Psychoanalysis is a set of psychological and
psychotherapeutic theories and associated techniques, originally popularized by
Austrian physician Sigmund Freud and stemming partly from the clinical work of
Josef Breuer and others. Since then, psychoanalysis has expanded and been
revised, reformed and developed in different directions. This was initially by
Freud's colleagues and students, such as Alfred Adler and Carl Gustav Jung who
went on to develop their own ideas independently from Freud. Later neo-Freudians
included Erich Fromm, Karen Horney, Harry Stack Sullivan and Jacques Lacan. The
basic tenets of psychoanalysis include the following:
1. besides the inherited constitution of
personality, a person's development is determined by events in early childhood;
2. human attitude, mannerism, experience, and
thought is largely influenced by irrational drives;
3. irrational drives are unconscious;
4. attempts
to bring these drives into awareness meet psychological resistance in the form
of defense mechanisms;
5. conflicts between conscious and unconscious, or
repressed, material can materialise in the form of mental or emotional
disturbances, for example: neurosis, neurotic traits, anxiety, depression etc.;
6. the liberation from the effects of the unconscious
material is achieved through bringing this material into the conscious mind
(via e.g. skilled guidance, i.e. therapeutic intervention).
Under the broad umbrella of psychoanalysis there are
at least 22 theoretical orientations regarding human mental development. The
various approaches in treatment called "psychoanalysis" vary as much
as the theories do. The term also refers to a method of analysing child
development.
Freudian psychoanalysis refers to a specific type of
treatment in which the "analysand" (analytic patient) verbally
expresses his thoughts, including free associations, fantasies, and dreams,
from which the analyst induces the unconscious conflicts causing the patient's
symptoms and character problems, and interprets them for the patient to create
insight for resolution of the problems. The analyst confronts and clarifies the
patient's pathological defenses, wishes and guilt. Through the analysis of
conflicts, including those contributing to resistance and those involving
transference onto the analyst of distorted reactions, psychoanalytic treatment
can hypothesize how patients unconsciously are their own worst enemies: how
unconscious, symbolic reactions that have been stimulated by experience are
causing symptoms. Psychoanalysis has received criticism from a wide variety of
sources. One notable critique of psychoanalysis is that it constitutes a
pseudoscience. Nonetheless, it remains a strong influence within the realm of
psychiatry, and more so in some quarters than others
History
1890s
The idea of psychoanalysis first started to receive
serious attention under Sigmund Freud. Sigmund Freud formulated his own theory
of psychoanalysis in Vienna in the 1890s. Freud was a neurologist trying to
find an effective treatment for patients with neurotic or hysterical symptoms.
Freud realised that there were mental processes that were not conscious, whilst
he was employed as a neurological consultant at the Children's Hospital, where
he noticed that many aphasic children had no apparent organic cause for their
symptoms. He then wrote a monograph about this subject. In 1885, Freud obtained
a grant to study with Jean-Martin Charcot, a famed neurologist, at the
Salpêtrière in Paris, where Freud followed the clinical presentations of
Charcot, particularly in the areas of hysteria, paralyses and the anaesthesias.
