to one of them).=!al("6819")
5 <He has a notion that this last phrase denotes a preference.=!al("6819")
5 His friend Otto is looking ill. His face is brown and he has protruding eyes.=!al("6503")
5 Dreams the sentence: `*Its written in a positively norekdal style*.'=!al("6522")
5 Dream whose central point is a sea voyage and in which the next stopping=!al("6530")
5 <place appears to be `*Hearsing*' and the next after that `*Fliess.*'=!al("6530")
5 Dream consisting of two pieces: First piece is the word=!al("6532")
5 <`*Autodidasker*', which he recalls vividly. The second part is a short=!al("6532")
5 <and harmless phantasy to the effect that when he next saw Professor N.=!al("6532")
5 <he would say to him: `The patient about whose condition I consulted you=!al("6532")
5 <recently is in fact only suffering from a neurosis, just as you suspected.'=!al("6532")
5 Is laying before his friend [Fliess] a difficult and long-sought theory of bisexuality.=!al("6568")
5 Is in a place which is a mixture of a private sanatorium and several=!al("6578")
5 <other institutions. A man-servant appears to summon him to an=!al("6578")
5 <examination. He knows in the dream that something has been missed and=!al("6578")
5 <that the examination is due to a suspicion that he has appropriated the missing article.=!al("6578")
5 Brucke has set him the task of making a dissection\; . . . He fishes=!al("6749")
5 <something out that looks like a piece of crumpled silver-paper.=!al("6749")
5 He has gone/goes to Brucke's laboratory at night and, in response to a=!al("6773")
5 <gentle knock on the door, he opens it to (the late) Professor Fleischl,=!al("6773")
5 <who comes in with a number of strangers and, after exchanging a few=!al("6773")
5 <words, sit down at his table. (This is followed by a second dream.)=!al("6773")
5 <His friend Fl. has come to Vienna unobtrusively in July. He meets him=!al("6773")
5 <in the street in conversation with his (deceased) friend P., and goes=!al("6773")
5 <with them to some place where they sit opposite each other as though=!al("6773")
5 <they were at a small table . . . . Fl turns to him and asks him how much he=!al("6773")
5 <has told P. about his affairs. He tries to explain to Fl. that P.=!al("6773")
5 <(could not understand anything at all, of course, because he) was not=!al("6773")
5 <alive. But what he actually says - and he himself notices the mistake - is `NON VIXIT.'=!al("6773")
5 After his death his father plays a political part among the Magyars and=!al("6780")
5 <brings them together politically. (Here he sees a small and indistinct picture:)=!al("6780")
5 <a crowd of men as though they are in the Reichstag\; someone=!al("6780")
5 <is standing on one or two chairs, with other people round him. He=!al("6780")
5 <remembers how like Garibaldi he had looked on his death-bed, and feels=!al("6780")
5 <glad that that promise had come true.=!al("6780")
5 He receives a communication from the town council of his birthplace=!al("6808")
5 <concerning the fees due for someone's maintenance in the hospital in=!al("6808")
5 <the year 1851, which had been necessitated by an attack he had had in=!al("6808")
5 <his house. He is amused by this since, in the first place, he was not yet alive=!al("6808")
5 <in 1851 and, in the second place, his father, to whom it might have related, is already dead.=!al("6808")
5 One of his acquaintances, Herr M., has been attacked in an essay with an=!al("6814")
5 <unjustifiable degree of violence, as they all thought - by no less a=!al("6814")
5 <person than Goethe. Herr M. is naturally crushed by the attack.=!al("6814")
5 <He complains of it bitterly to some company at table\; his veneration=!al("6814")
5 <for Goethe has not been affected, however, by this personal experience.=!al("6814")
5 He is going to the hospital with P. through a district in which there=!al("6828")
5 <are houses and gardens. At the same time he has a notion that he has=!al("6828")
5 <often seen this district before in dreams.  He does not know my way=!al("6828")
5 <about very well. He shows him a road that leads round the corner to a=!al("6828")
5 <restaurant (indoors, not a garden). There he asks for Frau Doni and is=!al("6828")
5 <told that she lives at the back in a small room with three children. He=!al("6828")
5 <goes towards it, but before he gets there meets an indistinct figure=!al("6828")
5 <with his two little girls\; he takes them with him after he has stood=!al("6828")
5 <with them for a little while. Some sort of reproach against his wife, for leaving them there.=!al("6828")
5 Is travelling along the *Sudbahn* railway line, and in his sleep he=!al("6839")
5 <hears: `Hollthurn, ten minutes' being called out. He at once thinks of=!al("6839")
5 <holothurians  - of a natural history museum - that this is the spot at=!al("6839")
5 <which valiant men have fought in vain against the superior power of the=!al("6839")
5 <ruler of their country - yes, the Counter-Reformation in Austria - it=!al("6839")
5 <is as though it is a place in Styria or the Tyrol.=!al("6839")
5 <While writing down dream recalls second piece: Says [in English] to=!al("6839")
5 <the brother and sister, referring to a particular work of Schiller's:=!al("6839")
5 <`It is from . . .,' but corrects himself: `It is by . . .' `Yes,' =!al("6839")
5 <the man comments to his sister, `he said that right.'=!al("6839")
5 A castle by the sea\; later it is no longer immediately on the sea, but=!al("6857")
5 <on a narrow canal leading to the sea. The Governor is a Herr P. He is=!al("6857")
5 <standing with him in a big reception room - with three windows in front=!al("6857")
5 <of which there rise buttresses with what look like crenellations. He is=!al("6857")
5 <attached to the garrison as something in the nature of a volunteer=!al("6857")
5 <naval officer. They fear the arrival of enemy warships, since they are=!al("6857")
5 <in a state of war. Herr P. intends to leave, and gives him instructions=!al("6857")
5 <as to what is to be done if the event that they fear takes place. . . .=!al("6857")
5 <There now comes a small ship, cut off short, in a comic fashion, in the=!al("6857")
5 <middle. On its deck some curious cup-shaped or box-shaped objects are=!al("6857")
5 <visible. They call out with one voice: `That's the breakfast-ship!'=!al("6857")
5 A hill, on which there is something like an open-air closet: a very=!al("6868")
5 <long seat with a large hole at the end of it. Its back edge is thickly=!al("6868")
5 <covered with small heaps of faeces of all sizes and degrees of=!al("6868")
5 <freshness. There are bushes behind the seat. He micturates on the seat\;=!al("6868")
5 <a long stream of urine washes everything clean\; the lumps of faeces=!al("6868")
5 <come away easily and fall into the opening. It is as though at the end there is still some left.=!al("6868")
5 He says to his wife that he has a piece of news for her, something=!al("6961")
5 <quite special. She is alarmed and refuses to listen. He assures her=!al("6961")
5 <that on the contrary it is something that she would be very glad to=!al("6961")
5 <hear, and begins to tell her that their son's officer's mess had sent a=!al("6961")
5 <sum of money (5000 Kronen?) . . .something about distinction . . .distribution. . . .=!al("6961")
5 Sees his beloved mother, with a peculiarly peaceful, sleeping expression=!al("6984")
5 <on her features, being carried into the room by two (or three) people=!al("6984")
5 <with bird's beaks and laid upon the bed.=!al("6984")
5 Company at table or table d'hote . . . spinach is being eaten . . .=!al("7017")
5 <Frau E. L. . is sitting beside him\; she is turning her whole attention=!al("7017")
5 <to him and lays her hand on his knee in an intimate manner. He removes=!al("7017")
5 <her hand unresponsively. She then says: "But you've always had such=!al("7017")
5 <beautiful eyes." . . . He then has an indistinct picture of two eyes, as=!al("7017")
5 <though it is a drawing or like the outline of a pair of spectacles. . .=!al("7017")
5 A sort of swimming-pool. The bathers are scattering in all directions\;=!al("7032")
5 <at one point on the edge of the pool someone is standing and bending=!al("7032")
5 <towards one of the people bathing, as though to help her out of the water.=!al("7032")
5 Is sitting on a bench with one of his former University teachers, and=!al("7036")
5 <the bench, which is surrounded by other benches, is moving forward at a rapid pace.=!al("7036")
5 Is sitting in a railway carriage and holding on his lap an object in=!al("7039")
5 <the shape of a top-hat, which however is made of transparent glass.=!al("7039")
4 Other
5 Medical student (Rudolph) who dreams he is already at work at the hospital=!al("6019")
5 Woman who had been obliged to undergo an operation on her jaw which had=!al("6448")
5 <taken an unfavourable course, is ordered by her doctors to wear a=!al("6448")
5 <cooling apparatus on the side of her face day and night.=!al("6448")
5 Woman who dreams that that her period has started=!al("6451")
5 Woman who dreams that she has some milk stains on the front of her vest=!al("6452")
5 Young woman  who has been cut off from society for weeks on end while=!al("6453")
5 <nursing her child through an infectious illness. After the child's=!al("6453")
5 <recovery, she has a dream of being at a party at which, among others,=!al("6453")
5 <she meets Alphonse Daudet, Paul Bourget, and Marcel Prevost.=!al("6453")
5 Man who is arrested for having killed a child=!al("6035")
5 Sample dream given by Hildebrandt - man selling wine to Napoleon on St Helena=!al("6220")
5 Dream dreamt by Delboeuf in which he has access to mnemic material not=!al("6221")
5 <available to him in waking life (A procession of lizards feeding on a=!al("6221")
5 <type of fern whose official Latin name he is able to recall in the dream)=!al("6221")
5 Maury: knows exact location of place Mussidan in dream but not in waking life.=!al("6225")
5 Scaliger -  Brugnolus appears and complains to Scaliger that he has been=!al("6227")
5 <overlooked by him in a/his poem in praise of the famous men of Verona=!al("6227")
5 The Marquis d'Hervey de St. Denys - Dreams of blonde girl talking to his=!al("6229")
5 <sister who is doing embroidery. She is familiar to him but can't place where he knows her from.=!al("6229")
5 <Has second dream in which she tells him they had met at the *plage* at Pornic.=!al("6229")
5 The Marquis d'Hervey de St. Denys - Musician acquaintance of his hears a=!al("6233")
5 <tune in a dream which seemed to him entirely new. Several years later=!al("6233")
5 <discovers same tune in an old collected volume of musical pieces,=!al("6233")
5 <although he cannot recall ever having looked at it before.=!al("6233")
5 Patient who dreams he ordered a `*Kontuszowka'=!al("6237")
5 Maury's dream in which he remembers the name of the watchman of the=!al("6243")
5 <bridge at Trilport whose building his father had supervised=!al("6243")
5 [Related by Maury] Monsieur F., on night before leaving for Montbrison,=!al("6245")
5 <dreams he meets Monsieur T. - a friend of his father's. When actually=!al("6245")
5 <reaches Montbrison meets Monsieur T. and recognizes him as the person in his dream.=!al("6245")
5 Maury: He is on a pilgrimage (*pelerinage*) to Jerusalem or Mecca\; after=!al("6932")
5 <many adventures he finds himself visiting *Pell*etier, the chemist, who=!al("6932")
5 <after some conversation, gives him a zinc shovel (*pelle*)\; in the next=!al("6932")
5 <part of the dream this turns into a great broad-sword.=!al("6932")
5 Maury: He is walking along a highway and reading the number of=!al("6936")
5 <Kilometres on the milestones\; then he is in a grocer's shop where there=!al("6936")
5 <is a big pair of scales, and a man is putting kilogram weights into=!al("6936")
5 <the scale in order to weigh him\; the grocer then says to him:=!al("6936")
5 <`You're not in Paris but on the island of Gilolo.' Several other scenes=!al("6936")
5 <follow, in which he sees a Lobelia flower, and then General Lopez, of whose death=!al("6936")
5 <he has read shortly before. Finally, while he is playing a game of lotto, he wakes up.=!al("6936")
5 Delboeuf - relates/tells of a dream of a colleague in which a dangerous=!al("6251")
5 <carriage accident from which he escaped miraculously is reproduced in its entirety.=!al("6251")
5 Napoleon I - is woken by a bomb-explosion while asleep in his carriage.=!al("6460")
5 <Has had a dream in which he was once more crossing the Tagliamento=!al("6460")
5 <under the Austrian bombardment, and at last started up with a cry: `We are undermined!'=!al("6460")
5 Maury - dream in which he is [/has been] executed at the guillotine.=!al("6258")
5 <[Top of the bed had fallen down and struck his cervical vertebrae]=!al("6258")
5 Anna's grandmother - obliged, for health reasons, to go without food for a whole day.=!al("6290")
5 <Dreams she has been `asked out' for both principal meals.=!al("6290")
5 <Is served at both with the most appetizing delicacies.=!al("6290")
5 Woman who offers `love services' during war-time=!al("6308")
5 Woman whose wish to give a supper-party is frustrated because she only=!al("6315")
5 <has a little smoked salmon in the house, it is Sunday afternoon and all the shops are shut=!al("6315")
5 Woman who dreams that she is travelling with her mother-in-law down to=!al("6321")
5 <the place in the countryside where they were to spend their holidays together=!al("6321")
5 School-friend of Freud's (now a barrister) who dreams that he lost all his cases=!al("6324")
5 Young girl who dreams that her sister's only surviving child [Karl] is lying dead in a coffin=!al("6326")
5 Woman who dreams that she saw her only, fifteen-year-old daughter lying dead `in a case'=!al("6328")
5 Young physician - dreams that an acquaintance of his had returned from a=!al("6330")
5 <meeting of t tax commissioners and informed him that, while no objection=!al("6330")
5 <had been raised to any of the other tax returns, general suspicion=!al("6330")
5 <had been raised by his and a heavy fine had been imposed on him=!al("6330")
5 Dream dreamt by patient who succeeds in continuing treatment against=!al("6334")
5 <will of relatives and of authorities whose opinions had been consulted.=!al("6334")
5 <Dreams that her people forbade her to go on seeing him. She reminds him=!al("6334")
5 <of a promise he had given her that if necessary he would continue the=!al("6334")
5 <treatment without a fee. He replies that he cannot make any allowances in money matters.=!al("6334")
5 Physician who dreams that he sees upon his left index-finger the first=!al("6340")
5 <indication [*Primaraffekt*] of syphilis on the terminal phalange=!al("6340")
5 Young man dreams that=!al("6345")
5 <I. His elder brother was chaffing him=!al("6345")
5 <II. Two grown men were caressing each other with a homosexual purpose.=!al("6345")
5 <III. His brother had sold the business of which he himself had looked=!al("6345")
5 <forward to becoming the director of.=!al("6345")
5 Woman who arrives too late at the market and can get neither meat nor vegetables:=!al("6371")
5 <She goes the market with her cook, who is carrying the basket. After=!al("6371")
5 <she has asked for something, the butcher says to her: `That's not=!al("6371")
5 <obtainable any longer,' and offers her something else, adding `This is=!al("6371")
5 <good too.' She rejects it and goes on to the woman who sells=!al("6371")
5 <vegetables, who tries to get her to buy a peculiar vegetable that is=!al("6371")
5 <tied up in bundles but is of a black colour. She says: `I don't=!al("6371")
5 <recognize that\; I won't take it.'=!al("6371")
5 Woman whose husband asks her whether they ought not to have the piano=!al("6374")
5 <tuned. She relies that it is not worth while - the hammers need reconditioning in any case.=!al("6374")
5 Young man who dreams that he was putting on his winter overcoat once more, which was a dreadful thing.=!al("6385")
5 Woman who dreams that she was putting a candle into a candlestick\; but=!al("6387")
5 <the candle broke so that it wouldn't stand up properly. The girls at her=!al("6387")
5 <school said she was clumsy\; but the mistress said it was not her fault.=!al("6387")
5 Woman who dreams of what she really did yesterday: She filled a small=!al("6390")
5 <trunk so full of books that that she had difficulty in shutting it and she dreamt just what really happened.=!al("6390")
5 Man who dreams of seeing his former tutor in bed with the nurse who had=!al("6394")
5 <been with his family till his eleventh year=!al("6394")
5 Physician - has dreams in which a yellow lion frequently appears=!al("6397")
5 Physician, after reading Nansen's narrative of his polar expedition, has=!al("6400")
5 <dream of being in a field of ice and of giving the gallant explorer=!al("6400")
5 <galvanic treatment for an attack of sciatica from which he was suffering=!al("6400")
5 Dream of patient's in which a traumatic sexual episode from twenty-three years ago is reproduced.=!al("6423")
5 Woman, all of whose dreams were characterized by her being `rushed'.=!al("6425")
5 <Dreams she was going to call on a woman friend\; her mother told her to=!al("6425")
5 <take a cab and not to walk\;but she ran instead and kept on falling down=!al("6425")
5 Woman who dreams she is in a big room in which all sorts of machines are=!al("6428")
5 <standing, like what she imagines an orthopaedic institute to be.=!al("6428")
5 Man who sees two boys struggling. They are barrel-maker's boys, to judge=!al("6431")
5 <by the implements lying around.=!al("6431")
5 Woman who goes out in a violent rush to do some commissions. In the=!al("6432")
5 <Graben she sinks down on her knees, as though she is quite broken-down.=!al("6432")
5 A young barrister, fresh from his first important bankruptcy proceedings,=!al("6464")
5 <has a dream of a certain G. Reich of *Husyatin* whom he had come across during a bankruptcy case.=!al("6464")
5 Female patient: A whole crowd of children - all her brothers, sisters and cousins of both sexes - =!al("6473")
5 <are romping in a field. Suddenly they all grow wings, fly away and disappear.=!al("6473")
5 Female patient: As a four-year-old has dream that a lynx or a fox is=!al("6476")
5 <walking on the roof\; then something falls down or she falls down\; and=!al("6476")
5 <then her mother is carried out of the house dead.=!al("6476")
5 Female patient: Has a [large]number of dreams which are concerned with t=!al("6480")
5 <death of her mother. In one she is attending an old woman's funeral. In=!al("6480")
5 <another she and her sister are sitting at a table dressed in mourning.=!al("6480")
5 Child of under four years: sees a big dish with a big joint of roast meat and vegetables on it.=!al("6493")
5 <All at once the joint has been eaten up - whole and without being cut up.=!al("6493")
5 [`A Lovely Dream'] [The `Up and Down' dream] [Sappho]=!al("6514")
5 <Male patient: Is driving with a large party to X Street, in which there=!al("6514")
5 <is an unpretentious inn. There is a play being acted inside it. At one=!al("6514")
5 <moment he is audience, at another actor.=!al("6514")
5 The may-beetle dream. Elderly lady has a dream in which she calls to mind=!al("6517")
5 <that she has two may-beetles in a box and that she must set them free=!al("6517")
5 <or they will suffocate. She opens the box and the may-beetles are in an=!al("6517")
5 <exhausted state. One flies out of the open window but the other is=!al("6517")
5 <crushed by the casement while she is shutting it at someone's request.=!al("6517")
5 Female patient: Is with her husband at a peasant festivity and says:=!al("6524")
5 <`This will end in a general "Maistollmutz."'=!al("6524")
5 Young man: A man has been working till late in the evening to put his=!al("6526")
5 <house-telephone in order. On leaving he remarks: `It's a funny thing=!al("6526")
5 <that even people who are "tutelrein" as a rule are quite unable to deal with a thing like this.'=!al("6526")
5 Man has dream containing the sentence: "That has an *erzefilisch* influence on the sexual emotions."=!al("6538")
5 Woman goes into the kitchen, where her two maids are, and finds fault=!al("6545")
5 <with them for not having got her `bite of food' ready. At the same time=!al("6545")
5 <she sees a very large quantity of common kitchen crockery standing=!al("6545")
5 <upside down in the kitchen to drain\; it is piled up in heaps.=!al("6545")
5 <[`The Language of Flowers.'] [The `flowery' dream]=!al("6545")
5 Goethe: makes an attack on a young man, Herr M.=!al("6561")
5 Obsessional neurotic: His father is scolding him for coming home so late.=!al("6562")
5 Young man: It is evening and he is in a hotel at a summer resort.=!al("6570")
5 <He mistakes the number of his room and goes into one in which an=!al("6570")
5 <elderly lady and her two daughters are undressing and going to bed.=!al("6570")
5 Man: He is going into the Volkgarten Restaurant with Fraulein K. . . . .=!al("6573")
5 <(an obscure patch, an interruption) . . .then finds himself in the salon of a brothel,=!al("6573")
5 <where he sees two or three women, one of them in her chemise and drawers.=!al("6573")
5 Pharoah's dreams in the Bible of the kine and ears of corn=!al("6577")
5 Lady is at the Opera. A Wagner opera is being performed, which lasts=!al("6584")
5 <till a quarter to eight in the morning....Her younger sister wants to=!al("6584")
5 <hand her up a large lump of coal from the stalls, on the ground that she=!al("6584")
5 <did not know it would be so long, and must be simply freezing by now. [`Secret love']=!al("6584")
5 Young woman suffering from agoraphobia:=!al("6591")
5 <(i) She is walking in the street in the summer, wearing a straw hat of=!al("6591")
5 <peculiar shape\; . . . She is cheerful and in a self-confident frame of=!al("6591")
5 <mind\; and, as she passes a group of young officers, she thinks:=!al("6591")
5 <`None of you can do me any harm!'=!al("6591")
5 (ii) Her mother sends her little daughter away, so that she has to go=!al("6601")
5 <by herself. Then she goes in a train with her mother and sees her=!al("6601")
5 <little one walk straight on to the rails so that she was bound to be run over. . . .=!al("6601")
5 <Then she looks round out of the window of the railway-carriage=!al("6601")
5 <to see whether the parts can not be seen [from] behind.=!al("6601")
5 <Then she reproaches her mother for having made the little one go by herself.=!al("6601")
5 Male patient: He is going for a walk with his father in a place which=!al("6607")
5 <must certainly be the Prater, since he sees the ROTUNDA, with a SMALL=!al("6607")
5 <ANNEX IN FRONT OF IT to which A CAPTIVE BALLOON is attached, though it=!al("6607")
5 <looks rather LIMP. . . .Then they come into a courtyard which has a=!al("6607")
5 <large sheet laid out in it. His father wants to PULL OFF a large piece=!al("6607")
5 <of it, but first looks around to see if anyone is watching.=!al("6607")
5 Uneducated woman: . . . Then someone breaks into the house and she is=!al("6609")
5 <frightened and calls out for a policeman. But he has quietly gone into=!al("6609")
5 <a church, to which a number of steps lead up, accompanied by two tramps.=!al("6609")
5 <Behind the church there is a hill and above it a thick wood.=!al("6609")
5 <The policeman is dressed in a helmet, brass collar and cloak. He has a brown beard.=!al("6609")
5 Boy aged three years and five months: Father is carrying his head on a plate.=!al("6615")
5 Student - remembers having repeatedly dreamt during his sixth year of=!al("6617")
5 <going to the hairdresser's to have his hair cut. A big, severe-looking=!al("6617")
5 <woman comes up to him and cuts his head off. He recognizes the woman as his mother.=!al("6617")
5 Male: He is running down the staircase [of a block of flats] in pursuit=!al("6623")
5 <of a little girl who has done something to him, in order to punish her.=!al("6623")
5 <At the foot of the stairs someone (a grown-up woman?) stops the child for him.=!al("6623")
5 < [`A Staircase Dream']=!al("6623")
5 Male patient: His piano-teacher reproaches him for neglecting his=!al("6627")
5 <piano-playing, and for not practising Mocheles' `Etudes' and Clementi's=!al("6627")
5 <`Gradus ad Parnassum.' [`A Modified Staircase Dream']=!al("6627")
5 Thirty-five-year-old man - dream which he remembers clearly and claims to have had at the age of four:=!al("6630")
5 <The lawyer who had charge of his father's will - (he had lost his=!al("6630")
5 <father when he was three) brings two large pears. He is given one of=!al("6630")
5 <them to eat\; the other lies on the window-sill in the sitting-room.=!al("6630")
5 Young girl: Arranges the centre of a table with flowers for a birthday.=!al("6639")
5 Bismarck: Is riding on a narrow Alpine path, precipice on the right,=!al("6642")
5 <rocks on the left. The path grows narrower, so that the horse refuses=!al("6642")
5 <to proceed, and it is impossible to turn round or dismount, owing to=!al("6642")
5 <lack of space. Then, with his whip in his left hand, he strikes the=!al("6642")
5 <smooth rock and calls on God. The whip grows to an endless length, the=!al("6642")
5 <rocky wall drops like a piece of stage scenery and opens out a broad=!al("6642")
5 <path, with a view over hills and forests, like a landscape in Bohemia\;...=!al("6642")
5 Chemist's dream: He is supposed to be making phenyl-magnesium-bromide.=!al("6650")
5 <He sees the apparatus with particular distinctness, but has substituted=!al("6650")
5 <himself for the magnesium. He now finds himself in a singularly unstable state.=!al("6650")
5 Young man [with strong homosexual leanings]:=!al("6661")
5 (i) He is attending a performance of `Fidelio' and is sitting in=!al("6654")
5 <the stalls at the Opera besides L., a man who is congenial to him and=!al("6654")
5 <with whom he would like to make friends. Suddenly he flies through the=!al("6654")
