From Freud’s statement that the manifest or remembered dream is a disguised fulfillment of a suppressed or repressed wish and the extensive use of sexual interpretations, one might infer that dreams do not relate directly to the conscious waking life of the dreamer – as stated by the continuity hypothesis of dreaming. The five dreams of Sigmund Freud presented in this paper demonstrate that Freud himself linked these dreams (as his other dreams) to significant experiences, events, feelings of his waking life: his professional life with all the worries of being a pioneer in the field of psychotherapy, his relations to colleagues, to his father and to his son, and health problems. This claim does not refute Freud’s dream theory but supports m...
The Interpretation of Dreams provided the central model for psychoanalytic literary criticism, and h...
This paper describes some links between Freud's creative activity in The Interpretation of Dreams an...
Post-Jungians tend to identify Jung’s dream theory with the concept of compensation; they tend to be...
One of the pillars of Freud’s thought was surely his view of dreams (Freud 1911, 1916-17). Dreams as...
Theories of the dreaming-waking relationship vary dramatically. Historically, the dominant view was ...
I argue that Sigmund Freud’s theories of dream-work and dream-interpretation, most notably in his ea...
In the latter part of the 19th century, Sigmund Freud developed a theory that attempted to explain h...
The discussion between J. Allan Hobson and Michael Schredl covers a broad variety of topics that are...
The ten commentaries to my discussion with J. Allan Hobson about the continuity and discontinuity be...
This article replies directly to the two cornerstones of Hobson's legendary transposition of Freud's...
This chapter surveys new developments in the theory of symbolism, primary process thinking, and drea...
It has been acknowledged that what Freud calls dream processes participating in the formation of dre...
In The interpretation of dreams, Freud presents a rich material of dream analyses, which is articula...
Dream has been brought the stage of scientific research from Freud. After the discovery of REM sleep...
Both Freud and Jung wrote and published their own theories to reveal the unconscious mind as repres...
The Interpretation of Dreams provided the central model for psychoanalytic literary criticism, and h...
This paper describes some links between Freud's creative activity in The Interpretation of Dreams an...
Post-Jungians tend to identify Jung’s dream theory with the concept of compensation; they tend to be...
One of the pillars of Freud’s thought was surely his view of dreams (Freud 1911, 1916-17). Dreams as...
Theories of the dreaming-waking relationship vary dramatically. Historically, the dominant view was ...
I argue that Sigmund Freud’s theories of dream-work and dream-interpretation, most notably in his ea...
In the latter part of the 19th century, Sigmund Freud developed a theory that attempted to explain h...
The discussion between J. Allan Hobson and Michael Schredl covers a broad variety of topics that are...
The ten commentaries to my discussion with J. Allan Hobson about the continuity and discontinuity be...
This article replies directly to the two cornerstones of Hobson's legendary transposition of Freud's...
This chapter surveys new developments in the theory of symbolism, primary process thinking, and drea...
It has been acknowledged that what Freud calls dream processes participating in the formation of dre...
In The interpretation of dreams, Freud presents a rich material of dream analyses, which is articula...
Dream has been brought the stage of scientific research from Freud. After the discovery of REM sleep...
Both Freud and Jung wrote and published their own theories to reveal the unconscious mind as repres...
The Interpretation of Dreams provided the central model for psychoanalytic literary criticism, and h...
This paper describes some links between Freud's creative activity in The Interpretation of Dreams an...
Post-Jungians tend to identify Jung’s dream theory with the concept of compensation; they tend to be...