Charcot had introduced hypnotism as an experimental research tool and developed
the photographic representation of clinical symptoms. Freud's first theory to
explain hysterical symptoms was presented in Studies on Hysteria (1895), co-
authored with his mentor the distinguished physician Josef Breuer, which was
generally seen as the birth of psychoanalysis. The work was based on Breuer's
treatment of "Anna O.," which the patient herself had dubbed the
"talking cure." Breuer wrote that many factors that could result in
such symptoms, including various types of emotional trauma, and he also
credited work by others such as Pierre Janet; while Freud contended that at the
root of hysterical symptoms were repressed memories of distressing occurrences,
almost always having direct or indirect sexual associations. Around the same
time Freud attempted to develop a neuro-physiological theory of unconscious
mental mechanisms, which he soon gave up. It remained unpublished in his
lifetime. In 1896 Freud published his so-called seduction theory which proposed
that the preconditions for hysterical symptoms are sexual excitations in
infancy, and he claimed to have uncovered repressed memories of incidents of
sexual abuse for all his current patients. However by 1898 he had privately
acknowledged to his friend and colleague Wilhelm Fliess that he no longer
believed in his theory, though he did not state this publicly until 1906.Though
in 1896 he had reported that his patients "had no feeling of remembering
the [infantile sexual] scenes," and assured him "emphatically of
their unbelief," in later accounts he claimed that they had told him that
they had been sexually abused in infancy. This became the received historical
account until challenged by several Freud scholars in the latter part of the
20th century who argued that he had imposed his preconceived notions on his
patients. However, building on his claims that the patients reported infantile
sexual abuse experiences, Freud subsequently contended that his clinical
findings in the mid-1890s provided evidence of the occurrence of unconscious
fantasies, supposedly to cover up memories of infantile masturbation. Only much
later did he claim the same findings as evidence for Oedipal desires.
1900–1940s
By 1900, Freud had theorised that dreams had
symbolic significance, and generally were specific to the dreamer. Freud
formulated his second psychological theory— which hypothesises that the
unconscious has or is a "primary process" consisting of symbolic and
condensed thoughts, and a "secondary process" of logical, conscious
thoughts. This theory was published in his 1900 book, The Interpretation of
Dreams . Chapter VII was a re-working of the earlier "Project" and
Freud outlined his "Topographic Theory." In this theory, which was
mostly later supplanted by the Structural Theory, unacceptable sexual wishes
were repressed into the "System Unconscious," unconscious due to
society's condemnation of premarital sexual activity, and this repression
created anxiety. This "topographic theory" is still popular in much
of Europe, although it has fallen out of favour in much of North America. In
1905, Freud published Three Essays on the Theory of Sexuality in which he laid out his discovery of
so-called psychosexual phases: oral (ages 0–2), anal (2–4), phallic-oedipal
(today called 1st genital[ by whom? ]) (3–6), latency (6-puberty), and mature
genital (puberty-onward). His early formulation included the idea that because
of societal restrictions, sexual wishes were repressed into an unconscious
state, and that the energy of these unconscious wishes could be turned into
anxiety or physical symptoms. Therefore the early treatment techniques,
including hypnotism and abreaction, were designed to make the unconscious
conscious in order to relieve the pressure and the apparently resulting symptoms.
In On Narcissism (1915) Freud turned his attention to the subject of
narcissism. Still using an energic 1900–1940s [edit] International
Psychoanalytic Congress. Photograph, 1911. Freud and Jung in the center
system, Freud characterized the difference between
energy directed at the self versus energy directed at others, called cathexis.
By 1917, In "Mourning and Melancholia," he suggested that certain
depressions were caused by turning guilt-ridden anger on the self. In 1919 in
"A Child is Being Beaten" he began to address the problems of
self-destructive behavior (moral masochism) and frank sexual masochism. Based
on his experience with depressed and self-destructive patients, and pondering
the carnage of World War I, Freud became dissatisfied with considering only
oral and sexual motivations for behavior. By 1920, Freud addressed the power of
identification (with the leader and with other members) in groups as a
motivation for behavior ( Group Psychology and the Analysis of the Ego ). In
that same year (1920) Freud suggested his "dual drive" theory of
sexuality and aggression in Beyond the Pleasure Principle , to try to begin to
explain human destructiveness. Also, it was the first appearance of his
"structural theory" consisting three new concepts id, ego, and
superego. Three years later, he summarised the ideas of id, ego, and superego
in a book entitled, The Ego and the Id . In the book, he revised the whole
theory of mental functioning, now considering that repression was only one of
many defense mechanisms, and that it occurred to reduce anxiety. Hence, Freud
characterised repression as both a cause and a result of anxiety. In 1926, in
Inhibitions, Symptoms and Anxiety, Freud characterised how intrapsychic
conflict among drive and superego (wishes and guilt) caused anxiety, and how
that anxiety could lead to an inhibition of mental functions, such as intellect
and speech.Inhibitions, Symptoms and Anxiety was written in response to Otto
Rank, who, in 1924, published Das Trauma der Geburt (translated into English in
1929 as The Trauma of Birth ), analysing how art, myth, religion, philosophy
and therapy were illuminated by separation anxiety in the "phase before
the development of the Oedipus complex" [ this quote needs a citation ].