5 <air right across the stalls, puts his hand in his mouth and pulls out two of his teeth.=!al("6654")
5 (ii) He is being treated by two University professors of his=!al("6662")
5 <acquaintance instead of by Freud. One of them is doing something to=!al("6662")
5 <his penis. He is afraid of an operation. The other is pushing against=!al("6662")
5 <his mouth with an iron rod, so that he loses one or two of his teeth.=!al("6662")
5 <He is tied up with four silk cloths.=!al("6662")
5 Male: He is at the dentist's who is drilling a back tooth in his lower=!al("6667")
5 <jaw. He works on it so long that the tooth becomes useless. He then=!al("6667")
5 <seizes it with a forceps and pulls it out with an effortless ease that excites his astonishment.=!al("6667")
5 (Followed by a second dream in which) he leaves his hat and coat=!al("6671")
5 <somewhere (possibly in the dentist's cloakroom) in the hope that=!al("6671")
5 <someone will bring them after him, and with his hurrying off, dressed=!al("6671")
5 <only in his overcoat, to catch a train which is starting.=!al("6671")
5 Male: *Standing back a little behind two stately palaces is a little=!al("6679")
5 <house with closed doors. His wife leads him along the piece of street=!al("6679")
5 <up to the little house and pushes the door open\; he then slips quickly=!al("6679")
5 <and easily into the inside of a court which rises in an incline.=!al("6679")
5 Male : He has a secret *liason* with a lady whom someone else=!al("6683")
5 <wants to marry. He is worried in case this other man might discover the=!al("6683")
5 <liaison and the proposed marriage comes to nothing. He therefore behaves=!al("6683")
5 <in a very affectionate way to the man. He embraces him and kisses him.=!al("6683")
5 Young man: He is in a deep pit with a window in it like the one in the=!al("6687")
5 <Semmering Tunnel. At first he sees an empty landscape through the=!al("6687")
5 <window, but then invents a picture to fit the space, which immediately=!al("6687")
5 <appears and fills in the gap. The picture represents a field which is=!al("6687")
5 <being ploughed up deeply by some implement\; and the fresh air together=!al("6687")
5 <with the idea of hard work which accompanies the scene, and the=!al("6687")
5 <blue-black clods of earth, produce a lovely impression.=!al("6687")
5 Woman patient: At her summer holiday resort, by the Lake of ----, she=!al("6694")
5 <dives into the dark water just where the pale moon is mirrored in it.=!al("6694")
5 Woman: She is standing on the sea-shore watching a small boy, who seems=!al("6696")
5 <hers, wading into the water. This he does till the water covers him and=!al("6696")
5 <she can only see his head bobbing up and down near the surface.=!al("6696")
5 Young woman: A subterranean channel leads directly into the water from a=!al("6700")
5 <place in the floor of her room. She raises a trap-door in the floor and=!al("6700")
5 <a creature dressed in brown fur, very much resembling a seal, promptly appears.=!al("6700")
5 Woman: Someone is burying a treasure in the neighbourhood of a little=!al("6704")
5 <wooden hut which looks like a rustic out-door closet.=!al("6704")
5 Lady: A servant girl is standing on a ladder as if she is cleaning a=!al("6708")
5 <window, and has a chimpanzee with her and a gorilla-cat. She hurls the=!al("6708")
5 <animals at the dreamer\; the chimpanzee cuddles up to her, which is very disgusting.=!al("6708")
5 Woman: Has a child with a remarkably deformed skull. The dreamer hears=!al("6712")
5 <that the child has grown like that owing to its position in the uterus.=!al("6712")
5 <The doctor says that the skull might be given a better shape by=!al("6712")
5 <compression, but that that will damage the child's brain. She reflects=!al("6712")
5 <that as he is a boy it will do him less harm.=!al("6712")
5 The weather outside is fearful. There is a wretched hotel, water is=!al("6717")
5 <dripping from the walls of the room, the bedclothes are damp.=!al("6717")
5 Girl: Is walking through the fields and cutting off rich ears of barley=!al("6720")
5 <and wheat. A friend of her youth comes towards her, but she tries to avoid meeting him.=!al("6720")
5 Man: His brother is in a *Kasten*.=!al("6723")
5 Man: Climbs to the top of a mountain which has a quite unusually extensive view.=!al("6724")
5 A mettlesome horse is rolling about in a beautiful field of oats...=!al("6726")
5 Man: Is asked someone's name but cannot think of it.=!al("6727")
5 Woman patient: All the people are especially big.=!al("6728")
5 Man: Arrives at a railway station just as a train is coming in. The=!al("6729")
5 <platform moves towards the train, while the train stops still.=!al("6729")
5 Man: His uncle gives him a kiss in an automobile.=!al("6733")
5 Man: Is pulling a woman out from behind a bed.=!al("6735")
5 Man: Is an officer sitting at a table opposite the Emperor.=!al("6736")
5 Man: Is treating someone for a broken limb.=!al("6737")
5 Man: It is a quarter past five in the morning.=!al("6738")
5 Woman: She is walking with two little girls whose ages differ by fifteen months.=!al("6739")
5 H Sachs: He is trying to paste a cutting into the album. But it won't go=!al("6741")
5 <on to the page, which causes him much pain.=!al("6741")
5 Man: He is a pregnant woman lying in bed. He finds the situation very disagreeable. . . .=!al("6743")
5 <Behind the bed is hanging a map, the bottom edge of=!al("6743")
5 <which is kept stretched by a strip of wood. He tears the strip of wood=!al("6743")
5 <down by catching hold of its two ends. It does not break across but=!al("6743")
5 <splits into two halves lengthways.=!al("6743")
5 Patient: Freud appears in dream as an elephant.=!al("6748")
5 Patient - remembers often dreaming as a child:=!al("6751")
5 <God wears a paper cocked-hat on his head.=!al("6751")
5 Patient: She is going to pay for something. Her daughter takes 3 florins=!al("6753")
5 <and 65 kreuzers from her (the mother's) purse. The dreamer says to her:=!al("6753")
5 <`What are you doing? It only costs 21 kreuzers.'=!al("6753")
5 Lady: She is at the theatre with her husband. One side of the stalls is=!al("6756")
5 <completely empty. Her husband tells her that Elise L. and her fiance=!al("6756")
5 <had wanted to go too\; but had only been able to get bad seats - three=!al("6756")
5 <for 1 florin 50 kreuzers - and of course they could not take those. She=!al("6756")
5 <thinks it would not really have done any harm if they had.=!al("6756")
5 Man: He is settled in a chair at the B.'s (a family with which he had=!al("6761")
5 <been formerly acquainted) and says to them: `It was a great mistake=!al("6761")
5 <your not letting me have Mali.' - `How old are you?' he then goes on to=!al("6761")
5 <ask the girl. - `I was born in 1882,' she replies. - `Oh, so you're 28, then.'=!al("6761")
5 Police-constable: He is on street-duty. An inspector comes up to him,=!al("6766")
5 <who has the number 22 followed by 62 or 26, on his collar.=!al("6766")
5 <At any rate there are several twos on it.=!al("6766")
5 Man: Is in a big courtyard in which some dead bodies are being burnt.=!al("6769")
5 <`I'm off,' he says, `I can't bear the sight of it.' He then meets two=!al("6769")
5 <butcher's boys. `Well,' he asks, `did it taste nice?' `No,' one of them=!al("6769")
5 <answers, `not a bit nice' - as though it had been human flesh.=!al("6769")
5 Patient: His father has met with a grave calamity. He was travelling by=!al("6777")
5 <the night train, which was derailed. The carriage seats are forced=!al("6777")
5 <together and his head is compressed from side to side. He then sees him=!al("6777")
5 <lying in bed with a wound over his left eyebrow which runs in a=!al("6777")
5 <vertical direction. He is surprised at his father's meeting with a=!al("6777")
5 <calamity (since he is already dead [as he adds in telling the dream]).=!al("6777")
5 <How clear his eyes are!=!al("6777")
5 Man: His father is alive once more and talking to him in his usual way, but=!al("6799")
5 <(the remarkable thing is that) he has really died, only he does not know it.=!al("6799")
5 Grandson of one year and eight months: In his sleep cries out, sobbing=!al("6845")
5 <violently `Daddy! Daddy! - baby!' [See also under `Repetition Compulsion']=!al("6845")
5 Lady: She sees three lions in a desert, one of which is laughing\; but=!al("6853")
5 <she is not afraid of them. Afterwards, however, she must have run away=!al("6853")
5 <from them, for she is trying to climb up a tree\; but she finds that her=!al("6853")
5 <cousin, who is a French mistress, is up there already, etc.=!al("6853")
5 Elderly gentleman: He is lying in bed and a gentleman who is known to=!al("6876")
5 <him enters the room\; he tries to turn on the light but is unable to: he=!al("6876")
5 <tries over and over again, but in vain. Thereupon his wife gets out of=!al("6876")
5 <bed to help him, but she can not manage it either. But as she feels=!al("6876")
5 <awkward in front of the gentleman owing to being `en neglige,' she=!al("6876")
5 <finally gives it up and goes back to bed. All of this is so funny that=!al("6876")
5 <he can't help roaring with laughter at it. His wife says, `Why are you=!al("6876")
5 <laughing? why are you laughing?' but he goes on laughing till he wakes up.=!al("6876")
5 Now famous author's recurring dreams of being back at the tailor's workbench.=!al("6885")
5 Young unmarried man: He is sitting in the restaurant at which he usually=!al("6894")
5 <eats. Several people then appear, in order to fetch him away, and one=!al("6894")
5 <of them wants to arrest him. He says to his companions at the table:=!al("6894")
5 <`I'II pay later\; I'II come back.' But they exclaim with derisive=!al("6894")
5 <smiles: `We know all about that\; that's what they all say!' One of the=!al("6894")
5 <guests calls out after him: `There goes another one!' He is then led=!al("6894")
5 <into a narrow room in which he finds a female figure carrying a child.=!al("6894")
5 <One of the people accompanying him says: `This is Herr Muller.'=!al("6894")
5 <A police inspector, or some such official, is turning over a bundle of=!al("6894")
5 <cards or papers and as he does so repeats `Muller, Muller, Muller.'=!al("6894")
5 <Finally he asks him a question, which he answers with an `I will.'=!al("6894")
5 <He then turns round to look at the female figure and observes that she is now wearing a big beard.=!al("6894")
5 Dramatic author, Casimir Bonjour who, at first performance of one of=!al("6908")
5 <his pieces, dozes off just after curtain goes up: Goes through the=!al("6908")
5 <whole five acts of the play, and observes all the various signs of=!al("6908")
5 <emotion shown by the audience during the different scenes. At the end=!al("6908")
5 <the performance he is delighted to hear his name being shouted with the=!al("6908")
5 <liveliest demonstrations of applause.=!al("6908")
5 Father, whose child has recently died: His child is standing besides his=!al("6914")
5 <bed, catches him by the arm and whispers to him reproachfully:=!al("6914")
5 <`Father, don't you see I'm burning?'=!al("6914")
5 Female patient: Some people tell her about Freud's book on jokes and=!al("6917")
5 <praise it highly. Something comes in then about a "channel," perhaps=!al("6917")
5 <it is another book that mentions a channel, or something else about a=!al("6917")
5 <channel . . . she doesn't know . . . it is all so indistinct.=!al("6917")
5 Maury, at a time when he was learning English: In telling someone that=!al("6928")
5 <he had visited him the day before, uses the words `I called for you=!al("6928")
5 <yesterday.' Whereupon the other answers correctly: `You should have=!al("6928")
5 < said "I called *on* you yesterday."'=!al("6928")
5 Young hysterical patient who is prevented from falling asleep by `green faces with red eyes'=!al("6945")
5 Woman: Her friend has just become engaged. When asked her opinion of the=!al("6953")
5 <fiancee would have liked to tell the truth and say that he is a=!al("6953")
5 <`*Dutzendmensch.*' She suppresses this and instead praises him.=!al("6953")
5 <That night she dreams that she is asked the same question, and replies=!al("6953")
5 <with the formula: `In the case of repeat orders it is sufficient to quote the number.'=!al("6953")
5 Twenty-seven-year-old man - dream he repeatedly dreamt (to the=!al("6987")
5 <accompaniment of severe anxiety) between the ages of eleven and thirteen:=!al("6987")
5 <A man with a hatchet is pursuing him\; he tries to run away,=!al("6987")
5 <but seems to be paralysed and cannot move from the spot.=!al("6987")
5 Woman: Dreams that she meets Dr. K., a friend and former family doctor=!al("7010")
5 <of hers, in the Karntnerstrasse in front of Hiess's shop.=!al("7010")
5 Members of a polar expedition: While they are wintering in the ice-field=!al("7029")
5 <and living on a monotonous diet and short rations, regularly dream=!al("7029")
5 <of large meals, of mountains of tobacco, and of being back at home.=!al("7029")
5 Dreamer has written a comedy with a particular plot\; it is produced in=!al("7054")
5 <a theatre, the first act is over, and there are thunders of applause\; the clapping is terrific. . . .=!al("7054")
5 Female patient: A child has resolved to kill itself by means of a=!al("7297")
5 <snake-bite. It carries out its resolution. She watches it writhing in convulsions, and so on.=!al("7297")
5 Woman patient: Dreams that she meets a former friend of hers and family=!al("8811")
5 <doctor in front of a certain shop in a certain street.=!al("8811")
5 <The next morning, when she goes into the Inner Town, she meets him at=!al("8811")
5 <the very spot named in the dream.=!al("8811")
5 Dora: A house is on fire. Her father is standing beside her bed and=!al("8871")
5 <wakes her up. She dresses quickly. Her mother wants to stop and save=!al("8871")
5 <her jewel-case\; but her father says: `I refuse to let myself and my two=!al("8871")
5 <children be burnt for the sake of your jewel-case.' They hurry=!al("8871")
5 <downstairs and as soon as she is outside she wakes up.=!al("8871")
5 Patient: Has recurrent dream of swimming in the blue sea, of joyfully=!al("8903")
5 <cleaving her way through the waves, and so on.=!al("8903")
5 Female patient: She is looking at a view of Heligoland (based on a=!al("8905")
5 <photograph, but life-size) which shows the upper and lower parts of the=!al("8905")
5 <island simultaneously\; on the sea is a ship, in which there are two=!al("8905")
5 <people whom she knew in her youth, and so on.=!al("8905")
5 Dora: (second dream)=!al("8902")
5 Norbert Hanold, in Wilhelm Jensen's *Gradiva*:=!al("8960")
5 <(i) He finds himself in ancient Pompeii on the day of the eruption of=!al("8960")
5 <Vesuvius and witnesses the city's destruction. While standing at the=!al("8960")
5 <edge of the forum beside the Temple of Jupiter, he suddenly sees=!al("8960")
5 <Gradiva at no great distance from him. Till then he has had no thought=!al("8960")
5 <of her presence, but now it occurs to him that, since she is a=!al("8960")
5 <Pompeian, she is living in her native town, and, *without his having=!al("8960")
5 <suspected it, living as his contemporary*. Fear of the fate that lies=!al("8960")
5 <before her provokes him to utter a warning cry, whereupon the figure,=!al("8960")
5 <as she calmly steps along, turns her face towards him. But she then=!al("8960")
5 <proceeds on her way untroubled, till she reaches the portico of the=!al("8960")
5 <temple\; there she takes her seat on one of the steps and slowly lays=!al("8960")
5 <her head down on it, while her face grows paler and paler, as though it=!al("8960")
5 <is turning into marble. When he hurries after her, he finds her=!al("8960")
5 <stretched out on the broad step with a peaceful expression, like=!al("8960")
5 <someone asleep, till the rain of ashes buries her form.=!al("8960")
5 <(ii) Somewhere in the sun Gradiva is sitting, making a snare out of a=!al("8960")
5 <blade of grass to catch a lizard in, and says:=!al("8960")
5 <`Please keep quite still. Our lady colleague is right\; the method is a=!al("8960")
5 <really good one and has made use of it with excellent results.'=!al("8960")
5 <(iii) He is in Pompeii and Vesuvius is erupting. Among the people=!al("8960")
5 <imperilled are the Apollo Belvedere and the Capitoline Venus.=!al("8960")
5 <Apollo lifts Venus up, carries her out, and lays her down on some=!al("8960")
5 <object in the dark which seems to be a carriage or cart, since it emits `a creaking noise'.=!al("8960")
5 The `rat man': Freud's mother is dead\; he is anxious to offer him his=!al("9046")
5 <condolences, but is afraid that in doing so he might break into an=!al("9046")
5 <impertinent laugh, as he has repeatedly done on similar occasions in=!al("9046")
5 <the past. He prefers, therefore, to leave a card on him with `p. c.'=!al("9046")
5 <written on it\; but as he is writing them the letters turn into `p. f.'.=!al("9046")
5 The `rat man': He sees Freud's daughter in front of him\; she has two patches of dung instead of eyes.=!al("9056")
5 The `rat man': His lady is under some kind of restraint. He takes his=!al("9118")
5 <two Japanese swords and sets her free. Clutching them, he hurries to=!al("9118")
5 <the place where he suspects she is. He knows that they mean `marriage'=!al("9118")
5 <and `copulation'. Both things now come true. He finds her leaning up=!al("9118")
5 <against a wall, with thumb-screws fastened to her. The dream seems to=!al("9118")
5 <him now to become ambiguous. Either he sets her free from this=!al("9118")
5 <situation by means of his two swords, `marriage' and `copulation':=!al("9118")
5 <or the other idea is that it is only on account of them that she got into this situation.=!al("9118")
5 The `rat man': Reserl is stopping with them. She gets up as though she=!al("9135")
5 <is hypnotized, comes behind his chair with a pale face and puts her=!al("9135")
5 <arms round him. It is as though he is trying to shake off her embrace,=!al("9135")
5 <as though each time she strokes his head some misfortune will occur to=!al("9135")
5 <her - some misfortune in the next world too. It happens automatically -=!al("9135")
5 <as though the misfortune occurs at the very moment of the stroking.=!al("9135")
5 The `rat man': He is in a wood and most melancholy. His lady comes to=!al("9127")
5 <meet him, looking very pale. `Paul, come with me before it is too late.=!al("9127")
5 <I know we are both sufferers.' She puts her arm through his and drags=!al("9127")
5 <him away by force. He struggles with her but she is too strong. They=!al("9127")
5 <come to a broad river and she stands there. He is dressed in miserable=!al("9127")
5 <rags which fell into the stream and are carried away by it. He tries to=!al("9127")
5 <swim after them but she holds him back:=!al("9127")
5 <`Let the rags go!' He stands there in gorgeous raiment.=!al("9127")
5 The `rat man': He is with his lady. She is very nice to him, and he=!al("9112")
5 <tells her about his compulsive idea and prohibition in connection with=!al("9112")
5 <the Japanese swords - the meaning of which is that he might neither=!al("9112")
5 <marry her nor have sexual intercourse with her. But that is=!al("9112")
5 <nonsensical, he says, he might just as well have a prohibition against=!al("9112")
5 <ever washing again. She smiles and nods to him.=!al("9112")
5 The `rat man': His sister Gerda is very ill. He goes to her bedside.=!al("9108")
5 <Braun comes towards him. `You can only save your sister by renouncing=!al("9108")
5 <all sexual pleasure', upon which he replies in astonishment `*all* pleasure'.=!al("9108")
5 The `rat man': He is engaged to his lady, and as he is walking with her=!al("9101")
5 <arm through his, he says overjoyed `I should never have imagined that=!al("9101")
5 <this could have come true so soon'.=!al("9101")
5 The `rat man': He is discussing an abstract subject with Lise II.=!al("9104")
5 <Suddenly the dream-picture vanishes and he is looking at a big machine=!al("9104")
5 <with an enormous number of wheels, so that he is astonished at its complexity.=!al("9104")
5 The `rat man': He is going along a street. There is a pearl lying in the=!al("9097")
5 <road. He stoops to pick it up but every time he stoops it disappears.=!al("9097")
5 <Every two or three steps it appears again. He says to himself, "you mayn't".=!al("9097")
5 The `rat man', while studying for the Third Examination:=!al("9089")
5 <The examiner makes a practice every third or fourth time in the=!al("9089")
5 <Examination of asking one particular question about drafts payable at a=!al("9089")
5 <specified place\; and when he has been answered he goes on to ask,=!al("9089")
5 <`and what is the reason for this law?' To which the correct answer is,=!al("9089")
5 <`as a protection against the *Schicanen* of the opposing parties'.=!al("9089")
5 <His dream is on precisely these lines, but he replies instead,=!al("9089")
5 <`as a protection against the *Schugsenen*'.=!al("9089")
5 The `rat man': He is licking his cousin's feet.=!al("9088")
5 The `rat man': His cousin leads him up to the bed-side of his grandmother=!al("9085")
5 <whose body and genitals are exposed, and shows him how beautiful she still is at ninety.=!al("9085")
5 The `rat man': He is standing on a hill with a gun which he is training=!al("9077")
5 <on a town which can be seen from where he is, surrounded by a number of=!al("9077")
5 <horizontal walls. His father is beside him and they discuss the period=!al("9077")
5 <in which the town was built - the Ancient East or the German=!al("9077")
5 <Middle Ages. The horizontal walls then turn into vertical ones which=!al("9077")
5 <stand up in the air like strings. He tries to demonstrate something=!al("9077")
5 <upon them, but the strings are not stiff enough and keep on falling down.=!al("9077")
5 The `rat man': He meets a captain who only has his badge of rank on the=!al("9141")
5 <right side and one of the three stars is hanging down.=!al("9141")
5 The `rat man': He is standing on a spring-board which is turning round with him in a circle.=!al("9148")
5 The `rat man': He goes to the dentist to have a bad tooth pulled out.=!al("9150")
5 <He pulls one out, but it is not the right one, but one next to it which=!al("9150")
5 <only has something slightly wrong with it. When it has come out he is astonished at its size.=!al("9150")
5 Newly-married woman: As a reaction to the loss of her virginity, the=!al("9161")
5 <dream betrays her wish to castrate her young husband and keep his penis for herself.=!al("9161")
4 Typical Dreams [See also under 'Practical Applications' > 'Dreams' > 'Typical Dreams']
5 Of being naked, in a state of partial undress=!al("6040")
5 Of being inhibited, glued  to the spot, paralysed=!al("6042")
5 Dreams of convenience=!al("6043")
5 Hypocritical dreams=!al("6311")
5 Dreams of impatience=!al("6393")
5 Recurrent dreams=!al("6398")
5 Dreams of flying=!al("6468")
5 Dreams of the death of persons of whom the dreamer is fond=!al("6469")
5 Castration dreams [in children]=!al("6621")
5 Dreams with a dental stimulus=!al("6659")
4 Dream Fragments Illustrating Certain Aspects Of Dream-Life
5 Dreams in which experiences/events are reproduced in their entirety=!al("6255")
5 Dreams provoked by external  sensory stimuli=!al("6257")
5 Dreams provoked by internal sensory stimuli=!al("6261")
5 Dreams provoked by internal physiological stimuli=!al("6296")
5 Fragments of dreams illustrating the looseness of the basis=!al("6262")
5 <on which associations between elements are formed=!al("6262")
5 The inclusion of indifferent material in dreams=!al("6265")
5 Dreams in which pathological material makes a first, only or residual appearance=!al("6266")
5 Dreams involving linguistic expression - illustrating play on words, use of puns/similar-sounding words=!al("6268")
5 Role played by experiences of previous day in provoking a dream.=!al("6270")
5 Dreams instigated by a wish which arose during the previous day but which was suppressed.=!al("6959")
5 Appearance of recent material in=!al("6363")
5 Material from the past/from childhood in.=!al("6364")
5 <Appearance of infantile material in dreams=!al("6364")
5 Extended memory in dreams=!al("6272")
5 Dreams in which the wish-fulfilment can be discerned relatively easily=!al("6278")
4 Distortion In Dreams
5 In general=!al("6305")
5 Reversal into / representation by its opposite=!al("6306")
5 Dreams highlighting the operation of the censorship=!al("6307")
5 Condensation in=!al("6370")
5 Displacement in=!al("6459")
5 Dreams in which more than one wish is fulfilled [in a single situation]=!al("6365")
5 `Innocent' dreams which turn out to prove not so `innocent'=!al("6373")
5 Symbolism in=!al("6380")
5 Urinary symbolism=!al("6622")
5 Repetition compulsion in=!al("6381")
5 Transference in=!al("6430")
5 Dreams in which the content of the stimulus is woven into the dream=!al("6467")
5 Affects in=!al("6470")
5 Dreams in which a wish from the past is satisfied=!al("6471")
5 Use of dream interpretation in analysis=!al("6479")
5 All dreams as being egoistic=!al("6505")
5 Dreams involving condensation of words, formation of neologisms=!al("6523")
5 Representation of causal relations in=!al("6549")
5 Representation of logical relations in=!al("6551")
5 Representation of contraries, contradictions, `just the reverse', negatives, the `not' relation in.=!al("6552")
5 <Contraries in the dream-thoughts represented by same dream-element=!al("6552")
5 Identifications in=!al("6554")
5 Composite structures in=!al("6553")
5 Allusion in=!al("6555")
5 Sexual content in=!al("6557")
5 The turning of abstract thought into pictures=!al("6583")
5 Absurdity in=!al("6589")
5 Dreams in which peculiar or unusual modes of expression or representation are used=!al("6707")
5 Reversal of content in one part of the dream as indicating that a=!al("6731")
5 <similar reversal has been made elsewhere in the dream=!al("6731")
5 Dreams showing a strong resemblance to jokes=!al("6734")
5 Role of judgements, comments passed, glosses on dreams after waking=!al("6827")
5 Role played by phantasy in=!al("6893")
5 Corrections in the usages of foreign languages, self-corrections in=!al("6921")
4 Dreams Apparently Running Counter To The Wish-Fulfilment Theory Of Dreams
5 Dreams where a wish is precisely *not* fulfilled.=!al("6314")
5 Masochistic / self-punishment dreams=!al("6344")
4 Analogies For Dreams In General
5 Analogy with a rebus / picture-puzzle=!al("6511")
5 Analogy with an algebraic equation=!al("6838")
5 Analogies Taken From Everyday Life Illustrating Certain Aspects Of Dream Life.
6 Man who returns neighbour's kettle in damaged condition (inconsistency)=!al("6275")
6 The village blacksmith has committed a capital offence. The burgomaster,=!al("8952")
6 <however, decides that as a penalty a *tailor* rather than the=!al("8952")
6 <blacksmith shall be hanged, because there are two tailors in the=!al("8952")
6 <village and only one blacksmith, and the crime must be expiated.[displacement]=!al("8952")
6 Analogies for dream-censorship taken from social life=!al("6875")
6 Something illegitimate evading the censorship under the cover of something that is legitimate=!al("6887")
6 Good fairy offers a poor married couple the fulfilment of their first=!al("6973")
6 <three wishes. They decide to choose their wishes carefully. Wife is=!al("6973")
6 <smell of sausages from cottage next door and wishes for a couple of=!al("6973")
6 <them. This is fulfilled. Husband is furious and in his rage wishes that=!al("6973")
6 <they are hanging on his wife's nose. This is fulfilled and they cannot=!al("6973")
6 <be dislodged. Its fulfilment is disagreeable for the wife. The third=!al("6973")
6 <wish is bound to be that the sausages should come away from his wife's nose.=!al("6973")
6 <[As illustrating conflict between agencies.]=!al("6973")
6 <A wish-fulfilment for one as not necessarily representing wish-fulfilment for the other.]=!al("6973")
6 Simile illustrating relationship between Id and censorship.=!al("7048")
6 <[one man having to be careful, and hence having to suitably distort,=!al("7048")
6 <what he says in front of the other.]=!al("7048")
6 The bad person as doing in real life what the good person is content to dream about=!al("7052")
3 Parapraxes
4 Own
5 Slips Of The Pen
6 First edition of *Interpretation of Dreams* where Hannibal's father's=!al("6421")
6 <name is given as Hasrubal rather than Hamilcar Barca.=!al("6421")
6 On a sheet of paper containing short daily notes mainly of a business=!al("7719")
6 <kind he is surprised to find, among some entries correctly dated=!al("7719")
6 <`September', the wrongly written date `Thursday, October 20'.=!al("7719")
6 <[A few days before, he had returned fresh from his holiday travels,=!al("7719")
6 <and felt ready for plenty of professional work\; but there were not yet=!al("7719")
6 <many patients. On his arrival he had found a letter from a patient to say she was coming on October 20.]=!al("7719")
6 In the proofs of his contribution to the *Jahresbericht fur Neurologie und Psychiatrie*,=!al("7726")
6 <he incorrectly writes the obstetrician Burkhardt's=!al("7726")
6 <name as `Buckrhard'. [He holds nothing against the obstetrician but=!al("7726")
6 <has been annoyed by an unintelligent review of his=!al("7726")
6 <*Interpretation of Dreams* by a writer of the same name.]=!al("7726")
6 He intends to draw the sum of 300 kronen from the Post Office Savings=!al("7745")
6 <Bank, which he wants to send to an absent relative for purposes of=!al("7745")
6 <medical treatment. At the same time he notices that his account stands=!al("7745")
6 <at 4,380 kronen and decides to bring it down on this occasion to the=!al("7745")
6 <round sum of 4,000 kronen. After writing out the cheque, he notices=!al("7745")
6 <that he has not asked for 380 kronen as intended, but for exactly 438=!al("7745")
6 <kronen. [438 is *ten per cent* of the total account, 4,380 kronen.=!al("7745")
6 <A ten per cent discount is given by *booksellers*. He recalls that a=!al("7745")
6 <few days earlier he had picked out a number of medical books in which=!al("7745")
6 <he was no longer interested in order to offer them to a bookseller for=!al("7745")
6 <precisely 300 kronen. If the bookseller were to accept his offer he=!al("7745")
6 <would replace the exact sum which he was to spend on the invalid.]=!al("7745")
5 Forgetting Of Proper Names
6 Cannot recall the name of the painter *Signorelli*.=!al("7058")
6 <Instead remembers the names *Botticelli* and *Boltraffio*=!al("7058")
6 Patient asks him to recommend a health resort on the Riviera.=!al("7082")
6 <Knows of the existence of a such a resort, and knows the name of a doctor=!al("7082")
6 <who practises there, but cannot remember the name of the resort itself.=!al("7082")
6 <The name of the resort turns out to be *Nervi*.=!al("7082")
6 Patient is talking about a neighbouring summer resort, and asserts that=!al("7086")
6 <besides its two well-known inns there is also a third one there. He=!al("7086")
6 <cannot, however, recall its name initially. In spite of having spent=!al("7086")
6 <seven summers at the place, Freud disputes the existence of the third=!al("7086")
6 <inn. Shortly thereafter patient recalls and tells him the name of the=!al("7086")
6 <inn - the `Hochwartner'. Freud thereupon acknowledges its existence.=!al("7086")
6 <The name bears a close phonetic resemblance to=!al("7086")
6 <the name of one of his colleagues, a specialist in Vienna.=!al("7086")
6 Is on point of booking a ticket at Reichenhall but cannot remember the=!al("7094")
6 <name of the next main station. Looks it up in the time-table. Its name=!al("7094")
6 <is *Rosenheim*. An hour earlier he had paid a visit to his sister Rosa's home.=!al("7094")
6 Young man - the younger brother of one of his patients - pays him a=!al("7098")
6 <visit at his consulting room. In spite of having addressed=!al("7098")
6 <him often by his first name in the past, Freud cannot remember his=!al("7098")
6 <first name. Freud goes out into the street and looks at the names=!al("7098")
6 <above the shops, immediately recognizing the name when he sees it.=!al("7098")
6 Is unable to recall a patient's name. The patient has expressed a fear=!al("7105")
6 <of going blind. This arouses in Freud the memories of two incidents=!al("7105")
6 <from his youth - one involving blinding by gunshot, the other=!al("7105")
6 <involving a self-injury by shooting. The victim of the second incident=!al("7105")
6 <has the same name as the patient. The fear expressed by the patient=!al("7105")
6 <has had the effect of arousing in Freud an anxious expectation=!al("7105")
6 <regarding the possibility of an injury of a similar nature=!al("7105")
6 <materializing in respect of a member of his own family.=!al("7105")
6 Experiences a disagreeable feeling when a *Herr S. Freud* presents himself in his consulting hour.=!al("7117")
6 Cannot recall the name of a town in Sicily that he had visited six months earlier.=!al("7152")
6 <The name of the town turns out to be Castelvetrano.=!al("7152")
6 After war breaks out with Italy in 1915 finds himself unable to recall=!al("7170")
6 <a whole quantity of Italian place-names which at ordinary times are readily available to him.=!al("7170")
5 Forgetting Of An Address
6 Has to pay a visit to an address in a strange town - one which is=!al("7069")
6 <reluctant to pay. Cannot/unable to remember/recall the name of the=!al("7069")
6 <street but memory of the house number is/appears ultra-clear.=!al("7069")
6 He undertakes to get a lady who is a stranger to Vienna a small=!al("7880")
6 <strong-box for her documents and money. Although he cannot recall the=!al("7880")
6 <address of the shop selling the boxes, he feels sure that he will find=!al("7880")
6 <the shop if he walks through the town, since has passed it on=!al("7880")
6 <countless occasions. To his chagrin he has no success in finding the=!al("7880")
6 <shop, even though he walks all over the town in every direction.=!al("7880")
6 <On looking the shop up in a trade directory, he recognizes the address=!al("7880")
6 <immediately. It turns out to be located in the building where=!al("7880")
6 <the M. live - a family with whom he had formerly been on friendly=!al("7880")
6 <terms but later fallen out with over money matters.=!al("7880")
5 Forgetting Of Impressions And Experiences
6 One summer holiday him and his wife are sitting at table d'hote=!al("7869")
6 <opposite a gentleman from Vienna whom he knows and who no doubt=!al("7869")
6 <remembers him too. He, however, has reasons of his own for not=!al("7869")
6 <renewing the acquaintance. His wife listens in on the gentleman's=!al("7869")
6 <conversation with his neighbours, which annoys Freud greatly.=!al("7869")
6 <Some weeks later, while complaining to a relative about this behaviour on his wife's part,=!al("7869")
6 <he finds that he is unable to recall a single word of the gentleman's conversation.=!al("7869")
6 He wishes to have a good laugh with an intimate friend over a remark=!al("7877")
6 <made by his wife only a few hours before, but finds that he has forgotten what she said.=!al("7877")
6 He is requested by the firm of B. and R. to pay a professional visit=!al("7890")
6 <to one of their staff. On his way there he is possessed by the=!al("7890")
6 <thought that he must repeatedly have been in the building where their=!al("7890")
6 <firm has its premises. He can however recall neither what house it is=!al("7890")
6 <nor whom he has visited there. He eventually remembers that the=!al("7890")
6 <premises of the firm are on the floor below the Pension Fischer, where=!al("7890")
6 <he has frequently visited patients. [On his way to the new patient, a=!al("7890")
6 <gentleman whom had difficulty in recognizing greeted him in the street.=!al("7890")
6 <Some months before he had seen this man and, in spite of a=!al("7890")
6 <diagnosis of progressive paralysis, he had subsequently recovered. The=!al("7890")
6 <physician with whom he had seen the patient was also called Fischer.]=!al("7890")
6 One day in the summer of 1900 he remarks to Fliess: `These problems of=!al("7951")
6 <the neuroses are only to be solved if we base ourselves wholly and=!al("7951")
6 <completely on the assumption of the original bisexuality of the=!al("7951")
6 <individual.' To which Fliess replies: `That's what I told you two and=!al("7951")
6 <a half years ago at Br. when we went for that evening walk. But you wouldn't hear of it then.'=!al("7951")
6 One day, while going through his medical engagement book in order to=!al("7977")
6 <send out his accounts, he comes across the name `M---l', but cannot=!al("7977")
6 <recall who it belongs to. Finally he remembers that she was a=!al("7977")
6 <fourteen-year-old girl - the most remarkable case he has had in recent=!al("7977")
6 <years, and one whose outcome cost him moments of the greatest=!al("7977")
6 <distress. The child had fallen ill of an unmistakable hysteria, which=!al("7977")
6 <cleared up radically under his care. She still however complained of=!al("7977")
6 <of abdominal pains which had played the chief part in the clinical=!al("7977")
6 <picture of her hysteria, and two months later she died of sarcoma of abdominal glands.=!al("7977")
5 Errors Of Memory
6 In the first edition of *The Interpretation of Dreams*:-=!al("8460")
6 (i)   Gives Schiller's birthplace as *Marburg* rather than *Marbach*.=!al("8461")
6 (ii)  Calls Hannibal's father *Hasrubal* rather than *Hamilcar Barca*.=!al("8462")
6 (iii) States that Zeus emasculated his father and dethroned him.=!al("8463")
6 <[According to Greek mythology it was Kronos who committed it on his father.]=!al("8463")
6 A patient asks Freud for the two books on Venice which he promised to=!al("8469")
6 <lend him in order to prepare for a journey at Easter. Freud has=!al("8469")
6 <forgotten to take them out, but takes a hasty look round the library=!al("8469")
6 <for the two books he had his eye on. He brings out two books: `Venice, City of Art' and `The Medici'.=!al("8469")
6 <The Medici, he realizes afterwards, have nothing to do with Venice.=!al("8469")
6 Is due to visit his eldest brother at an English seaside resort.=!al("8555")
6 <Ideally he would like to stop for a day in Holland but, time being=!al("8555")
6 <limited, he undertakes to travel by the shortest possible route and=!al("8555")
6 <not to break his journey anywhere. He is to travel from Munich *via*=!al("8555")
6 <Cologne to Rotterdam, where a boat leaves at midnight for Harwich. He=!al("8555")
6 <leaves his train at Cologne to change into the Rotterdam express, but=!al("8555")
6 <it is nowhere to be found. He takes a later train to Rotterdam.=!al("8555")
6 <Obliged to spend a day in Holland, he is able to see Rembrandt's=!al("8555")
6 <paintings at the Hague and in the Rijksmuseum at Amsterdam.=!al("8555")
5 Mislaying Of Objects
6 He mislays a book-catalogue which has been sent to him. He intended=!al("7903")
6 <ordering a book advertised in it, by an author whose witty and lively=!al("7903")
6 <style he admired. [An acquaintance had a few days earlier remarked=!al("7903")
6 <that the author's style and way of thinking was similar to that of Freud.=!al("7903")
6 <Years before a similar remark made by a colleague regarding a=!al("7903")
6 <well-known medical author had prompted Freud to write a letter to the=!al("7903")
6 <author seeking closer relations with him. He was put in his place by a chilly answer.]=!al("7903")
5 Slips Of The Tongue
6 His daughter makes an ugly face when she takes a bite at an apple,=!al("7238")
6 <and he wants to quote to her:=!al("7238")
6 <                Der Affe gar possierlich ist,=!al("7238")
6 <                Zumal wenn er vom Apfel frisst.=!al("7238")
6 <  [The ape's a very comic sight when from an apple he takes a bite.]=!al("7238")
6 <He makes the quote correctly the first time, but the second time=!al("7238")
6 <round, when he has to repeat it for the benefit of someone who was=!al("7238")
6 <distracted at the time, he [instead] begins:=!al("7238")
6 <               `Der Apfe . . .'=!al("7238")
6 Lady says to him `If you want to buy carpets you must go to Kaufmann=!al("7283")
6 <in the Matthausgasse. I think I can give you recommendation there.'=!al("7283")
6 <`At Matthaus . . .' Freud repeats, `I mean Kaufmann's.'=!al("7283")
6 One evening he wants to excuse himself for not having fetched his wife=!al("7066")
6 <home from the theatre, and says: `I was at the theatre at ten past ten.'=!al("7066")
6 <He is corrected: `You mean ten *to* ten.'=!al("7066")
5 Misreadings
6 Is sitting in a cafe, turning over the pages of a copy of the=!al("7645")
6 <*Leipziger Illustrierte* (which he is holding up at an angle), when he=!al("7645")
6 <reads the following legend under a picture that stretches across the=!al("7645")
6 <page: `A Wedding Celebration in the *Odysee*.' It catches his=!al("7645")
6 <attention\; in surprise he takes hold of the paper in the proper way=!al("7645")
6 <and then corrects his error: `A Wedding Celebration on the *Ostee*.'=!al("7645")
6 Reads one day in a newspaper:=!al("7652")
6 <`*Im Fass* [in a tub] across Europe', instead of `*Zu Fuss* [on foot]'=!al("7652")
6 One day he receives a letter which brings a piece of news which shocks=!al("7654")
6 <him. He immediately calls my wife and breaks the news to her that=!al("7654")
6 <`*die* arme [the poor] Wilhelm M.' has fallen very seriously ill and=!al("7654")
6 <has been given up by the doctors. The letter in fact read `der arme *Dr.* W. M.'.=!al("7654")
6 Whenever he walks through the streets of a strange town on his=!al("7659")
6 <holidays, he reads every shop sign that resembles the word in any way as `Antiquities'.=!al("7659")
6 During wartime: Picks up a mid-day or evening paper and sees in large=!al("7675")
6 <print: `*Der Friede von Gorz* [The Peace of Gorizia].' But all it says=!al("7675")
6 <is: `*Der Feinde vor Gorz* [The Enemy before Gorizia].'=!al("7675")
5 Paramnesias
6 While writing the later chapters of *The Interpretation of Dreams*=!al("7988")
6 <he happens to be at a summer resort without access to libraries and works=!al("7988")
6 <of reference, and is forced to incorporate in his manuscript from=!al("7988")
6 <memory all sorts of references and quotations, subject to later=!al("7988")
6 <correction. In writing the passage on day-dreams he thinks of the=!al("7988")
6 <example of the poor book-keeper in Alphonse Daudet's *Le Nabab*.=!al("7988")
6 <The phantasy of this man - whom Freud calls Mosier Jocelyn - is=!al("7988")
6 <reproduced as follows: Monsieur Jocelyn boldly throws himself at the=!al("7988")
6 <head of a runaway horse in the street, and brings it to a halt. The=!al("7988")
6 <carriage door opens and a great personage steps out, presses Monsieur=!al("7988")
6 <Jocelyn's hand and says: `You are my saviour. I owe my life to you.=!al("7988")
6 <What can I do for you?' When he finally comes to consult the book, he=!al("7988")
6 <finds no mention of any such reverie, and moreover, that the=!al("7988")
6 <man's name is Monsieur Joyeuse. [`Joyeux', of which `Joyeuse' is the=!al("7988")
6 <feminine form, is the only possible way of translating Freud's name=!al("7988")
6 <into French. The phantasy, which he had wrongly attributed to Daudet,=!al("7988")
6 <turns our to be one of his own - one which had not become conscious or=!al("7988")
6 <which had once been conscious and since been forgotten.]=!al("7988")
5 Forgetting Of Intentions
6 He decides to buy a fresh supply of blotting paper [`*Loschpapier*'],=!al("8028")
6 <but for four days running forgets to do so. [Though he normally=!al("8028")
6 <*writes* `Loschpapier'* he usually *says* `Fliesspapier'* (another word=!al("8028")
6 <for `blotting-paper'). `Fliess' is the name of a friend who has on the=!al("8028")
6 <days in question given him occasion for a worrying and anxious thought.]=!al("8028")
6 He has written a short pamphlet - *On Dreams* - summarizing the=!al("8034")
6 <subject-matter of his *Interpretation of Dreams*, for the series=!al("8034")
6 <*Grenzfragen des Nerven- und Seelenlebens*. The publisher of this=!al("8034")
6 <series has sent him the proofs, and has asked for them back by return=!al("8034")
6 <of post, as the book is to be issued before Christmas. He corrects the=!al("8034")
6 <proofs that night, but several times forgets to post them off.=!al("8034")
6 <He finally posts them off and, the same day, pays a visit to the=!al("8034")
6 <publisher of *The Interpretation of Dreams*. In the course of=!al("8034")
6 <conversation he brings up the topic of the publication of the=!al("8034")
6 <the pamphlet. The publisher expresses his misgivings, saying that it=!al("8034")
6 <will interfere with the sales of the book. Similar misgivings must=!al("8034")
6 <have been responsible for his delay in sending back the proofs.=!al("8034")
6 He promises a young author that he will write a review of his short=!al("8046")
6 <work\; but because of internal resistances, which he knows about, he=!al("8046")
6 <puts off doing so, till one day he yields to pressure from him and=!al("8046")
6 <promises it will be done that same evening. He seriously means to do=!al("8046")
6 <it then, but has forgotten that he has set the evening aside for=!al("8046")
6 <preparing a specialist report that cannot be deferred. After this has=!al("8046")
6 <shown him that his intention is spurious, he gives up the struggle=!al("8046")
6 <against his resistances and refuses the author's request.=!al("8046")
5 Bungled Actions
6 One numerous occasions, when visiting patients at their own homes,=!al("8055")
6 <he pulls out his own latch key instead of knocking or ringing the bell.=!al("8055")
6 There is a house where twice every day, at regular hours, he waits to=!al("8075")
6 <be let in outside a door on the second floor. On two occasions it=!al("8075")
6 <happens that he goes a floor too high - i.e. he *climbs too high*'.=!al("8075")
6 <One the first occasion he is enjoying an ambitious day-dream in which=!al("8075")
6 <he is `climbing ever higher and higher'. On the second occasion he is=!al("8075")
6 <absorbed in a phantasy in which he is irritated by a (phantasied)=!al("8075")
6 <criticism of his writings in which he is reproached with always `going too far'.=!al("8075")
6 One day he leaves in a hurry at the end of his consulting hour as he=!al("8083")
6 <wants to catch a particular suburban train\; and he puts the tuning=!al("8083")
6 <fork in his coat pocket instead of the reflex hammer.=!al("8083")
6 Though it is very rare for him to break anything, he one day dashes the=!al("8088")
6 <marble cover of his plain inkpot to the ground so that it breaks.=!al("8088")
6 <[Some hours before, his sister had been in the room to inspect some=!al("8088")
6 <new acquisitions. She admired them very much, and then remarked:=!al("8088")
6 <`Your writing table looks really attractive now\; only the inkstand=!al("8088")
6 <doesn't match. You must get a nicer one.' He may perhaps have=!al("8088")
6 <concluded from his sister's remark that she intended to make him a=!al("8088")
6 <present of a nicer inkstand on the next festive occasion, and smashed=!al("8088")
6 <the unlovely old one so as to force her to carry out the intention she had hinted at.]=!al("8088")
6 One morning, when passing through a room in his dressing-gown and with=!al("8101")
6 <straw slippers on his feet, he yields to a sudden impulse and hurls=!al("8101")
6 <one of his slippers from his foot at the wall, causing a beautiful=!al("8101")
6 <little marble Venus to fall down from its bracket and break into=!al("8101")
6 <pieces. [One of his family has been gravely ill, and that morning he=!al("8101")
6 <he learned that there had been a great improvement. The attack of=!al("8101")
6 <destructive fury thus served to express a feeling of gratitude to fate=!al("8101")
6 <and allowed him to perform a `*sacrificial act*' - as if he had previously made a vow=!al("8101")
6 <to sacrifice something or other as a thank-offering if she recovered her health.]=!al("8101")
6 He sees fit to reproach a loyal and deserving friend on the grounds of=!al("8111")
6 <the interpretation he places on certain indications coming from his=!al("8111")