Freud's theories, however, characterized no such phase. According to Freud, the
Oedipus complex, was at the centre of neurosis, and was the foundational source
of all art, myth, religion, philosophy, therapy—indeed of all human culture and
civilization. It was the first time that anyone in the inner circle had had
characterised something other than the Oedipus complex as contributing to
intrapsychic development, a notion that was rejected by Freud and his followers
at the time. By 1936, the "Principle of Multiple Function" was
clarified by Robert Waelder. He widened the formulation that psychological
symptoms were caused by and relieved conflict simultaneously. Moreover,
symptoms (such as phobias and compulsions) each represented elements of some
drive wish (sexual and/or aggressive), superego, anxiety, reality, and
defenses. Also in 1936, Anna Freud, Sigmund's famous daughter, published her
seminal book, The Ego and the Mechanisms of Defense , outlining numerous ways
the mind could shut upsetting things out of consciousness.
1940s–Present
When Hitler's power grew, the Freud family and many
of their colleagues flew to London. Within a year Sigmund Freud died. In the
United States, also following the death of Freud, a new group of psychoanalysts
began to explore the function of the ego. Led by Heinz Hartmann, Kris,
Rappaport and Lowenstein, the group built upon understandings of the synthetic
function of the ego as a mediator in psychic functioning[ jargon ]. Hartmann in
particular distinguished between autonomous ego functions were 1940s–Present
a result of compromise formation[ jargon ]. These
"Ego Psychologists" of the '50s paved a way to focus analytic work by
attending to the defenses (mediated by the ego) before exploring the deeper
roots to the unconscious conflicts. In addition there was burgeoning interest
in child psychoanalysis. Although criticized since its inception,
psychoanalysis has been used as a research tool into childhood development, and
is still used to treat certain mental disturbances. In the 1960s, Freud's early
thoughts on the childhood development of female sexuality were challenged; this
challenge led to the development of a variety of understandings of female
sexual development[ citation needed ], many of which modified the timing and
normality of several of Freud's theories (which had been gleaned from the
treatment of women with mental disturbances). Several researchers. followed
Karen Horney's studies of societal pressures that influence the development of
women. Most contemporary North American psychoanalysts employ theories that,
while based on those of Sigmund Freud, include many modifications of theory and
practice developed since his death in 1939[ citation needed ].
In the first decade of the 21st century there are
approximately 35 training institutes for psychoanalysis in the United States
accredited by the American Psychoanalytic Association (APsaA), which is a
component organization of the International Psychoanalytical Association (IPA),
and there are over 3000 graduated psychoanalysts practicing in the United
States. The IPA accredits psychoanalytic training centers through such
"component organisations" throughout the rest of the world, including
countries such as Serbia, France, Germany, Austria, Italy, Switzerland, and
many others, as well as about six institutes directly in the U.S.
Topographic theory
Topographic theory was named and first described by
Freud in The Interpretation of Dreams (1900). The theory hypothesises that the
mental apparatus can be divided into the systems Conscious, Pre- conscious and
Unconscious. These systems are not anatomical structures of the brain but,
rather, mental processes. Although Freud retained this theory throughout his
life he largely replaced it with the Structural theory. The Topographic theory
remains as one of the metapsychological points of view for describing how the
mind functions in classical psychoanalytic theory.
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