6 <unconscious. The friend is offended and writes him a letter asking him=!al("8111")
6 <not to treat his friends psycho-analytically. Freud has to admit that=!al("8111")
6 <he is in the right. While writing a reply to pacify him, a pen-holder=!al("8111")
6 <slips from his hand and breaks a newly-acquired glazed Egyptian figure.=!al("8111")
6 The silver handle of a stick which he carries gets damaged and is badly=!al("8118")
6 <repaired. Soon after he gets the stick back, he uses the handle in a=!al("8118")
6 <mischievous attempt to catch one of his children by the leg - with the=!al("8118")
6 <result that the stick breaks, and he is thus rid of it.=!al("8118")
6 Period during which an unusually large amount of glass and china crockery in his house is broken.=!al("8132")
6 In the house of some friends he meets a young girl who is staying there=!al("8148")
6 <as a guest and who arouses a feeling of pleasure in him which he=!al("8148")
6 <thought was long extinct. As the girl's uncle, a very old gentleman,=!al("8148")
6 <enters the room, they both jump to their feet to bring him a chair=!al("8148")
6 <that is standing in the corner. She is both nimbler and nearer to the=!al("8148")
6 <chair than he is and manages to get hold of it first. He still sticks=!al("8148")
6 <to his intention of carrying the chair and suddenly finds himself=!al("8148")
6 <standing directly behind her, and throwing his arms round her from behind.=!al("8148")
6 Over a period of several years he twice a day visits an old lady.=!al("8166")
6 <On the morning visit he puts a few drops of eye-lotion into her eye=!al("8166")
6 <and gives her a morphine injection. The eye-lotion is always packed=!al("8166")
6 <in a blue bottle and the morphine solution in a white one.=!al("8166")
6 <One morning he puts the dropper into the white bottle instead of the=!al("8166")
6 <blue one and puts morphine into the eye instead of collyrium.=!al("8166")
5 Self-Injury
6 He pinches his thumb when a youthful patient tells him during the hour=!al("8189")
6 <of treatment of his intention (not to be taken seriously of course) of=!al("8189")
6 <marrying his eldest daughter. She is lying critically ill in a sanatorium at the time.=!al("8189")
4 Other
5 Forgetting Of Intentions
6 Young woman whose husband forgets to bring her a bouquet of flowers on her birthday=!al("6360")
6 John Galsworthy: A young man of the well-to-do middle-class receives an=!al("7861")
6 <indirect request for money from a ne'er-do-well, to whom he has=!al("7861")
6 <supplied help on two or three occasions. After first rejecting the=!al("7861")
6 <idea of throwing this money away on a hopeless case, he has a change=!al("7861")
6 <of heart and decides to send a cheque. But before he has written out=!al("7861")
6 <the cheque, a moth flying round the candle distracts him, and he sends=!al("7861")
6 <the letter off without enclosing the cheque.=!al("7861")
6 The most senior officer in a prisoner-of-war camp for officers is=!al("8015")
6 <insulted by one of his fellow prisoners. To avoid further=!al("8015")
6 <complications he wishes to use the only authoritative measure at his=!al("8015")
6 <disposal and have the officer removed and transferred to another camp.=!al("8015")
6 <It is only on the advice of several friends that he decides -=!al("8015")
6 <contrary to his secret wish - to abandon his plan and seek to satisfy=!al("8015")
6 <his honour immediately. The same morning, as senior officer, he has to=!al("8015")
6 <call the roll of the officers. Although he has never done so before,=!al("8015")
6 <he passes over the name of the man who has insulted him.=!al("8015")
5 Forgetting Of Foreign Words
6 Young man of academic background:=!al("7060")
6 Unable to recall the word *aliquis* forming part of a Latin quotation.=!al("7060")
6 A young man becomes acquainted in a pension with an English lady, whom=!al("7189")
6 <he takes a liking to. On the first evening of their acquaintance he is=!al("7189")
6 <having a conversation with her in her native language, which he knows=!al("7189")
6 <fairly well. In spite of its being the same [word] in German, he=!al("7189")
6 <cannot remember the English word for `gold', and is forced to make=!al("7189")
6 <himself understood by touching a gold ring on the lady's hand.=!al("7189")
5 Forgetting Of Sets Of Words From One's Own Language
6 Colleague: Unable to [correctly] recall certain words from Goethe's `The Bride of Corinth'=!al("7072")
6 Man: Unable to recall the words `*with a white sheet*' from a poem of Heine's.=!al("7075")
6 Ferenczi: At a social gathering someone makes a quote.=!al("7077")
6 <Ferenczi passes a comment that the first part of the sentence is quite sufficient.=!al("7077")
6 <In fact he has something better to say . . . but then cannot recall what he had wanted to say.=!al("7077")
5 Forgetting Of Proper Names
6 A Herr Lederer, while on honeymoon, cannot remember the name of an acquaintance whom=!al("7114")
6 <he has to introduce to his wife. It turns out that his surname, too, is *Lederer*.=!al("7114")
6 A Herr Y. falls in love with a lady\; but he meets with no success, and=!al("7119")
6 <shortly afterwards she marries a Herr S. Thereafter, Herr Y., in spite=!al("7119")
6 <of having known Herr X. for a long time, has difficulty in remembering his name.=!al("7119")
6 Lady: Is expounding a theory that people who have a talent for painting=!al("7123")
6 <have no feeling for music, and vice versa. Cannot recall/[is unable=!al("7123")
6 <to] remember the name of the one person who forms an exception to the theory.=!al("7123")
6 A lady, who has heard something about psycho-analysis, cannot remember=!al("7127")
6 <the name of the psychiatrist Jung. The names Kl---, Wilde,=!al("7127")
6 <Nietzsche and Hauptmann come to mind. In connection with Kl--- she has=!al("7127")
6 <the association that she looks very well for her *age*. In connection=!al("7127")
6 <with Wilde and Nietzsche she has the association that they were both=!al("7127")
6 <homosexuals and that Wilde had had dealings with *young* people.=!al("7127")
6 <In connection with Hauptmann, first `*Halbe*' and then `*Jungend*' occur to her.=!al("7127")
6 Man: When being examined in philosophy as a subsidiary subject is=!al("7136")
6 <questioned by the examiner about the teachings of Epicurus, and after=!al("7136")
6 <that is asked if he knows who took up his theories in later centuries.=!al("7136")
6 <He answers with the name of Pierre Gassendi, whom he had heard=!al("7136")
6 <described as a disciple of Epicurus while sitting in a cafe a couple=!al("7136")
6 <of days before. To the surprised question of how he knows that, he=!al("7136")
6 <answers that he has long been interested in Gassendi. As a result of this he passes *magna cum laude*.=!al("7136")
6 <Thereafter he has an obstinate tendency to forget the name Gassendi.=!al("7136")
6 Ferenczi: Is unable to remember the name of a town in Italy as a consequence=!al("7145")
6 <of its phonetic resemblance to a woman's first name, with which a number of memories charged=!al("7145")
6 <The associations *Capua, Brescia* and *The Lion of Brescia* force=!al("7145")
6 <themselves on him. The woman's name turns out to be *Veronika* (*Verona* in Hungarian).=!al("7145")
6 Man: Wants to give someone the name of the booksellers Gilhofer and=!al("7157")
6 <Ranschburg but, even though he knows the firm perfectly well, can only=!al("7157")
6 <recall the second half of the name. He goes home and his brother=!al("7157")
6 <tells him the first half of the name. In association to Gilhofer the=!al("7157")
6 <word `Gallhof' springs to mind. He had a few months before, at a place=!al("7157")
6 <called Gallhof, gone for a memorable walk with an attractive young=!al("7157")
6 <lady, a lady toward whom he at the time, because of her=!al("7157")
6 <desire for marriage, had rather ambivalent feelings.=!al("7157")
6 In a conversation about Genoa and its immediate surroundings, a young=!al("7165")
6 <man wants to mention the place called *Pegli*, but can only recall its=!al("7165")
6 <name with great effort. In the course of his efforts to understand why=!al("7165")
6 <he had been unable to remember the name the word *Peli springs to mind.=!al("7165")
6 One morning a lady who lives in Basle receives news that a friend of=!al("7173")
6 <her youth, Selma X. of Berlin, who is just then on her honeymoon, is=!al("7173")
6 <passing through Basle, but staying only one day. The Basle lady=!al("7173")
6 <hurries straight away to her hotel. When the friends separate, they=!al("7173")
6 <make an arrangement to meet again in the afternoon and to be with each=!al("7173")
6 <other up to the time of the Berlin lady's departure. In the afternoon=!al("7173")
6 <the Basle lady *forgets* about the rendezvous. Now second parapraxis=!al("7173")
6 <enters into the picture. At the time when she should have been with=!al("7173")
6 <her friend, the lady from Basle happens to be in company at another=!al("7173")
6 <place, where the topic of the recent marriage of the opera singer Kurz=!al("7173")
6 <comes up in conversation. When she wants to mention the singer by name=!al("7173")
6 <she cannot recall her first name. In the evening of the same day the=!al("7173")
6 <Basle lady is among a number of people, some of whom are the same as=!al("7173")
6 <those she had been with in the afternoon. By a coincidence the=!al("7173")
6 <conversation again turns to the marriage of the Viennese singer\; and=!al("7173")
6 <without any difficulty the lady produces the name `*Selma* Kurz'.=!al("7173")
6 An old jurist and philologist, is describing in company how in his=!al("7195")
6 <student days in Germany he had known a quite exceptionally stupid=!al("7195")
6 <student, and has some anecdotes to tell of his stupidity. But he=!al("7195")
6 <cannot recall the student's name. A moment later he remembers that the=!al("7195")
6 <name he is looking for ends in `. . . *man*', and in connection with this,=!al("7195")
6 <the name *Erdmann* occurs to him. Finally he recalls the student's name: it is *Lindeman*.=!al("7195")
6 Elderly woman: name-forgetting as a hysterical symptom=!al("7202")
6 In a small gathering of university people, which includes two women=!al("7204")
6 <students of philosophy, one of the women wants to tell of a novel she=!al("7204")
6 <has recently read, but cannot recall its title. Three of the men who=!al("7204")
6 <are present say that they are familiar with the novel but that they=!al("7204")
6 <too - strange to relate - cannot recall its name. The title turns out to be *Ben Hur*.=!al("7204")
5 Forgetting Of Impressions And Experiences
6 Man whose wife is suffering from pleuritis: Her condition has not=!al("7957")
6 <improved after many weeks and Dr. P. is called in for consultation.=!al("7957")
6 <In taking the anamnesis he asks the usual questions, including whether=!al("7957")
6 <there have been any cases of lung illness in her family. She replies=!al("7957")
6 <in the negative and he cannot recall any either. The conversation=!al("7957")
6 <turns to the topic of excursions and to Langersdorf, where her brother=!al("7957")
6 <is buried. This brother died fifteen years ago after suffering for years from tuberculosis.=!al("7957")
6 A physician, whose wife is suffering from an abdominal complaint,=!al("7965")
6 <remarks by way of comforting her that there has been no tuberculosis=!al("7965")
6 <in her family. She reminds him that her mother died of tuberculosis=!al("7965")
6 <and that her sister recovered from it only after having been given up by the doctors.=!al("7965")
6 A mother is giving Freud information about the childhood of her=!al("7970")
6 <neurotic son, now in his puberty, in the course of which she says=!al("7970")
6 <that he, like his brothers and sisters, was a bed-wetter till late.=!al("7970")
6 <A few weeks later he has occasion to refer to the bed-wetting which=!al("7970")
6 <she brought out in the anamnesis. She contests this fact, both in=!al("7970")
6 <regard to this son and to the other children.=!al("7970")
5 Errors Of Memory
6 Freud forbids a patient to telephone to the girl he is in love with -=!al("8477")
6 <but with whom he himself wants to break off relations - since each=!al("8477")
6 <conversation serves only to renew the struggle about giving her up. He=!al("8477")
6 <is to write his final decision to her. While composing the letter he=!al("8477")
6 <suddenly remembers that he has forgotten to ask Freud whether he may=!al("8477")
6 <quote his name in the letter. On phoning Freud to ask whether he may do so,=!al("8477")
6 <he finds unexpectedly finds - as a result of a wrong number - the girl on the other end of the line.=!al("8477")
6 A young lady, in the course of conversation, says that she has to go to the=!al("8486")
6 <*Babenbergergasse* [`Babenberg Street'] instead of the *Habsburgergasse* [`Hapsburg Street'].=!al("8486")
6 A poor but handsome young man persists in his courtship of the daughter=!al("8489")
6 <of the proprietor of a villa, until the girl falls passionately in=!al("8489")
6 <love with him and even persuades her family to give their approval to=!al("8489")
6 <the marriage in spite of the differences in their social position and=!al("8489")
6 <race. One day he writes a letter to his brother in which he says:=!al("8489")
6 <`The girl is certainly no beauty\; but she is very sweet, and it would=!al("8489")
6 <be all right as far as that goes. But whether I shall be able to make=!al("8489")
6 <up my mind to marry a Jewess I cannot yet tell you.'=!al("8489")
6 <This letter is received by his fiancee and it puts an end to the=!al("8489")
6 <engagement. At the same, the brother receives a letter intended for the fiancee.=!al("8489")
6 A lady is dissatisfied with her old doctor but unwilling to openly get=!al("8500")
6 <rid of him. She achieves her purpose by mixing up two letters.=!al("8500")
6 A lady, in asking Brill after common acquaintance, refers to her by her=!al("8502")
6 <maiden name. When attention is drawn to the parapraxis, she admits=!al("8502")
6 <that she dislikes the husband and is very unhappy about the marriage.=!al("8502")
6 A young father presents himself before the registrar of births to=!al("8506")
6 <register the birth of his second daughter. When asked what the child's name is to be he answers:=!al("8506")
6 <`Hanna' - only to be told by the official that he already has a child of that name.=!al("8506")
6 A lady has three daughters, one of whom is unmarried. At their=!al("8510")
6 <weddings the daughters received the same present - an expensive=!al("8510")
6 <tea-service - from a friend of the family. Whenever the topic of conversation=!al("8510")
6 <turns to this tea-service the mother makes the error of saying that the third daughter owns it.=!al("8510")
6 A man is having a conversation with an elderly spinster sitting next=!al("8515")
6 <to him at the table. In the course of it he uses a phrase of special=!al("8515")
6 <affability - something he is not in the habit of doing with her. In=!al("8515")
6 <the course of their further conversation he has to have it repeatedly=!al("8515")
6 <pointed out to him that he has addressed her by the name of a young=!al("8515")
6 <lady - one towards whom he is more inclined to be attentive.=!al("8515")
6 A lady spends an evening with her husband and two strangers. One of the=!al("8521")
6 <`strangers' is actually intimate friend of hers - something the others=!al("8521")
6 <know nothing about. The friends accompany the married couple to the=!al("8521")
6 <door of their house and while waiting for the door to be opened take=!al("8521")
6 <their leave of one another. The lady bows to the stranger, gives him=!al("8521")
6 <her hand and says a few polite words. Then she takes the arm of her=!al("8521")
6 <secret lover, turns to her husband and begins to bid him good-bye in the same way.=!al("8521")
6 A young man, after protracted internal struggles, brings himself to the=!al("8529")
6 <point of proposing marriage to the girl who has long been in love with=!al("8529")
6 <him, as he is with her. He escorts his fiancee home, says good-bye=!al("8529")
6 <to her, and, in a mood of the greatest happiness, gets on to a tram=!al("8529")
6 <and asks the conductress for *two* tickets. About six months later he=!al("8529")
6 <gets married. He soon however begins to wonder whether he has done the=!al("8529")
6 <right thing in marrying - he misses his former relations with his=!al("8529")
6 <friends, and has every sort of fault to find with his parents-in-law.=!al("8529")
6 <One evening he fetches his young wife from her parents' house, gets on=!al("8529")
6 <to a tram with her and contents himself with asking for one ticket only.=!al("8529")
6 A colleague of Maeder's has a day free from duties and wants to enjoy=!al("8540")
6 <it without any interruptions\; he is, however, due to pay a visit in=!al("8540")
6 <Lucerne - a visit which he is not looking forward to. After long=!al("8540")
6 <deliberation he decides to go there all the same. He passes the time=!al("8540")
6 <on the journey from Zurich to Goldau in reading the daily papers. At=!al("8540")
6 <the latter station he changes trains and continues reading. He travels=!al("8540")
6 <on till the ticket-inspector informs him that he is in the wrong=!al("8540")
6 <train - the one travelling back from Goldau to Zurich.=!al("8540")
6 V Tausk: While on leave from the front, he sees an old patient. He=!al("8548")
6 <declines remuneration for his services. Filled with misgivings about=!al("8548")
6 <the sincerity of his generosity, he gets on a tram of route X. After a=!al("8548")
6 <short journey, he has to change on to route Y. A tram comes and he=!al("8548")
6 <gets on - only to have to get off at the next stop -  he inadvertently=!al("8548")
6 <got on to an X tram (travelling back in the direction of the patient) instead of a Y tram.=!al("8548")
6 J. Starcke is to give an evening lecture at a village. Having free time=!al("8564")
6 <on that day he decides to leave a bit earlier and pay a visit to a=!al("8564")
6 <writer whom he knows lives there. The lecture is postponed for a week.=!al("8564")
6 <On the new date, however, he has no free time available, and gives up=!al("8564")
6 <the idea of the visit. The evening of the lecture arrives and he sets=!al("8564")
6 <out for the village. He reaches his destination - only to find that=!al("8564")
6 <there is no one there to meet him. He then remembers that the lecture has been postponed for a week.=!al("8564")
6 <He makes use of the opportunity to pay the visit that he originally wanted to.=!al("8564")
5 Mislaying Of Objects
6 Youngish man: Is married to a woman whom he finds too cold. One day she=!al("7912")
6 <gives him a book which she bought because she thought it would=!al("7912")
6 <interest him. He thanks her for this mark of `attention', promises to=!al("7912")
6 <read the book and puts it on one side. After that he cannot find it.=!al("7912")
6 <About six months later his mother falls ill and his wife leaves home=!al("7912")
6 <to nurse her. His mother's condition becomes serious and his wife has=!al("7912")
6 <an opportunity for showing the best side of herself. One evening he returns home,=!al("7912")
6 <walks up to his desk, opens one of the drawers, and right at the top he finds the book.=!al("7912")
6 A girl spoils a piece of material in cutting it out to make a collar\;=!al("7921")
6 <so the dressmaker has to come and do her best to put it right. When=!al("7921")
6 <the dressmaker arrives the girl cannot find the collar. When she=!al("7921")
6 <realizes why she cannot find the collar - that she feels ashamed in=!al("7921")
6 <front of the dressmaker for having bungled something so simple as a collar - she is able to find it.=!al("7921")
6 Patient, whose psycho--analytic treatment is interrupted by the summer holidays,=!al("7927")
6 <mislays his bunch of keys.=!al("7927")
6 A man is urged by his wife to attend a social function in which he=!al("7929")
6 <really has no interest . . . Yielding to his wife's entreaties, he=!al("7929")
6 <begins to take his dress-suit from the trunk when he suddenly thinks=!al("7929")
6 <of shaving. After accomplishing this he returns to the trunk and finds=!al("7929")
6 <it locked. Despite a long, earnest search the key cannot be found.=!al("7929")
6 <No locksmith is available on Sunday evening, so the couple have to send their regrets.=!al("7929")
6 E. Jones: Finds that he is in the habit of mislaying his pipe whenever=!al("7936")
6 <he has smoked too much and feels unwell in consequence.=!al("7936")
6 Lady: Takes a piece of ginger-bread from a packet and eats it\; at the=!al("7938")
6 <time she thinks she will have to offer some to Fraulein S=!al("7938")
6 <(her mother's companion), even though she doesn't particularly want to do=!al("7938")
6 <so. When the time comes to give the piece, she reaches for the packet=!al("7938")
6 <on the table but it is not there. She had put it in the cupboard without realizing it.=!al("7938")
6 H Sachs: One Sunday afternoon he hesitates for some time over whether=!al("7944")
6 <he should work or take a walk and pay a visit at the end of it. He=!al("7944")
6 <decides in favour of the former. After about an hour he notices that=!al("7944")
6 <his supply of paper is exhausted. Although he knows that he has a=!al("7944")
6 <further supply of paper somewhere, he cannot find it, and is compelled=!al("7944")
6 <to break off his work and go out after all. On returning home, he=!al("7944")
6 <finds the supply of paper he had been looking for.=!al("7944")
5 Slips Of The Tongue
6 President of the Lower House of the Austrian Parliament opens the sitting:=!al("7234")
6 <'Gentlemen: I take notice that a full quorum of members is=!al("7234")
6 <present and herewith declare the sitting *closed*!'=!al("7234")
6 Freud's daughter says: `I am writing to Frau Sch*r*esinger . . .'=!al("7247")
6 <The lady's name is Sch*l*esinger.=!al("7247")
6 *Vorschwein* =!al("8852")
6 Woman patient says at the start of the hour of treatment:=!al("7249")
6 <`I shut up like a *Tassenmescher* [a non-existent word] - I mean=!al("7249")
6 <*Taschenmesser* [pocket-knife]'=!al("7249")
6 Woman patient says: `I've got such a cold, I can't *durch die Ase natmen* - I mean, *Nase atmen*'.=!al("7252")
6 Woman patient: Calls on a friend with whom she discusses summer=!al("7254")
6 <residences. When asked where her cottage at M. is situated she answers:=!al("7254")
6 <`on the *Berglende* [hill-thigh]' instead of *Berglehne* [hill-side].=!al("7254")
6 Woman patient, when asked at the end of the session how her uncle is,=!al("7257")
6 <answers: `I don't know, nowadays I only see him *in flagranti*.'=!al("7257")
6 <She meant to say: *en passant*.=!al("7257")
6 Woman patient: At a certain point in the analysis Freud has to tell her=!al("7260")
6 <that he suspects her of having been ashamed of her family during the=!al("7260")
6 <period they are just then concerned with, and of having reproached her=!al("7260")
6 <father with something they do not yet know about. She remembers=!al("7260")
6 <nothing of the kind and moreover declares it is unlikely. However, she=!al("7260")
6 <continues the conversation with some remarks about her family:=!al("7260")
6 <`One thing must be granted them: they are certainly unusual people,=!al("7260")
6 <they all possess *Geiz* [greed] - I meant to say "*Geist* [cleverness]".=!al("7260")
6 Freud meets two old ladies in the Dolomites who are dressed up in=!al("7268")
6 <walking clothes. In the course of a discussion over the pleasures and=!al("7268")
6 <also the trials of spending a holiday in that way one of the ladies=!al("7268")
6 <admits that spending the day like that entails a good deal of=!al("7268")
6 <discomfort. `It is certainly not at all pleasant', she says, `if one=!al("7268")
6 <has been tramping all day in the sun and has perspired right through=!al("7268")
6 <one's blouse and chemise.' In this sentence she has to overcome a=!al("7268")
6 <slight hesitation at one point. Then she continues: `But then when one=!al("7268")
6 <gets "nach *Hose*" and can change . . .' The lady's intention must=!al("7268")
6 <obviously have been to give a more complete list of her clothes:=!al("7268")
6 <blouse, chemise and *Hose* [drawers]. Reasons of propriety have led=!al("7268")
6 <her to suppress any mention of the third article of linen. But in the=!al("7268")
6 <next sentence, with its different subject-matter, the suppressed word=!al("7268")
6 <emerges against her will, in the form of a distortion of the similar word `nach *Hause* [home]'.=!al("7268")
6 Female patient relates the following dream: A child has resolved to=!al("7286")
6 <kill itself by means of a snake-bite. It carries out its resolution.=!al("7286")
6 <She watches it writhing in convulsions, and so on. In the course of=!al("7286")
6 <its analysis it emerges that on the previous evening she had listened=!al("7286")
6 <to a public lecture on first aid for snake-bites. Freud asks if she=!al("7286")
6 <was told which the dangerous ones are. She replies that it is the=!al("7286")
6 <`*Klapperschlange* [rattlesnake]'. She should have said the viper, the=!al("7286")
6 <rattlesnake not being found in their part of the world. Suicide by=!al("7286")
6 <means of a snake-bite is an allusion to the beautiful Cleopatra [in=!al("7286")
6 <German: `*Kleopatra*']. The error thus reveals that thoughts=!al("7286")
6 <revolving round Cleopatra lie behind the dream.=!al("7286")
6 A German who is travelling in Italy needs a strap to tie up his damaged=!al("7300")
6 <trunk. For `strap' [`*Riemen*'] the dictionary gives him the Italian=!al("7300")
6 <word `*corregia*'. It will be easy, he thinks, to remember the word by=!al("7300")
6 <thinking of the painter *Corregio*. After that he goes into a shop and asks for `*una ribera*'.=!al("7300")
6 A young man says to his sister: `I've completely fallen out with the=!al("7305")
6 <D.'s now. We're not on speaking terms any longer.' `Yes indeed!' she answers,=!al("7305")
6 <`they're a fine *Lippschaft* [non-existent word].' She means to say `*Sippschaft*' [lot, crew]'.=!al("7305")
6 Young man addresses a lady in the street: `If you will permit me, madam,=!al("7309")
6 < I should like to "*begleit-digen*" you.'=!al("7309")
6 Doctor, who supposedly hasn't got financial interests at heart, says to a female patient:=!al("7311")
6 <`If, as I hope, you will *not* leave your bed soon . . . .'=!al("7311")
6 Woman is engaging a French governess for the afternoons, and after=!al("7314")
6 <agreement has been reached on the terms, wants to retain her=!al("7314")
6 <testimonials. The Frenchwoman asks to be allowed to keep them, giving=!al("7314")
6 <as her reason: *Je cherche encore pour les apres-midis, pardon, pour=!al("7314")
6 <le avant-midis* [I am still looking for work in the afternoons - I mean in the forenoons].=!al("7314")
6 Doctor has to give a stiff lecture to a wife, while the husband, at=!al("7320")
6 <whose request it is being done, stands outside and listens. The doctor ends by saying `Good-bye, sir.'=!al("7320")
6 Doctor: At one time he has two patients from Trieste in treatment whom=!al("7323")
6 <he always addresses the wrong way round. `Good morning, Herr Peloni',=!al("7323")
6 <he says to Askoli, and `Good morning, Herr Askoli' to Peloni.=!al("7323")
6 Doctor during a stormy General Meeting says: `We shall now *streiten*=!al("7326")
6 <[quarrel]' (instead of `*schreiten* [proceed]') `to point four on the agenda.'=!al("7326")
6 A professor declares in his inaugural lecture: `I am not *geneigt* [inclined]'=!al("7329")
6 <(instead of `*geeignet* [qualified]') `to describe the services of my most esteemed predecessor.'=!al("7329")
6 Doctor says to a lady whom he suspects of having Graves' disease:=!al("7332")
6 <`You are about a *Kropf* [goitre]' (instead of `*Kopf* [head]') `taller than your sister.'=!al("7332")
6 Someone wants to describe the relationship of two friends and to bring=!al("7335")
6 <out the fact that one of them is Jewish. He says: `They lived together like Castor and Pollak.'=!al("7335")
6 A young woman who wears the breeches in her home tells Freud that her=!al("7338")
6 <sick husband has been to the doctor to ask what diet he ought to=!al("7338")
6 <follow for his health. The doctor, however, says that a special diet=!al("7338")
6 <is not important. She adds: `He can eat and drink what *I* want.'=!al("7338")
6 A gentleman is offering his condolences to a young lady whose husband has recently died,=!al("7342")
6 <and he intends to add: `You will find consolation in *devoting* [*widmen*] yourself=!al("7342")
6 <entirely to your children.' Instead he says `*widwen* [a non-existent word]'.=!al("7342")
6 At an evening party the same gentleman is having a conversation with=!al("7346")
6 <the same lady about the extensive preparations being made in Berlin=!al("7346")
6 <for Easter, and asks: `Have you seen today's display [*Auslage*] at=!al("7346")
6 <Wertheim's? The place is completely *decollated*.'=!al("7346")
6 H Sachs asks a lady: `So you were able to admire his *Hausschuhe*=!al("7350")
6 <[house shoes] - *Halbschuhe* [low shoes], I mean - through the blinds when they were drawn?"=!al("7350")
6 During wartime a lady is asked: `What regiment is your son with?'=!al("7353")
6 <She replies: `With the 42nd murderers' [`*Morder*' - instead of `*Morser*', `Mortars'].=!al("7353")
6 During wartime a soldier, while reading an absorbing book, is torn away=!al("7356")
6 <to act temporarily as reconnaissance telephone operator.=!al("7356")
6 <When the artillery post gives the signal to test the line he reacts with:=!al("7356")
6 <Duly tested and in order\; `*Ruhe* [`Quiet'\; often used as an exclamation: `Silence!']'=!al("7356")
6 <According to regulations the message should run:=!al("7356")
6 <`Duly tested and in order\; *Schluss* [end (of message)]'=!al("7356")
6 During wartime a sergeant instructs his men to give their people at=!al("7362")
6 <home their correct addresses, so that `*Gespeckstucke* should not go=!al("7362")
6 <astray. He means to say `*Gepackstucke*' (`parcels').`*Gespeckstucke*'=!al("7362")
6 <is a non-existent word\; `*Speckstucke*' means `bits of bacon'.=!al("7362")
6 During wartime, in neutral Switzerland: A professor is delivering a=!al("7366")
6 <lecture to an audience made up of interned French prisoners-of-war and=!al("7366")
6 <French-Swiss students, and whose sympathies lie strongly on the side=!al("7366")
6 <of the *Entente*. "*Boche*" is the name commonly used for the Germans,=!al("7366")
6 <but in public announcements and in lectures and the like, senior=!al("7366")
6 <public servants, professors and other persons in responsible positions=!al("7366")
6 <make an effort, for the sake of neutrality, to avoid the use of the=!al("7366")
6 <word. In the course of the lecture he says: *Imaginez-vous qu'en chaqu=!al("7366")
6 <chaque moche vous ecrasez le crane d'un Francais*. [Instead of saying=!al("7366")
6 <*motte* (the French word for `clod') as intended, he says moche*.]=!al("7366")
6 During wartime: Austrian officer says `We could sit down here in the=!al("7377")
6 <*grave* [`*Grab*'] - grass [`*Gras*'] and *sink* [`*sinken*'] a serenade.'=!al("7377")
6 A doctor has agreed to undertake the treatment of a man whose illness=!al("7380")
6 <is all probability a fatal one. It is intended that the sick man=!al("7380")
6 <should stay in a nursing home and the doctor proposes that it should=!al("7380")
6 <be the `Hera' sanatorium. `Surely', objects the patient, `that is a=!al("7380")
6 <home for a special type of case only (a maternity home).' `Oh no!'=!al("7380")
6 <replies the doctor hastily, `in the "Hera" they can *umbringen* [put a=!al("7380")
6 <an end to] - I mean, *unterbringen*  [take in] - every type of=!al("7380")
6 <patient.' It emerges that earlier on the patient had stipulated that=!al("7380")
6 <he (the doctor) should shorten his sufferings by means of a drug as=!al("7380")
6 <soon as it is confirmed that he is past helping.=!al("7380")
6 A lady advances the following opinion at a social gathering:=!al("7390")
6 <`Yes, a woman must be pretty if she is to please men. A man is much=!al("7390")
6 <better off\; as long as he has his *five* straight limbs he needs nothing more!'=!al("7390")
6 A recently married man, whose wife is concerned about preserving her=!al("7394")
6 <girlish appearance and only with reluctance allows him to have=!al("7394")
6 <frequent sexual intercourse, relates the following:=!al("7394")
6 <After a night in which he has once again disobeyed his wife's rule of=!al("7394")
6 <abstinence, he is shaving in the morning in the bedroom which they share,=!al("7394")
6 <while his wife is still in bed\; and, as he has often done to=!al("7394")
6 <save trouble, he makes use of his wife's powder-puff which is lying on=!al("7394")
6 <the bedside table. His wife, who is extremely concerned about her=!al("7394")
6 <complexion, has several times told him not to, and calls out angrily:=!al("7394")
6 <`There you go again, powdering *me* with *your* puff!'=!al("7394")
6 A lady, suffering from an affection of obviously psychogenic origin,=!al("7404")
6 <is repeatedly recommended to consult a psycho-analyst, Dr. X.=!al("7404")
6 <She persistently declines to do so, saying that such treatment could=!al("7404")
6 <never be of any value, as the doctor would wrongly trace everything=!al("7404")
6 <back to sexual things. She one day agrees to follow the advice but,=!al("7404")
6 <meaning to ask: `Nun gut, wann ordiniert also dieser Dr. X.?'=!al("7404")
6 <[`All right, then, when does this Dr. X. have his consulting hours?'],=!al("7404")
6 <instead asks: `Nun gut, wann *ordinart* also dieser Dr. X.?'=!al("7404")
6 <[`*ordinart*' is a non-existent word. `*Ordinar*' means `common', `vulgar'.]=!al("7404")
6 A girl who had in the course of her studies changed over from medicine=!al("7414")
6 <to chemistry describes her change of mind as follows:=!al("7414")
6 <`I was not on the whole squeamish about dissecting, but when I once=!al("7414")
6 <had to pull the finger-nails off a dead body, I lost my pleasure in the whole of - *chemistry*.'=!al("7414")
6 In an anatomy lesson on the nasal cavities the professor asks whether=!al("7419")
6 <his presentation has been understood. He gets a general reply in the=!al("7419")
6 <affirmative. The professor, who is known to have a rather high opinion=!al("7419")
6 <of himself, then comments: `I can hardly believe that, since, even in=!al("7419")
6 <Vienna with its millions of inhabitants, those who understand the=!al("7419")
6 <nasal cavities can be counted on *one finger*, I mean on the fingers of one hand.'=!al("7419")
6 Professor: `In the case of the female genitals, in spite of many=!al("7426")
6 <*Versuchungen* [temptations] - I beg your pardon, *Versuche* [experiments] . . .'=!al("7426")
6 Brantome:=!al("7429")
6 <(i) `Thus I knew a very beautiful and virtuous lady of the world who,=!al("7429")
6 <discoursing with a virtuous gentleman on the court on the affairs of=!al("7429")
6 <the war during those civil disturbances, said to him: "I have heard=!al("7429")
6 <tell that the king had a breach made in all the c . . . of that region."=!al("7429")
6 <She meant to say the `ponts' [`bridges', which rhymes with the missing French word].=!al("7429")
6 <(ii) `Another lady whom I knew, entertaining another lady of higher=!al("7429")
6 <rank than herself, and praising her and extolling her beauties, she=!al("7429")
6 <said after to her: "No, madame, what I say to you is not in order to=!al("7429")
6 <*adulterate* you"\; meaning to say *adulate*, as she clad the word thus=!al("7429")
6 <anew, one may suppose that she was thinking of adultery.'=!al("7429")
6 Lady describing her first hour in a language course: `It is very=!al("7441")
6 <interesting\; the teacher is a nice young Englishman. In the very first=!al("7441")
6 <hour he gave me to understand "*durch die Bluse*" [though the blouse]=!al("7441")
6 < - I mean, "*durch die Blume*" [literally `through flowers', i.e.=!al("7441")
6 <`indirectly'] that he would rather take me for individual tuition.'=!al("7441")
6 Young man who introduces himself at the start of treatment in the=!al("7446")
6 <following words: `I am the father of So-and-so who came to you for treatment.=!al("7446")
6 <I beg your pardon, I meant to say I am his brother: he is four years older than I am.'=!al("7446")
6 Meringer: Says to someone, who by reason of being the eldest member of=!al("7450")
6 <the company is addressed by the title of `*Senexl*' or=!al("7450")
6 <`*altes* [old] *Senexl*': `*Prost* [Your health!], *Senex altesl!*'=!al("7450")
6 The person who on one occasion says `Freuder' instead of `Freud' and on=!al("7453")
6 <another, speaks of/refers to the `Freuer-Breudian' method of treatment.=!al("7453")
6 Ferenczi: When called upon to recite a poem by Alexander Petofi in the=!al("7455")
6 <first form, gives his own name as the poem's author.=!al("7455")
6 Young doctor: Erroneously introduces himself to the famous Virchow as `Dr. Virchow'.=!al("7457")
6 Opponent of Freud's who, at a Congress, says:=!al("7459")
6 <`It is well known that Breuer and *I* have proved . . .' where he=!al("7459")
6 <could only have meant `. . . Breuer and *Freud* . . .'=!al("7459")
6 A man who does not care for what is called normal sexual intercourse in=!al("7462")
6 <his relations with women breaks into a conversation about a girl who=!al("7462")
6 <is said to be a flirt, [*kokett*] with the words: `If she had to do=!al("7462")
6 <with me, she'd soon give up her *koettieren* [a non-existent word].'=!al("7462")
6 <It must have been the influence of another word - `*koitieren*'=!al("7462")
6 <[to have coitus] - that was responsible for making the change in the=!al("7462")
6 <word that was intended, `*kokettieren*' [to flirt, coquette].=!al("7462")
6 Family has an uncle who for a while has been offended because they=!al("7469")
6 <never visit him. They take his move to a new house as an opportunity=!al("7469")
6 <to visit him. He seems very glad to see them, and as they are leaving=!al("7469")
6 <he says: `I hope from now on I shall see you still *more seldom* than in the past.'=!al("7469")
6 Lady, in a voice of admiration to another: `That smart new hat - I=!al("7474")
6 <suppose you `*aufgepatzt*' [instead of `*aufgeputzt*' (trimmed)] it=!al("7474")
6 <yourself?' She must have felt that the hat's trimmings [`*Hutaufputz*'] were a `*Patzerei* [botch]'.=!al("7474")
6 A lady who is visiting an acquaintance becomes very impatient and=!al("7478")
6 <weary at her tedious and long-winded conversation. She succeeds in=!al("7478")
6 <tearing herself away but is detained once more in the entrance hall.=!al("7478")
6 <Eventually she interrupts the hostess and asks: `Are you at home in the front hall [*Vorzimmer*]?'=!al("7478")
6 <[She had meant to ask: `Are you at home in the mornings [*Vormittag*]?']=!al("7478")
6 At the General Meeting of the Society of Journalist a young member who=!al("7484")
6 <is invariably hard-up makes a speech in which he speaks of the=!al("7484")
6 <`*Vorschussmitglieder* [lending members]' (instead of=!al("7484")
6 <`*Vorstandsmitglieder* [officers]' or `*Ausschussmitglieder*=!al("7484")
6 <[committee members]').The latter have the authority to sanction loans.=!al("7484")
6 A photographer who has made a resolution to refrain from zoological terms=!al("7489")
6 <in dealing with his clumsy employees:=!al("7489")
6 <(i) Addresses an apprentice - who tries to empty out a large dish that=!al("7489")
6 <is full to the brim and in so doing spills half the contents - in the=!al("7489")
6 <following words: `But, man, *schopsen sie* some of it off first.'=!al("7489")
6 <[He means to say `*schopfen Sie* [draw]'. `*Schopsen Sie*' is=!al("7489")
6 <meaningless. The word `*Schops*' means `sheep' or `silly fellow'.]=!al("7489")
6 <(ii) In the course of a tirade against a female assistant who has=!al("7489")
6 <nearly spoilt a dozen valuable plates by her carelessness, he says:=!al("7489")
6 <`Are you so *hornverbrannt* . . . .?' [He means to say=!al("7489")
6 <`*hirnverbrannt*', `idiotic', literally `with your brain (*Hirn*)=!al("7489")
6 <burnt up'. `*Hornverbrannt*', a non-existent term, means `with your horn (*Horn*) burnt up'.=!al("7489")
6 <The word `*Hornvieh*', literally `horned cattle', is used in the sense of `fool'.]=!al("7489")
6 Brill one day meets a colleague whom he has not seen for years and=!al("7503")
6 <of whose private life he knows nothing. On asking him whether he is=!al("7503")
6 <married, he replies in the negative. In the course of their=!al("7503")
6 <conversation he says: `I should like to know what you would do in a=!al("7503")
6 <case like this: I know a nurse who was named as co-respondent in a=!al("7503")
6 <divorce case. The wife sued the husband and named her as=!al("7503")
6 <co-respondent, and *he* got the divorce.' Brill interrupts him,=!al("7503")
6 <saying: `You mean *she* got the divorce.' He immediately corrects=!al("7503")
6 <himself saying: `Yes, of course, *she* got the divorce.' The nurse=!al("7503")
6 <has been badly affected by the divorce proceedings and he wants to=!al("7503")
6 <Brill to advise him how to treat her. Brill's assumption that it is=!al("7503")
6 <in fact his colleague who is seeking the divorce turns out [proves] to be correct.=!al("7503")
6 A father who is without any patriotic feelings, and who wishes his=!al("7516")
6 <children, too, to be free from what he regards as a superfluous=!al("7516")
6 <sentiment, is criticizing his sons for taking part in a patriotic=!al("7516")
6 <demonstration\; when they protest that their uncle also took part in=!al("7516")
6 <it, he replies: `*He* is the one person you should not imitate: he is=!al("7516")
6 <an *idiot*.' On seeing his children's look of astonishment at their=!al("7516")
6 <father's unusual tone, he realizes that he has made a slip of tongue,=!al("7516")
6 <and adds apologetically: `I meant to say `*patriot*', of course.'=!al("7516")
6 A woman dentist promises her sister that she will have a look some time=!al("7525")
6 <to see if there is *Kontakt* [contact] between two of her molars. The=!al("7525")
6 <sister finally complains about having to wait so long for this=!al("7525")
6 <inspection. The dentist eventually examines her, finds there is in=!al("7525")
6 <fact a small cavity in one of the molars, and says: `I didn't think it was in such a bad way -=!al("7525")
6 <I thought it was merely that you had no *Kontant* [ready money] - I mean *Kontakt*.'=!al("7525")
6 A girl is to become engaged to a young man whom she does not care for.=!al("7532")
6 <To bring the two young people closer together, their parents arrange=!al("7532")
6 <a meeting which is attended by the parties to the intended match. The=!al("7532")
6 <young girl possesses sufficient self-control to prevent her suitor=!al("7532")
6 <from detecting her antipathy to him. But when her mother asks her how=!al("7532")
6 <she likes the young man, she answers politely:=!al("7532")
6 <`Well enough. He's most *liebenswidrig*!'=!al("7532")
6 <[*Liebenswidrig*' - literally `repelling to love'. She meant to say=!al("7532")
6 <`*liebenswurdig*', `agreeable' (literally `worthy of love').]=!al("7532")
6 A married woman, not averse to extra-marital affairs if reinforced by=!al("7541")
6 <by adequate gifts, is told the following story by a young man eager to=!al("7541")
6 <to obtain her favours: One of two business friends is trying to obtain=!al("7541")
6 <the favours of his partner's somewhat prudish wife. In the end she=!al("7541")
6 <consents to grant them to him in exchange for a present of a thousand=!al("7541")
6 <gulden. Prior to the husband's departure on a journey, the seducer=!al("7541")
6 <borrows a thousand gulden from him, promising to pay it back to his=!al("7541")
6 <wife the next day. When the young man reaches the point in the story=!al("7541")
6 <at which the seducer says: `I'II *repay* the money to your wife=!al("7541")
6 <tomorrow', his listener interrupts with the words: `Let me see,=!al("7541")
6 <haven't you *repaid* me that - I'm sorry - I mean *told* me that already?'=!al("7541")
6 A man, whose fiancee is a Christian and is unwilling to adopt the=!al("7553")
6 <Jewish faith, is obliged to convert from Judaism to Christianity so=!al("7553")
6 <that they can marry. He only informs his two sons of their Jewish=!al("7553")
6 <background when they are older. While staying at a summer resort one=!al("7553")
6 <year, the lady of the house, who has no inkling of their Jewish=!al("7553")
6 <ancestry, launches some sharp attacks on the Jews. He wants to make=!al("7553")
6 <a declaration of the facts but fears the unpleasant exchanges that=!al("7553")
6 <would follow an avowal of this sort. He has reason to expect that his=!al("7553")
6 <sons will betray the truth if they hear any more of the conversation=!al("7553")
6 <and tries to get them to leave the company by sending them into the garden.=!al("7553")
6 <He says: `Go into the garden, *Juden* [Jews]', quickly correcting it to `*Jungen* [youngsters]'.=!al("7553")
6 A soldier charged with housebreaking states in evidence: `Up to now=!al("7565")
6 <I've not been discharged from military *Diebsstellung*\; so at the=!al("7565")
6 <moment I'm still in the army.' [`*Diebsstellung*' - literally=!al("7565")
6 <`thief position'. He meant to say `*Dienststellung*', `service', literally `service position'.]=!al("7565")
6 Freud has to interpret a patient's dream in which the name `Jauner' occurs.=!al("7570")
6 <The dreamer knows someone of that name, but it is impossible=!al("7570")
6 <to discover the reason for his appearing in the context of the dream.=!al("7570")
6 <Freud ventures to suggest that it might be merely because of the=!al("7570")
6 <name's similarity in sound to the term of abuse `*Gauner*' [swindler].=!al("7570")
6 <The patient contests this, but in doing so he makes a slip of the=!al("7570")
6 <tongue which confirms the guess, since he confuses the same letters=!al("7570")
6 <once more. His answer is: `That seems to me too *jewagt* [instead of `*Gewagt* (far-fetched)'].=!al("7570")
6 The German Imperial Chancellor Prince Bulow in his speech in defence of=!al("7579")
6 <his Emperor: `As for the present, the new epoch of the=!al("7579")
6 <Emperor Wilhelm II, I can only repeat what I said a year ago, namely=!al("7579")
6 <that *it would be unfair and unjust to speak of a coterie of=!al("7579")
6 <responsible advisors round our Emperor* . . .' (loud cries of=!al("7579")
6 <`irresponsible') `. . . *irresponsible advisors*. Forgive the *lapsus linguae*.' (Laughter.)=!al("7579")
6 Speaker, appealing for a demonstration *with no reserves*=!al("7586")
6 <[*ruckhaltlos*] in support of the Emperor: `. . .It is our belief that=!al("7586")
6 <the united thoughts and wishes of the German people are bent on=!al("7586")
6 <achieving a *united demonstration* in this matter as well, and if we=!al("7586")
6 <can do so in a form that takes the Emperor's feelings fully into=!al("7586")
6 <account, then we should do so *spinelessly* ["*ruckgratlos*"] as well.'=!al("7586")
6 Young man becomes president of a bank. In the valedictory speech which=!al("7592")
6 <the managing director Dr. Y. delivers in honour of the old president,=!al("7592")
6 <who has not been re-elected, he continually speaks of the *expiring*=!al("7592")
6 <[*dahinscheidend*] president instead of the *outgoing*=!al("7592")
6 <[*ausscheidend*] president. The old president dies a few days after this meeting.=!al("7592")
6 Schiller's Wallenstein: Max Piccolomini has ardently espoused the=!al("7598")
6 <Duke's [Wallenstein's] cause, and has been passionately describing=!al("7598")
6 <the blessings of peace, of which he has become aware on the course of=!al("7598")
6 <a journey while escorting Wallenstein's daughter to the camp. As he=!al("7598")
6 <leaves the stage, his father [Octavio] and Questenberg, the emissary=!al("7598")
6 <from the court, are plunged in consternation. Scene 5 continues:=!al("7598")
6 <QUEST.       What now? *Where* go you then?=!al("7598")
6 <OCT.                                 To her herself.=!al("7598")
6 <QUEST.                                              TO-=!al("7598")
6 <OCT. (*correcting himself*) To the Duke. Come let us go.=!al("7598")
6 <The small slip of saying `to her' instead of `to him' reveals to us=!al("7598")
6 <that the father has seen through his son's motive for espousing the Duke's cause.=!al("7598")
6 Shakespeare's *Merchant of Venice*: Portia has, by her father's will,=!al("7611")
6 <been bound to the choice of a husband by lot. So far escaped all her=!al("7611")
6 <unwelcome suitors by fortunate chance. She at last finds in Bassanio=!al("7611")
6 <the suitor who is to her liking, but has cause to fear that he too=!al("7611")
6 <will choose the wrong casket. She would, however, like to tell him=!al("7611")
6 <that so he can rest assured of her love, but is prevented from doing=!al("7611")
6 <so by her vow. The poet makes her say to the suitor she favours:=!al("7611")
6 <. . . *One half of me is yours, the other half yours*, -=!al("7611")
6 <      *Mine own, I would say*\; but if mine, then yours,=!al("7611")
6 <      And so all yours.=!al("7611")
6 George Meredith's *The Egoist*: Sir Willoughby Patterne becomes engaged=!al("7621")
6 <to a Miss Constantia Durham. She discovers in him an intense egoism=!al("7621")
6 <and to escape the marriage she elopes with a Captain Harry Oxford.=!al("7621")
6 <Some years later Patterne becomes engaged to a Miss Clara Middleton.=!al("7621")
6 <She too discovers his egoism and he becomes more and more distasteful=!al("7621")
6 <in her eyes. She partly confides in his cousin and secretary, Vernon=!al("7621")
6 <Whitford. In a soliloquy about her sorrow she speaks as follows:=!al("7621")
6 <`. . . But I have no Harry Whitford\; I am alone . . .' [She meant to say Harry Oxford.]=!al("7621")
6 A woman patient who is acting entirely against Freud's wishes in=!al("7630")
6 <planning a short trip to Budapest, but who is determined to have her=!al("7630")
6 <own way, justifies herself by telling him that she is going for only=!al("7630")
6 <three days. Instead she says `only three *weeks*'.=!al("7630")
6 A friend describes a nervous patient to Brill and wishes to know=!al("7637")
6 <whether he can benefit him. He remarks: `I believe that in time I=!al("7637")
6 <could remove all his symptoms by psycho-analysis because it is a=!al("7637")
6 <*durable* case'. [He meant to say *curable*.]=!al("7637")
6 Lady asks Jekels: `Why did I say to-day that I have twelve fingers?'=!al("7642")
5 Misreadings
6 Bleuler: Once while he is reading he has an intellectual feeling that=!al("7663")
6 <he sees his name two lines further down. To his astonishment he only=!al("7663")
6 <finds the word "*Blutkorperchen* [blood-corpuscles]".=!al("7663")
6 Sachs: Reads `The things that strike other people are passed over by=!al("7666")
6 <him in his "*Steifleinenheit* [pedantry]".' This last word surprises=!al("7666")
6 <him and on looking more closely he discovers that it is "*Stilfeinheit* [elegance of style]".=!al("7666")
6 Editor in a series on `German Mediaeval Texts' who consistently=!al("7670")
6 <misreads the date 1850 in Roman numerals as 1350.=!al("7670")
6 Lichtenberg: Has read Homer so much that he always reads=!al("7672")
6 <`*Agamemnon*' instead of `*angenommen* [supposed]'.=!al("7672")
6 During wartime : Man finds an `old *Brotkarte* [bread card]' mentioned=!al("7678")
6 <in a certain context\; when he looks at this more attentively, he has=!al("7678")
6 <to replace it by `old *Brokate* [brocades]'.=!al("7678")
6 An engineer, whose equipment has never stood up for long to the=!al("7681")
6 <dampness in a tunnel that is under construction, is astonished to read=!al("7681")
6 <a laudatory advertisement of goods made of=!al("7681")
6 <`*Schundleder* [shoddy leather]'. What is being recommended is `*Seehundleder* [sealskin]'.=!al("7681")
6 A philologist, whose most recent works have brought him into conflict with his professional colleagues,=!al("7686")
6 < reads `*Sprachstrategie* [language strategy]' in mistake for `*Schachstrategie* [chess strategy]'.=!al("7686")
6 A man who is taking a walk in a strange town just when the action of=!al("7690")
6 <his bowels is timed to occur by a course of medical treatment reads=!al("7690")
6 <the word `Closet-House' on a large sign on the first storey of a tall=!al("7690")
6 <shop-building. The word actually reads `Corset-House'.=!al("7690")
6 During wartime: Patient suffering from a traumatic war neurosis misreads a poem:=!al("7695")
6 <      . . . . .=!al("7695")
6 <      Wer immer von euch fallt, der stirbt gewiss fur mich\;=!al("7695")
6 <      Und ich soll ubrig bleiben? *warum denn nicht*?=!al("7695")
6 <     [Whoever of you falls, for me that man doth die\;=!al("7695")
6 <      And I - am I alone to live? *Why should not I*?]=!al("7695")
6 <The last line reads:=!al("7695")
6 <      Und ich soll ubrig bleiben? warum denn *ich*?=!al("7695")
6 <     [And I - am I alone to live then? Why should *I*?]=!al("7695")
6 During wartime: Person who initially says he will not use his=!al("7705")
6 <specialist qualifications to avoid being sent to the front, later goes=!al("7705")
6 <back on his word and is assigned a post in industry. Misreads=!al("7705")
6 <`*Druckbogen* [printer's proofs]' as `*Druckeberger* [shirker]'.=!al("7705")
6 During wartime: Sachs is sitting in a tram and reflecting on the fact=!al("7709")
6 <that many of the friends of his youth who had always been taken as=!al("7709")
6 <frail and weakly are now able to endure the most severe hardships.=!al("7709")
6 <Misreads `Iron Constitution' for `Iron Construction' on the board of a business-firm.=!al("7709")
6 H Sachs: The evening papers carry a Reuter message, which subsequently=!al("7714")
6 <proves to be incorrect, to the effect that Hughes has been elected=!al("7714")
6 <President of the United States. He further reads that Hughes had completed his studies=!al("7714")
6 <at *Bonn* University. [The text in fact contains a reference to *Brown* University.].=!al("7714")
5 Slips of the Pen
6 Storfer: He sees a book by Dr. Eduard *Hitschmann* in the window of a=!al("7732")
6 <bookshop. Its subject is Freud's theory of the neuroses and is new at=!al("7732")
6 <the time. Just then he is at work on the manuscript of a lecture on=!al("7732")
6 <the basic principles of Freud's psychology. Amongst other things, it=!al("7732")
6 <deals with the fact that no general account of them has yet appeared.=!al("7732")
6 <When first sees the book (whose author is till then unknown to him) he=!al("7732")
6 <does not think of buying it, but later decides to do so. The book is=!al("7732")
6 <no longer in the window. He asks the bookseller for it and gives the=!al("7732")
6 <author's name as `Dr Eduard *Hartmann*'. The bookseller corrects him:=!al("7732")
6 <`I think you mean *Hitschmann*', and brings him the book.=!al("7732")
6 <The parapraxis is noted down. Six months later he comes upon the sheet=!al("7732")
6 <of paper on which he made the note. He then observes that instead of=!al("7732")
6 <Hitschmann he had throughout written *Hintsch*mann.=!al("7732")
6 The proprietors of a widely-read weekly periodical have been publicly=!al("7757")
6 <described as "venal". In an article published in defence and=!al("7757")
6 <vindication, the following mistake, which escaped everyone's notice,=!al("7757")
6 <appears: `Our readers will bear witness to the fact that we have=!al("7757")
6 <always acted in the most *self-seeking* manner for the good of the community.'=!al("7757")
6 <[It should have read: `in the most *unself-seeking* manner'.]=!al("7757")
6 October 11, 1918 in a Budapest German-language daily:=!al("7764")
6 <`In view of the complete mutual confidence which has prevailed between=!al("7764")
6 <ourselves and our German allies throughout the war, it may be taken=!al("7764")
6 <for certain that the two Powers would reach a unanimous decision in=!al("7764")
6 <all circumstances. It is unnecessary to state specifically that active and *interrupted* co-operation=!al("7764")
6 <between the allied diplomatists is taking place at the present stage as well.'=!al("7764")
6 An American living in Europe who has left his wife on bad terms feels=!al("7771")
6 <that he can now effect a reconciliation with her, and asks her to come=!al("7771")
6 <across the Atlantic and join him on a certain date.=!al("7771")
6 <`It would be fine,' he writes, `if you could come on the *Mauretania*=!al("7771")
6 <as I did.' He does not dare send a previous sheet of paper on which he=!al("7771")
6 <has written the letter, for on it he has first written the name of the=!al("7771")
6 <ship as `*Lusitania*' and then corrected it to `Mauretania'.=!al("7771")
6 <[The *Mauretania* is the surviving sister-ship of the *Lusitania*, which was sunk in the war.]=!al("7771")
6 A doctor has examined a child and is making out a prescription for it,=!al("7780")
6 <which includes the word `*alcohol*'. While doing so the child's mother=!al("7780")
6 <pesters him with stupid and unnecessary questions. He writes *achol*=!al("7780")
6 <[approximately, in classical Greek, `No choler [anger]'] instead of *alcohol*.=!al("7780")
6 A Brill: By custom a total abstainer, he allows himself to be persuaded=!al("7785")
6 <by a friend to drink a little wine. The acute headache he has the next=!al("7785")
6 <day gives him cause to regret having yielded in this way. He has=!al("7785")
6 <occasion to write the name of a patient called *Ethel*\; instead he writes *Ethyl*.=!al("7785")
6 Doctor who several times makes an error in prescribing *Belladonna*=!al("7790")
6 <for women patients of an advanced age.=!al("7790")
6 Ferenczi: Writes in his note-book: `I am reminded of the *Anektode*'.=!al("7792")
6 <He meant to write `*Anekdote* [anecdote]'.=!al("7792")
6 Man ends a letter with the words:=!al("7794")
6 <`Herzlichste Grusse an Ihre Frau Gemahlin und *ihren* Sohn.'=!al("7794")
6 <[`Warmest greetings to your wife and *her* son.' The German `*ihr*',=!al("7794")
6 <as spelt with a small `i', means `her'\; when spelt with a capital `I',=!al("7794")
6 <it means `your'. On the way home from his last visit to this married=!al("7794")
6 <couple the lady whom he was with had remarked that the son bore a=!al("7794")
6 <striking resemblance to a family friend and was in fact undoubtedly his child.]=!al("7794")
6 A lady sends her sister a message of good wishes on the occasion of her=!al("7802")
6 <taking up residence in a new and spacious house. She however addresses=!al("7802")
6 <it wrongly - not even to the house that her sister has just left, but=!al("7802")
6 <to the house into which she moved when she got married and which she has long since left.=!al("7802")
6 A patient writes to Dr. Brill on the subject of his sufferings, which=!al("7807")
6 <he tries to attribute to worry about his financial affairs induced by=!al("7807")
6 <a cotton crisis: `My trouble is all due to that d--d frigid wave\;=!al("7807")
6 <there isn't even any seed.' (By `wave' he means a trend in the money=!al("7807")
6 <market.) What he really writes, however, is not "wave" but "wife".=!al("7807")
6 Dr. R. Wagner: In reading through an old lecture note-book he finds=!al("7812")
6 <that he wrote `*Edithel*' instead of `*Epithel* [epithelium]'.=!al("7812")
6 <[`*Edithel*' is the diminutive form of the name of a lady with whom he he was only=!al("7812")
6 <superficially acquainted at the time but whom he later came to be on intimate terms with.]=!al("7812")
6 Doctor who prescribes `*Leviticowasser* [Levitical water]' instead of `*Levicowasser*'.=!al("7818")
6 Man, while a patient in a (lung-) sanatorium, learns that a relative of=!al("7820")
6 <his has been diagnosed as having the same illness as himself. In a=!al("7820")
6 <letter to the relative recommending that he go the same professor who=!al("7820")
6 <is treating him, he uses the following phrase: `and so I advise you=!al("7820")
6 <to *insult* Professor X. without delay'. [He meant to say `consult'.=!al("7820")
6 <While fully satisfied with the professor's authority in medical=!al("7820")
6 <matters, he felt that he had been somewhat discourteous when, a short time before,=!al("7820")
6 <he had refused to write him a testimonial which it was very important for him to have.]=!al("7820")
6 In one of the sections of the law dealing with the financial=!al("7829")
6 <obligations of Austria and Hungary, the word `actual' is left out of the Hungarian translation.=!al("7829")
6 In the summer holidays Freud receives a telegram from his publishers,=!al("7832")
6 <the text of which is unintelligible to him. It runs:=!al("7832")
6 <`Vorrate erhalten, Einladung X. dringend.' [`Provisions received,=!al("7832")
6 <invitation X. urgent.'] [X. is the author of a book to which he is to=!al("7832")
6 <write an `*Einleitung* [introduction]'. Also, some days earlier he had=!al("7832")
6 <sent his publishers a `*Vorrede* [preface]' to another book. So the=!al("7832")
6 <telegram was probably an acknowledgement of the preface's arrival and=!al("7832")
6 <its original text in all probability ran: `Vorrede erhalten,=!al("7832")
6 <Einleitung X. dringend.'[`Preface received, introduction X. urgent.']]=!al("7832")
6 In a despatch reporting some remarks made by Zographos, the leader of=!al("7841")
6 <the insurgent Epirotes in Albania, the following phrase appears:=!al("7841")
6 <`Believe me: a self-governing Epirus would be in the most fundamental=!al("7841")
6 <interest of Prince Wied. He could fall down [`*sich sturzen*', a=!al("7841")
6 <misprint for `*sich stutzen*', `support himself'] on it.'=!al("7841")
6 Title of an article in one of the Vienna daily papers:=!al("7846")
6 <`The Bukovina under *Rumanian* Rule'. [At the time Rumania had not yet=!al("7846")
6 <disclosed herself as an enemy. The word should have been `Russian'.]=!al("7846")
6 Misprint in a circular from the printing firm of Karl Prochaska in=!al("7849")
6 <Teschen: `By a decree of the Entente Powers, fixing the frontier at=!al("7849")
6 <the River Olsa, not only Silesia but Teschen as well have been divided=!al("7849")
6 <into two parts, of which one *zuviel* to Poland and the other to Czecho-Slovakia.'=!al("7849")
6 <[`*zuviel*', `too much.' The word should have been `*zufiel*', `fell to the share of'.]=!al("7849")
6 Theodor Fontane, in correspondence with publisher over a misprint which=!al("7855")
6 <has appeared: `. . . a scene between John Knox and the Queen contains=!al("7855")
6 <the words: "worauf Maria aasrief."' [`On which Mary "*aasrief*"':=!al("7855")
6 <i.e., cried `*Aas*' (literally, `carrion'\; colloquially, `filthy=!al("7855")
6 <blackguard'. The word should have been `*Ausrief*', meaning simply `cried out'.]=!al("7855")
5 Paramnesias
6 Freud tells one of his patients, an ambitious and capable man, that a=!al("8007")
6 <young student has recently gained admittance to his circle of=!al("8007")
6 <followers on the strength of an interesting work, `*Der Kunstler,=!al("8007")
6 <Versuch einer Sexualpsychologie*'. A year and a quarter later, when=!al("8007")
6 <the work finally appears in print, the patient maintains that he can=!al("8007")
6 <remember with certainty having read an announcement of this book=!al("8007")
6 <somewhere even before - a month or six months before - he had first mentioned it to him.=!al("8007")
5 Bungled Actions
6 E Jones: If he is disturbed in the midst of some engrossing work at=!al("8059")
6 <home by having to go to the hospital to carry out some routine work, finds that=!al("8059")
6 <he apt to try to open the door of his laboratory there with the key of his desk at home.=!al("8059")
6 E Jones: Is acting in a subordinate position at a certain institution,=!al("8063")
6 <the front door of which is kept locked, so that it is necessary to=!al("8063")
6 <ring for admission. On several occasions he finds himself making=!al("8063")
6 <attempts to open the door with his house key. Each one of the=!al("8063")
6 <permanent visiting staff, to which he aspires to be a member, is=!al("8063")
6 <provided with a key, to avoid the trouble of having to wait at the door.=!al("8063")
6 H Sachs: His flat key and his office key are kept separate and in=!al("8070")
6 <separate pockets. He finds that he regularly takes out his flat key at=!al("8070")
6 <the door of the office. The opposite has happened only once, and on=!al("8070")
6 <that occasion he came home tired and knew that there was a guest waiting for him inside.=!al("8070")
6 Lou Andreas-Salome: At the time when milk has become scarce and=!al("8096")
6 <expensive, she repeatedly lets it boil over. This ceases to happen=!al("8096")
6 <when her white terrier dies. She concludes that she must have been=!al("8096")
6 <even more fond of her dog than she herself was aware.=!al("8096")
6 A doctor has in his possession an earthenware flower vase sent to him=!al("8122")
6 <by one of his married woman patients. When a psychosis becomes=!al("8122")
6 <manifest in her, he returns all the presents sent by her to her=!al("8122")
6 <relatives - except for this one vase. Some months later, when on the=!al("8122")
6 <point of getting a lawyer to claim and recover the arrears of the fees=!al("8122")
6 <for the treatment of this patient, he knocks the vase off the table,=!al("8122")
6 <so that it breaks into five or six largish pieces. While attempting=!al("8122")
6 <to repair the vase, two or three larger fragments slip from his hand=!al("8122")
6 <and break into a thousand pieces - and with that disappears all hope of repairing the vase.=!al("8122")
6 Young technician working on a voluntary basis with several=!al("8134")
6 <fellow-students on a series of complicated experiments in elasticity:=!al("8134")
6 <One day his friend F. remarks to him how annoying it is to him to=!al("8134")
6 <lose so much time on that particular day as he has so much else to=!al("8134")
6 <do at home. He agrees with him, adding half jokingly, referring to an=!al("8134")
6 <incident the week before: "Let us hope that the machine will go wrong=!al("8134")
6 <again so that we can stop work and go home early." That day F. is=!al("8134")
6 <assigned the task of regulating the valve of the press. When the right=!al("8134")
6 <pressure is reached the man conducting the experiment calls out a=!al("8134")
6 <loud `stop!'. At the word of command F. seizes the valve and turns it=!al("8134")
6 <with all his might - to the left! (All valves without exception are=!al("8134")
6 <closed by being turned to the right.) This causes one of the=!al("8134")
6 <connecting-pipes to burst - quite harmless to the machine but enough=!al("8134")
6 <to suspend work for the day and allow them to go home.=!al("8134")
6 W Stekel: He enters a house and offers his right hand to his hostess.=!al("8157")
6 <In doing so he inadvertently undoes the bow that holds her loose morning-gown together.=!al("8157")
6 Theodor Fontane's *L'Adultera*: Melanie jumps up and throws one of the=!al("8160")
6 <large balls to her husband as though in greeting. But her aim is not=!al("8160")
6 <straight, the ball flies to one side and Rubehn catches it.=!al("8160")
6 <A later conversation between Melanie and Rubehn reveals the first signs of a budding affection.=!al("8160")
6 Heijermans sketch: Tom and Teddie are a husband and wife team who=!al("8227")
6 <appear in a variety theatre. One of their acts involves Tom's being=!al("8227")
6 <locked into a trunk and then placed in a glass-walled tank of water=!al("8227")
6 <for two and a half minutes. Teddie holds the key to the trunk. To add extra excitement,=!al("8227")
6 <she once or twice purposely drops the key into the tank and then dives in hurriedly after it.=!al("8227")
6 <Teddie has recently started an affair with another man, an=!al("8227")
6 <animal-trainer. On this particular evening Tom is locked up in the=!al("8227")
6 <trunk and placed in the tank as usual. The trainer is standing in the wings.=!al("8227")
6 <To catch her attention he gives a very short whistle.=!al("8227")
6 <She looks at him, laughs, and with the clumsy gesture of someone whose=!al("8227")
6 <attention is distracted, throws the key into the air so wildly that=!al("8227")
6 <it falls by the side of the tank in the middle of the bunting covering the pedestal.=!al("8227")
6 <Time presses on remorselessly. The search for the key proves fruitless. Teddie is left a widow.=!al("8227")
5 Self-Injury
6 A young woman is staying with her very jealous husband on the estate=!al("8173")
6 <of a married sister, in company with her numerous other sisters and=!al("8173")
6 <brothers with their husbands and wives. One evening she shows off one=!al("8173")
6 <of her accomplishments: she gives a performance of the can-can, which=!al("8173")
6 <is received with hearty applause by her relatives but with scanty=!al("8173")
6 <satisfaction by her husband, who afterwards whispers to her:=!al("8173")
6 <`Carrying on like a tart again!' The remark strikes home. The next=!al("8173")
6 <morning she feels a desire to go for a drive. She selects the horses=!al("8173")
6 <herself, refusing one pair and asking for another. Her youngest sister=!al("8173")
6 <wants her baby and its nurse to go in the carriage with her\; this she=!al("8173")
6 <vigorously refuses. During the drive she shows signs of nerves\; she=!al("8173")
6 <warns the coachman that the horses are growing skittish, and when the=!al("8173")
6 <restless animals are really causing a moment's difficulty she jumps=!al("8173")
6 <out in a fright and breaks her leg, while the others who stay in the carriage are unharmed.=!al("8173")
6 Freud's eleven-year-old son: His lively temperament makes it difficult=!al("8193")
6 <to nurse him when he is ill. One day, in a fit of anger because he has=!al("8193")
6 <been ordered to spend the morning in bed, he threatens to kill himself=!al("8193")
6 <(a possibility that is familiar to him from the newspapers).=!al("8193")
6 <That evening he shows Freud a swelling which has developed on his=!al("8193")
6 <chest from a bump against a door-handle. To Freud's ironical question as to why he did it,=!al("8193")
6 <he replies that it was the attempt at suicide that he had threatened that morning.=!al("8193")
6 An officer is deeply depressed by the death of his beloved mother, has=!al("8201")
6 <fits of sobbing and speaks of being weary of life. He rides in a race with some fellow-officers,=!al("8201")
6 <falls from his horse and is so severely injured that he dies a few days later.=!al("8201")
6 Twenty-two-year-old man: His love has recently left him and he has been=!al("8205")
6 <declared unfit for military service. Playing with his brother's=!al("8205")
6 <revolver, and thinking that it is not loaded, he presses it against his left temple and=!al("8205")
6 <pulls the trigger. One of the three bullets in the six-shooter penetrates his left temple.=!al("8205")
6 Woman from a middle-class family sees an attractive picture in a shop=!al("8210")
6 <which she would like to have as an ornament for the nursery. As she is=!al("8210")
6 <walking towards the shop she stumbles over a heap of stones and in=!al("8210")
6 <falling strikes her face against the wall of a house, without even=!al("8210")
6 <making the slightest attempt at protecting herself with her hands.=!al("8210")
6 <[She had recently, with her husband's consent, carried out an abortion.]=!al("8210")
6 Lady who scalds her foot. [Her daughter is expecting her confinement=!al("8216")
6 <soon and her son-in-law has to leave for Germany for military service.]=!al("8216")
6 Young man whose fiancee is - on a Sunday and on a day when there is almost no motorized traffic=!al("8220")
6 <on the road because of a strike that is on - run over by a horse-drawn cab.=!al("8220")
5 Combined Parapraxes
6 A man allows himself to be elected to the committee of a certain=!al("8574")
6 <literary society, thinking that the organization might one day be able=!al("8574")
6 <to help him to have his play produced. He takes a regular part in the=!al("8574")
6 <meetings, which are held every Friday. Then he is given the promise of=!al("8574")
6 <a production at the theatre. Thereafter he regularly *forgets* the=!al("8574")
6 <meetings of the society. He reads Freud's book on the subject and,=!al("8574")
6 <ashamed of his shabby behaviour, resolves not to forget the meeting=!al("8574")
6 <the next Friday. He arrives at the meeting - only to find that the door of the room=!al("8574")
6 <where the meetings are held is locked. He has made a mistake - it is already Saturday.=!al("8574")
6 A lady travels to Rome with her brother-in-law, who is a famous artist.=!al("8584")
6 <The visitor is received with great honour by the German community in=!al("8584")
6 <Rome, and among other presents is given an antique gold medal. The=!al("8584")
6 <lady is vexed that her brother-in-law does not appreciate the object=!al("8584")
6 <sufficiently. When she returns home (her place in Rome being taken by=!al("8584")
6 <her sister) she discovers that she has brought the medal with her. She=!al("8584")
6 <immediately sends a letter to her brother-in-law notifying him of the=!al("8584")
6 <fact and announcing that she will send the article she has walked off=!al("8584")
6 <back to Rome next day. But next day the medal has been so cleverly=!al("8584")
6 <mislaid that it cannot be found and sent off.=!al("8584")
6 E Jones leaves a letter lying on his desk for several days without=!al("8594")
6 <posting it. At last he decides to send it off, but has it returned to=!al("8594")
6 <him because he has forgotten to address it. He addresses it and again=!al("8594")
6 <takes it to the post, but this time it has no stamp.=!al("8594")
6 K Weiss is asked by an acquaintance to lend him a book and to bring it=!al("8598")
6 <to him the next day. He promises to do so, but is aware of a lively=!al("8598")
6 <feeling of unpleasure which he cannot at first explain. Then he=!al("8598")
6 <remembers that the man owes him a sum of money, a sum which he=!al("8598")
6 <apparently has no intention of repaying. He twice forgets to bring the book=!al("8598")
6 One afternoon a man is in the street and, needing the time but finding=!al("8604")
6 <that he has left his watch behind, makes use of the opportunity to=!al("8604")
6 <visit a lady friend and borrow her watch. The next morning, when he=!al("8604")
6 <wants to return the watch to her, he finds that he has his watch on=!al("8604")
6 <him but has left her watch behind. He resolves to return the watch to her that afternoon.=!al("8604")
6 <He actually does so but, on leaving, finds that he has once again left his watch behind.=!al("8604")
6 J. Starcke agrees to lend his brother a number of hitherto unpublished=!al("8612")
6 <illustrations for use as lantern slides in a lecture. First he is=!al("8612")
6 <unable to find the negatives. Finding them, he makes the slides. He=!al("8612")
6 <breaks one of them by pressing too hard on it. He makes a copy. It=!al("8612")
6 <falls from his hand, saving it only by breaking its fall with his=!al("8612")
6 <foot. When mounting the slides, the whole pile falls to the ground,=!al("8612")
6 <again without anything getting broken. Finally, several days go by=!al("8612")
6 <before he actually packs them and sends them off.=!al("8612")
6 J Starcke has to send a postcard to an acquaintance. For several days=!al("8620")
6 <he postpones doing so. Eventually he writes the postcard. He thinks of=!al("8620")
6 <adding that he was prevented from writing earlier by *druk werk*=!al("8620")
6 <[Dutch for `laborious, exacting or burdensome work'], but decides=!al("8620")
6 <against this. When he sends the postcard off, he accidentally puts it=!al("8620")
6 <into the lower opening: *Drukwerk* [Dutch for `printed matter'].=!al("8620")
6 A girl decides, in spite of the fine whether, to go to the Rijksmuseum=!al("8626")
6 <to draw some plaster-casts. She arrives there, but finds that she has=!al("8626")
6 <forgotten to buy drawing paper. She goes to the shop, buys drawing=!al("8626")
6 <paper and returns. After making good progress, she hears the bell in=!al("8626")
6 <tower strike a large number of times. Thinking it is twelve o'clock,=!al("8626")
6 <she decides to work for another fifteen minutes and then take a stroll=!al("8626")
6 <to her sister for lunch. On the way to her sister, she sees to her=!al("8626")
6 <astonishment that it is only now twelve o'clock. She forgot that=!al("8626")
6 <belfry clocks strike the hour at the half hour as well.=!al("8626")
6 In Wedekind's play *Die Zensur* there occurs at its most solemn moment=!al("8635")
6 <the pronouncement: `The fear of death is an intellectual error=!al("8635")
6 <[`*Denkfehler*'].' The author asks the performer at rehearsal to make=!al("8635")
6 <a slight pause before the word `*Denkfehler*'. On the night, the actor=!al("8635")
6 <is careful to observe the pause\; but he involuntarily says in the most=!al("8635")
6 <solemn tones: `The fear of death is a *Druckfehler* [a misprint].'=!al("8635")
6 <On the following night, the actor, on reaching the same passage,=!al("8635")
6 <declares, and in equally solemn tones: `The fear of death is a=!al("8635")
6 <*Denkzettel* [a memorandum].' The next night the actor declares:=!al("8635")
6 <`The fear of death is a *Druckzettel* [a printed label].'=!al("8635")
4 Symptomatic Acts. Chance Actions.
5 Own
6 Repeatedly uses the expression: `If something suddenly shoots through one's head'.=!al("8456")
6 <[He had recently received news that a Russian bullet had=!al("8456")
6 <passed right through the cap that his son was wearing.]=!al("8456")
5 Other
6 Woman, one of whose jacket buttons comes undone during analysis=!al("6378")
6 Patient with constant thoughts of divorce from his wife:=!al("8223")
6 <One day, while swinging his favourite child in the air, swings him so high=!al("8223")
6 <that the top of the child's head almost strikes the heavy gas chandelier that is hanging there.=!al("8223")
6 Young married woman patient, on the day of her wedding anniversary, cuts=!al("8243")
6 <into the flesh of her ring-finger. It emerges that she wears her=!al("8243")
6 <wedding-ring on the *left*, rather than, as is usually the case in her=!al("8243")
6 <country, on the right hand. [Her husband is a lawyer.]=!al("8243")
6 <[`*Doktor der Rechte*', literally `doctor of right(s)'].=!al("8243")
6 <As a girl her affections belonged in secret to a physician (jokingly called=!al("8243")
6 <`*Doktor der Linke*' [`doctor of the left']).=!al("8243")
6 <A `left-handed marriage', too, has a definite meaning.]=!al("8243")
6 Young unmarried lady unintentionally tears a hundred florin note=!al("8251")
6 <contained in an envelope in two and gives half to a lady who is=!al("8251")
6 <visiting her. [This visitor had first introduced her to Freud, for=!al("8251")
6 <which she was grateful. Earlier that morning she had received a letter=!al("8251")
6 <of proposal from a suitor to whom she had been introduced by another=!al("8251")
6 <woman. The two intermediaries became fused and, in her chance action,=!al("8251")
6 <she was as it were saying: `You certainly found me the right doctor,=!al("8251")
6 <but if you could help me to get the right husband' (with the further=!al("8251")
6 <thought: `and to get a child') `I should be *more* grateful.' She thus=!al("8251")
6 <handed her visitor the fee which her phantasy was ready to give the other woman.]=!al("8251")
6 A doctor, on rearranging his furniture in a new house, comes across an=!al("8262")
6 <old-fashioned, straight wooden stethoscope. After pausing to decide=!al("8262")
6 <where to put it, he places it on the side of his writing-desk such that=!al("8262")
6 <it lies exactly between his chair and that reserved for his patients.=!al("8262")
6 Boy of not yet thirteen who is in the habit of rolling bread-crumb=!al("8267")
6 <between the fingers of his right hand, thrusting it into his pocket,=!al("8267")
6 <continuing to play with it there, and then taking it out again.=!al("8267")
6 <It emerges that he makes figures of little men, with a head, two arms=!al("8267")
6 <and two legs, and with an appendage - initially between the legs but=!al("8267")
6 <later from other parts of the body - which he draws out into a long point.=!al("8267")
6 Young man with albumen stain on his trousers.=!al("8274")
6 Rich miserly lady who is sitting at a small table busy arranging silver=!al("8275")
6 <florins in little piles. On rising she knocks some of the coins on to the floor.=!al("8275")
6 J van Emden: In making out his bill, the waiter announces that the price=!al("8278")
6 <of a particular dish has been increased by ten pfennigs, owing to the=!al("8278")
6 <war. On being asked why this is not shown on the menu he replies that=!al("8278")
6 <it must just be an oversight - the price has certainly gone up. He=!al("8278")
6 <pockets the money clumsily and drops a ten pfennig coin on the table in front of him.=!al("8278")
6 H Sachs: Is present when an elderly couple take their evening meal.=!al("8284")
6 <The lady suffers from a gastric complaint and has to observe a very=!al("8284")
6 <strict diet. A piece of roast meat, which the wife is not allowed=!al("8284")
6 <to eat, is set before the husband. He asks his wife to pass him the=!al("8284")
6 <mustard. She reaches in to the cupboard, and puts her little bottle of=!al("8284")
6 <stomach drops -  which bears no resemblance in shape or size to the mustard pot - in front of him.=!al("8284")
6 B Dattner: Is lunching with a colleague. In the course of conversation=!al("8291")
6 <the colleague mentions that before he had finished his studies he was=!al("8291")
6 <given the well-paid post of secretary to the minister plenipotentiary=!al("8291")
6 <of Chile - but then the minister was transferred and he did not present=!al("8291")
6 <himself to his successor. While uttering this last sentence he raises a=!al("8291")
6 <piece of cake to his mouth, but, in an apparent act of clumsiness, lets=!al("8291")
6 <it drop from the knife. Dattner remarks: "You certainly allowed a tasty=!al("8291")
6 <morsel to slip from you there." The colleague agrees.=!al("8291")
6 A man pays a visit to a recently-married friend - a lady whom he much=!al("8299")
6 <much admired in his youth. The husband, who has joined in the=!al("8299")
6 <conversation, looks about for a box of matches which were quite=!al("8299")
6 <definitely top of the table when he arrived. The visitor looks through=!al("8299")
6 <his pockets to see whether he hasn't perhaps accidentally=!al("8299")
6 <`snapped it up', but to no avail. Some time later he finds the box in his pocket.=!al("8299")
6 <He is furthermore struck by the fact that there is only a single match in the box.=!al("8299")
6 H Sachs: Their maid is particularly fond of a certain kind of cake.=!al("8308")
6 <One Sunday she brings this particular cake in on a tray and puts it=!al("8308")
6 <down on the sideboard. Using the same tray, she carries the crockery=!al("8308")
6 <and cutlery from the previous course *as well as the cake* back to the kitchen.=!al("8308")
6 Young bride who loses her wedding-ring on the honeymoon.=!al("8314")
6 Lady who, in managing her money affairs, frequently signs documents in=!al("8315")
6 <her maiden name. She later gets divorced.=!al("8315")
6 Newly-married woman who, the day after her return from the honeymoon,=!al("8316")
6 <invites her unmarried sister to go shopping with her as she used to do,=!al("8316")
6 <while her husband goes to his business. She suddenly notices a=!al("8316")
6 <gentleman across the street, and nudging her sister, says:=!al("8316")
6 <`Look, there goes Herr L.' She has forgotten that this gentleman has been her husband for several weeks.=!al("8316")
6 <The marriage comes to an unhappy end some years later.=!al("8316")
6 Lady who forgets to try on her wedding dress until eight o'clock on the=!al("8324")
6 <evening of her wedding. She later gets divorced.=!al("8324")
6 Actress Eleonora Duse, in a drama revolving around adultery: Having just=!al("8327")
6 <had an altercation with her husband, she stands apart deep in thought,=!al("8327")
6 <before the seducer approaches. During the short interval she plays with=!al("8327")
6 <her wedding ring, taking it off her finger, putting it on again, and then taking it off once more.=!al("8327")
6 Man receives a ring as a present from a girl he is in love with. When=!al("8332")
6 <posting off a parting note to an earlier lady-love (whom he still feels=!al("8332")
6 <a longing for) the ring falls into the post-box.=!al("8332")
6 Theodor Fontane's *Vor dem Sturm*: Justizrat Turgany declares during a=!al("8335")
6 <game of forfeits: `You may be sure, ladies, that the deepest secrets of=!al("8335")
6 <nature are revealed in the pledging of forfeits.' He uses the following=!al("8335")
6 <examples to support his claim: `I recall a professor's wife . . . who=!al("8335")
6 <again and again pulled off her wedding ring to offer it as a forfeit.=!al("8335")
6 <Do not ask me to describe the happiness of her marriage.'=!al("8335")
6 <He gives another example of a gentleman who never tires of depositing=!al("8335")
6 <his English pocket-knife in the ladies' laps, until one day, having=!al("8335")
6 <torn several silk dresses, it finally disappears.=!al("8335")
6 M Kardos: Gives a ring to man, much his junior, who stands to him in the=!al("8345")
6 <relation of that of a pupil to his teacher. They regularly meet once a=!al("8345")
6 <week, but on one occasion the recipient of the ring makes an excuse to=!al("8345")
6 <stay away, a *rendezvous* with a young lady seeming more attractive.=!al("8345")
6 <The following morning he notices that the ring is not on his finger.=!al("8345")
6 <He assumes that it will be on his bedside table, where he normally puts=!al("8345")
6 <it every evening, but this is not the case. He later finds it in his=!al("8345")
6 <waistcoat pocket. `His wedding-ring in his waistcoat pocket' is a=!al("8345")
6 <proverbial way of referring to a husband who intends to betray his wife.=!al("8345")
6 An elderly man marries a very young girl. On reaching the hotel where=!al("8355")
6 <they are to spend their wedding night, the man notices that he doesn't=!al("8355")
6 <have his wallet on him. He contacts his servant, who finds the wallet=!al("8355")
6 <in the discarded wedding suit and brings it to the hotel.=!al("8355")
6 <The bridegroom has thus entered the marriage without means [*ohne Vermogen*].=!al("8355")
6 <That night he proves, as he apprehensively foresaw, `incapable [*unvermogend*]'.=!al("8355")
6 A man unexpectedly loses his `Penkala' [the trade name of a special form of pencil].=!al("8362")
6 <[The day before he had received a disagreeable letter from=!al("8362")
6 <his brother-in-law - the person who had given him the pencil as a present.]=!al("8362")
6 A lady, whose elderly mother has passed away:=!al("8366")
6 <(i) While in mourning she refrains from visiting the theatre. With only=!al("8366")
6 <a few days to go before the end of the period of mourning, she allows=!al("8366")
6 <herself to be persuaded by friends to go to the theatre. On reaching=!al("8366")
6 <the theatre she discovers that she has lost the ticket.=!al("8366")
6 (ii) On her arrival at a health resort she decides to pay a visit to a=!al("8371")
6 <pension where she stayed on an earlier occasion. She is welcomed there=!al("8371")
6 <as an old friend and entertained, and when she wants to pay, is told=!al("8371")
6 <to look on herself as a guest\; but this she feels is not quite proper.=!al("8371")
6 <It is agreed that she can leave something for the maid who waited on=!al("8371")
6 <her. She leaves a one mark note on the table. In the evening the=!al("8371")
6 <pension's manservant brings her a five mark note which has been found under the table.=!al("8371")
6 A girl who is materially dependent on her parents wishes to buy a piece of cheap jewellery.=!al("8379")
6 <On enquiry she finds that she is two kronen short.=!al("8379")
6 <Disappointed, she begins to stroll home through the streets, which are thronged with the evening crowds.=!al("8379")
6 <On the ground, in one of the busiest squares, she finds a two kronen note.=!al("8379")
6 In the course of a summer holiday it happens that Freud had to wait a=!al("8384")
6 <few days at a particular place for the arrival of his travelling companion.=!al("8384")
6 <He makes the acquaintance of a young man who, too, is on his=!al("8384")
6 <own, awaiting the arrival of his wife. They take their meals and walks=!al("8384")
6 <together. The man's wife arrives. Freud is introduced to the wife and=!al("8384")
6 <invited to join them for breakfast. When Freud arrives in the breakfast=!al("8384")
6 <room, the couple are sitting on one side of the table, while the=!al("8384")
6 <husband's big, heavy waterproof cape has been hung over and is covering=!al("8384")
6 <the seat of the only other chair at the table.=!al("8384")
6 Strindberg's *The Gothic Rooms*:=!al("8393")
6 <`Yes, and I believed it was all over between us.'=!al("8393")
6 <`How so?'=!al("8393")
6 <`All the little gifts that I had from you broke in pieces . . .'=!al("8393")
6 <   . . .=!al("8393")
6 <`Once I was given a pair of pince-nez by my grandmother, at a time we=!al("8393")
6 <were good friends. . . One day I broke with the old lady and she was=!al("8393")
6 <angry with me. And during the next post-mortem the lenses happened to=!al("8393")
6 <fall out for no reason. . .'=!al("8393")
6 <   . . .=!al("8393")
6 <`What is more, the ring that I had from you has lost its stone and will=!al("8393")
6 <not let itself be repaired\; . . .'=!al("8393")
6 L Sterne's *Tristram Shandy*:=!al("8405")
6 <`. . . And I am not at all surprised that *Gregory of Nazianzum*, upon=!al("8405")
6 <observing the hasty and untoward gestures of *Julian*, should foretell=!al("8405")
6 <he would one day become an apostate\; . . . -There are a thousand=!al("8405")
6 <unnoticed openings, continued my father, which let a penetrating eye at=!al("8405")
6 <once into a man's soul\; and I maintain it, added he, that a man of=!al("8405")
6 <sense does not lay down his hat in coming into a room, -or take it up=!al("8405")
6 <in going out of it, but something escapes, which discovers him.'=!al("8405")
6 An elderly gentleman, who is not a good loser at cards, one evening=!al("8413")
6 <loses a largish sum of money. He pays up without complaining but, on departing,=!al("8413")
6 <leaves behind virtually everything that he has on him: spectacles, cigar-case and handkerchief.=!al("8413")
6 A man suffering from occasional sexual impotence, originating from the=!al("8417")
6 <intimacy of his relations with his mother in childhood, is in the habit=!al("8417")
6 <of decorating pamphlets and notes with the letter S, his mother's=!al("8417")
6 <initial. He also cannot bear letters from home coming in contact with=!al("8417")
6 <profane correspondence on his desk, and therefore puts these away separately.=!al("8417")
6 A young lady flings open the door of the consulting room, though the=!al("8423")
6 <woman preceding her has not yet left it. [In so doing she is demonstrating=!al("8423")
6 <the curiosity that in the past caused her to make her way into her parents' bedroom.]=!al("8423")
6 Girls who are proud of having beautiful hair are able to manage their=!al("8427")
6 <combs and hairpins in such a way that their hair comes down in the middle of a conversation.=!al("8427")
6 Men who scatter small change out of their trouser pockets while they are=!al("8430")
6 <lying down during treatment. [In this way they are paying whatever fee=!al("8430")
6 <they feel is appropriate for the session.]=!al("8430")
6 People who leave things behind at the physician's house.=!al("8433")
6 <[They are in this way showing that they cannot tear themselves away and would like to come back soon.]=!al("8433")
6 A house-physician decides to go into town one evening for an important=!al("8436")
6 <engagement, in spite of being on duty and being required to remain on=!al("8436")
6 <the hospital grounds. He returns home to find that he forgot to turn=!al("8436")
6 <to turn his room-light off - something he has never done in the past.=!al("8436")
6 <[The chief resident medical officer in the hospital would naturally=!al("8436")
6 <have concluded from the light in the room that the house-physician was home.]=!al("8436")
6 A man overburdened with worries and subject to occasional depressions=!al("8444")
6 <regularly finds in the morning that his watch has run down whenever the=!al("8444")
6 <evening before life has seemed to be altogether too harsh and=!al("8444")
6 <unfriendly. [By omitting to wind up his watch he is giving symbolic=!al("8444")
6 <expression to his indifference about living till the next day.]=!al("8444")
6 A man, to whom fate has dealt a harsh blow, and to whom life now seems=!al("8449")
6 <harsh and unfriendly, regularly forgets to wind up his watch.=!al("8449")
6 The connection that can regularly be discovered between the words of a=!al("8452")
6 <tune we find ourselves humming, unintentionally and often without=!al("8452")
6 <noticing we are doing so, and a subject that is occupying our mind.=!al("8452")
6 Dora: One day she wears at her waist a small reticule of a shape which=!al("8876")
6 <has just come into fashion. While lying on the sofa and talking, she=!al("8876")
6 <plays with it - opening it, putting a finger into it, shutting it again, and so on.=!al("8876")
6 Lady patient: One day in the middle of a session she brings out a small ivory box,=!al("8880")
6 <ostensibly in order to refresh herself with a sweet. She=!al("8880")
6 <makes some efforts to open it, and then hands it to Freud so that he=!al("8880")
6 <might convince himself how hard it is to open. Freud expresses his=!al("8880")
6 <suspicion that the box must mean something special, for this is the=!al("8880")
6 <first time he has seen it, even though the lady has been coming to him=!al("8880")
6 <for over a year. To this the lady replies: `I always have this box=!al("8880")
6 <about me\; I take it with me wherever I go.' Freud points out to her how well her words=!al("8880")
6 <are adapted to quite another meaning. The box is only a substitute for the female genitals.=!al("8880")
6 Dora: As Freud comes into the room in which she is waiting she hurriedly=!al("8890")
6 <conceals a letter which she is reading. Freud asks whom the letter is=!al("8890")
6 <from, and at first she refuses to tell him. It turns out to be a letter=!al("8890")
6 <from her grandmother. Freud surmises from its indifferent nature that she is=!al("8890")
6 <playing `secrets' with him, and that she is about to allow her secret to be wrested from her.=!al("8890")
5 Relationship Between Parapraxes And Dreams
6 Own
7 He dreams that he has lost his purse. In the morning, while dressing,=!al("8650")
7 <he finds that it really is missing. He had, the night before while=!al("8650")
7 <undressing, forgotten take it out of his trouser pocket and put it in its usual place.=!al("8650")
6 Other
7 A young lady, while at the bank, notices that she has lost her ring.=!al("8652")
7 <She hunts everywhere for it, but to no avail. About four months later=!al("8652")
7 <she dreams that it is lying beside the cupboard by the radiator.=!al("8652")
7 <The next morning she finds it in that very spot.=!al("8652")
4 Determinism In Mental Life
5 Own
6 Choice of the name `Dora' for case history=!al("8661")
6 Years later, when delivering a lecture on the `Dora' case history, he=!al("8662")
6 <is obliged to rapidly choose another name because one of the two=!al("8662")
6 <female members of the audience has the same name. He chooses the name=!al("8662")
6 <`Erna'. It turns out that the other lady's family name is Lucerna.=!al("8662")
6 Having just finished correcting the proofs of=!al("8666")
6 <*The Interpretation of Dreams*, he writes to Fliess saying that he=!al("8666")
6 <does not intend to make any more changes in the work, `even if it contains 2467 mistakes'.=!al("8666")
5 Other
6 A man, while reading *The Psychopathology of Everyday Life*, decides to=!al("8671")
6 <make an experiment. The number 1734 comes into his mind.=!al("8671")
6 <He firstly divides the number into two parts: 17 and 34.=!al("8671")
6 <[1734 divided by 17\=102. No. 102 is Kotzebue's play *Misanthropy and Remorse*=al("8671")
6 <in a series of paperback reprints. No. 17 in the same series is=!al("8671")
6 <Shakespeare's *Macbeth, in which connection the thoughts: murderer,=!al("8671")
6 <Lady Macbeth, witches, "fair is foul" occur to him.=!al("8671")
6 <He is 34. According to him 34 is the last year of youth, and for that reason he feels miserable.=!al("8671")
6 <The further thought occurs to him that 17 and 34 divided by 17 gives the result 1 and 2.=!al("8671")
6 <He tells his wife of the incident. She says it is all hair-splitting,=!al("8671")
6 <but accepts the *Macbeth* part. He asks her to give an arbitrary=!al("8671")
6 <number. She gives the number 117. He replies that 17 is a reference to=!al("8671")
6 <what he has just told her. The previous day he said to her that when a=!al("8671")
6 <wife is in her 82nd year and her husband in his 35th year there is=!al("8671")
6 <gross incompatibility. For the previous few days he has been teasing=!al("8671")
6 <her by saying she is a little old woman of 82. 82 + 35\=117.=!al("8671")
6 <[Both are, in their choice of numbers, under the influence of the same=!al("8671")
6 <set of repressed ideas - their relative ages. The suppressed wish=!al("8671")
6 <in the husband's case would, if fully developed, run:=!al("8671")
6 <`Only a wife of 17 is suitable for a man of 34 like me.'=!al("8671")
6 <A year later they are divorced.]=!al("8671")
6 A man has a special preference for the numbers 17 and 19.=!al("8694")
6 <[17 is the age at which he started university and in so doing attained=!al("8694")
6 <the academic freedom he desired. 19 is the age at which he took his=!al("8694")
6 <first long journey and soon after made his first scientific discovery.]=!al("8694")
6 A patient, when annoyed, is especially fond of saying:=!al("8699")
6 <`I've told you that already from 17 to 36 times.'=!al("8699")
6 <[He was born on the 27th day of the month whereas his younger brother=!al("8699")
6 <was born on the 26th. He has reason to complain that fate has often=!al("8699")
6 <robbed him of the good things in life in order to bestow them on this=!al("8699")
6 <younger brother. He represents this partiality on the part of fate by=!al("8699")
6 <deducting ten from the date of his own birthday and adding it to his brother's.=!al("8699")
6 <`I am the elder and yet I am cut short like this.']=!al("8699")
6 A patient, the youngest in a family of seven brothers and sisters.=!al("8707")
6 <One day, while in a particularly cheerful mood, the number 426718 comes into his mind.=!al("8707")
6 <[A joke he has heard: `When a doctor treats a cold it lasts for 42 days,=!al("8707")
6 <when it is not treated, it lasts 6 weeks' comes into his mind.=!al("8707")
6 <This corresponds to the first figures in the number (42\=6 x 7).=!al("8707")
6 <Freud draws his attention to the fact that the six-figure number he=!al("8707")
6 <has chosen contains all the first digits except for 3 and 5.=!al("8707")
6 <The patient relates that the numbers 3 and 5 correspond, in age order, to the two siblings=!al("8707")
6 <whom he dislikes most. He has thus passed them over in his choice of number.=!al("8707")
6 <He lost his father at an early age. He has often thought that if his=!al("8707")
6 <father had lived longer he would not have remained the youngest child.=!al("8707")
6 <If there had been 1 more they would have been 8.=!al("8707")
6 <`42\=6 x 7' thus signifies derision at the doctors who were unable to help his father.=!al("8707")
6 <The number as a whole corresponds to the fulfilment of two infantile=!al("8707")
6 <wishes: that his bad brother and sister should die and that a baby should be born after him.=!al("8707")
6 <Expressed in its shortest form:=!al("8707")
6 <`If only those two had died instead of my beloved father!']=!al("8707")
6 A son asks his mother to give any number she likes. She gives the=!al("8729")
6 <number 79. He asks her what occurs to her in connection with it.=!al("8729")
6 <She replies: a lovely hat that she was looking at the previous day.=!al("8729")
6 <He asks what it cost. She replies: 158 marks. That, he says, explains it: 158 divided by 2 =79.=!al("8729")
6 <If the hat were half the price, she would buy it.=!al("8729")
6 The number 986 occurs to a patient of E Jones. In connection with the=!al("8734")
6 <number the patient recalls having seen, six years ago and on the=!al("8734")
6 <hottest day he can remember, a joke in an evening newspaper. It stated=!al("8734")
6 <that the thermometer had stood at 986ø F., an exaggeration of 98.6ø F.=!al("8734")
6 <His next thought is the general reflection that the conception of heat=!al("8734")
6 <has always greatly impressed him\; that heat is the most important=!al("8734")
6 <thing in the universe, the source of all life, and so on. The next=!al("8734")
6 <thought is of a factory-stack issuing flame and smoke and that, while=!al("8734")
6 <watching it, he would reflect on the deplorable waste of energy.=!al("8734")
6 <[The associations - heat, fire, the source of life, the waste of vital energy=!al("8734")
6 <isssuing from an upright, hollow tube - lead Jones to conclude that the choice of number=!al("8734")
6 <has been determined by the presence of `a strong masturbation complex'.]=!al("8734")
6 A lady patient of Jung's has for several days had the obsessive word=!al("8748")
6 <`Taganrog' on her lips, without her having any idea where it comes=!al("8748")
6 <from. He questions her. After some hesitation, she says that she would=!al("8748")
6 <very much like a morning gown [*Morgenrock*], but that her hushand=!al("8748")
6 <did not take the interest in it that she had hoped. [`*Tag-an-rock*' - literally `day-on-gown'.]=!al("8748")
6 <She has also recently come to know someone from Taganrog [the name of a port in South Russia].=!al("8748")
6 A man finds that whenever he is in a particular locality - the bridge crossing River Bidassoa -=!al("8756")
6 <a particular line of poetry forces its way up as an association.=!al("8756")
6 <It runs:=!al("8756")
6 <   `But the soul is already free, it floats in the sea of light.'=!al("8756")
6 <He is on each occasion unable to recall its origin.=!al("8756")
6 <One day he comes across a copy of Uhland's poems. The line forms the=!al("8756")
6 <conclusion of a poem called `Der Waller' [`The Pilgrim'].=!al("8756")
6 <Continuing to page through the book, he finds a poem entitled=!al("8756")
6 <`Bidassoa Bridge'. Its first lines run:=!al("8756")
6 <`On the Bidassoa bridge there stands a saint grey with age: on the=!al("8756")
6 <right he blesses the Spanish mountains, on the left he blesses the Frankish land.'=!al("8756")
6 <[The bridge crossing the River Bidassoa at this point forms the frontier between France and Spain.]=!al("8756")
4 Superstition
5 Own
6 One day, being in a hurry, he calls a cab to take him to the house of=!al("8779")
6 <an old lady for whom he twice a day performs a professional service.=!al("8779")
6 <The cabman, who has often taken him there in the past, on this occasion draws up=!al("8779")
6 <in front of a house with the same number in a nearby street which runs parallel.=!al("8779")
6 <[Freud sees no significance in the event. A superstitious person,=!al("8779")
6 <on the other hand, might see in it an omen that this year will be the old lady's last.]=!al("8779")
5 Other
6 Ossipow, discussing the difference between the superstitious, psycho-analytic and mystical point of view:=!al("8789")
6 <He marries in a small Russian provincial town and immediately=!al("8789")
6 <afterwards starts for Moscow with his young wife. At a station two=!al("8789")
6 <hours before their destination he leaves the train to take a quick=!al("8789")
6 <look at the town through the station exit. A few minutes later he=!al("8789")
6 <returns - only to find that the train has already left with his young=!al("8789")
6 <bride. When he tells his old nurse at home of this accident she shakes=!al("8789")
6 <her head and declares that no good will come of the marriage.=!al("8789")
6 <Five months later they are separated. Years later, fate links him=!al("8789")
6 <closely with a person who lived in the town. This person, and even the fact of this person's existence,=!al("8789")
6 <had been completely unknown to him at the time of the parapraxis.=!al("8789")
6 The Roman who withdraws from the undertaking because he stumbles on the threshold of his door.=!al("8802")
4 Telepathic And Occult Phenomena
5 Own
6 While living alone in Paris, he quite often hears his name being called=!al("8807")
6 <by an unmistakable and beloved voice. He notes the exact moment of each occurrence but,=!al("8807")
6 <on making enquiries of those at home, finds that nothing happened at that time.=!al("8807")
6 While walking through the Inner Town, his thoughts suddenly turn to a=!al("8816")
6 <childish phantasy - related to his recently having been awarded the=!al("8816")
6 <title of professor - of revenge directed against a particular married=!al("8816")
6 <couple. His phantasy is interrupted by a greeting from the very=!al("8816")
6 <married couple on whom he has just taken his revenge.=!al("8816")
6 <[He had been walking towards the couple along a wide, straight and=!al("8816")
6 <almost deserted street\; when he was about twenty paces from them he=!al("8816")
6 <had glanced up for a moment and caught a glimpse of their impressive=!al("8816")
6 <figures and recognized them, but had set the perception aside.]=!al("8816")
5 Other
6 One day, while on the way to the bank to get change (silver coins to=!al("8827")
6 <give as presents), Rank finds himself absorbed in a phantasy in which=!al("8827")
6 <he presents the cashier with the banknote to be changed and asks for=!al("8827")
6 <*gold* (instead of silver). He awakes from his phantasy - only to find=!al("8827")
6 <a young man by the name of *Gold* walking towards him.=!al("8827")
4 *Deja vu*
5 A girl of twelve and a half pays her first visit to some school friends=!al("8837")
5 <in the country. When she enters the garden, she has an immediate=!al("8837")
5 <feeling of having been there before. This feeling is repeated when she=!al("8837")
5 <goes into the reception rooms, so that she feels she knows in advance=!al("8837")
5 <what room will be the next one, what view there will be from it, and=!al("8837")
5 <so on. The possibility that this feeling of familiarity owes its origin=!al("8837")
5 <to an earlier visit to the house and garden is absolutely ruled out.=!al("8837")
5 <[At the time when she pays the visit she knows that these girls have an=!al("8837")
5 <only brother, who is seriously ill. Her own only brother had been=!al("8837")
5 <dangerously ill with diphtheria a few months earlier\; during his=!al("8837")
5 <illness she had spent several weeks away from her parents' house,=!al("8837")
5 <staying with a relative. She finds an analogous situation in the home=!al("8837")
5 <of her friends, whose only brother is in danger of dying soon.]=!al("8837")
3 Screen Memories
4 Own
5 In his forty-third year begins to direct his interest to a memory of his=!al("7226")
5 <childhood and which he assigns to a date before the end of his third=!al("7226")
5 <year. He sees himself standing in front of a cupboard demanding=!al("7226")
5 <something and screaming, while his half-brother, his senior by twenty=!al("7226")
5 <years, holds it open. Then suddenly his mother, looking beautiful and slim,=!al("7226")
5 <walks into the room, as if she has come in from the street.=!al("7226")
4 Other
5 Man of twenty-four, from his fifth year: He is sitting in the garden of=!al("7213")
5 <a summer villa, on a small chair beside his aunt, who is trying to=!al("7213")
5 <teach him the letters of the alphabet. He is in difficulties over the=!al("7213")
5 <difference between *m* and *n* and asks his aunt to tell him how to=!al("7213")
5 <know one from the other. His aunt points out to him that the *m* has a=!al("7213")
5 <whole piece more than the *n* - the third stroke.=!al("7213")
5 Man in his forties, the eldest of nine children. Maintains that he never=!al("7219")
5 <noticed any of his mother's pregnancies. Under pressure a memory=!al("7219")
5 <presents itself to him: At the age of eleven or twelve he saw his=!al("7219")
5 <mother hurriedly unfasten her skirt in front of the mirror.=!al("7219")
3 Jokes
4 The `constitution' story. An impecunious Jew who had stowed himself away=!al("6412")
4 <without a ticket in the fast train to Karlsbad.=!al("6412")
4 The Jew who could not speak French and had been recommended that when he=!al("6414")
4 <was in Paris he should ask the way to the rue Richelieu.=!al("6414")
4 Heine: One of his characters, Hirsch-Hyacinth, the poor lottery-agent,=!al("8925")
4 <boasts that the great Baron Rothschild treated him quite as his equal - quite `famillionairely'.=!al("8925")
4 A young man - a relative of Jean-Jacques Rousseau - is introduced into a=!al("8929")
4 <Paris *salon*. Being red-haired, and because he behaves so awkwardly,=!al("8929")
4 <the hostess remarks critically to the gentleman who introduced him:=!al("8929")
4 <`Vous m'avez fait connaitre un jeune homme *roux* et *sot*, mais non pas un *Rousseau*.'=!al("8929")
4 `*Traduttore - Traditore!*' [`Translator - traitor!']=!al("8934")
4 Two not particularly scrupulous business men have succeeded in amassing=!al("8935")
4 <a large fortune, and are now making efforts at pushing their way into=!al("8935")
4 <good society. One method, which strikes them as a likely one, is to have=!al("8935")
4 <their portraits painted by the most celebrated and highly-paid artist in=!al("8935")
4 <the city, whose pictures have an immense reputation. The precious=!al("8935")
4 <canvases are shown for the first time at a large evening party, and the=!al("8935")
4 <two hosts themselves lead the most influential connoisseur and art=!al("8935")
4 <critic up to the wall upon which the portraits are hanging side by side,=!al("8935")
4 <to extract his admiring judgement on them. He studies the works for a=!al("8935")
4 <long time, and then, shaking his head, as though there is something he=!al("8935")
4 <has missed, points to the gap between the pictures and asks quietly:=!al("8935")
4 <`But where's the Saviour?'=!al("8935")
4 Journalist whose biting invective repeatedly leads to his being=!al("8947")
4 <physically maltreated by the subjects of his attacks. On one occasion,=!al("8947")
4 <when a fresh misdeed on the part of one of his habitual opponents is being discussed,=!al("8947")
4 <somebody exclaims: `If X hears of this, he'll get his ears boxed again.'=!al("8947")
4 Other=!al("8928")
3 Anecdotes
4 Itzig, the Sunday horseman=!al("6446")
3 The Repetition Compulsion
4 Grandson of one year and eight months: Already quite well able to express=!al("6848")
4 <the concept of separation. `*Fort*' (replaced by a long-drawn-out and=!al("6848")
4 <peculiarly stressed `o-o-o') is one of his first words. Plays at `gone' with all his toys.=!al("6848")
4 <[See also]=!al("6845")
