One particular area of contention in discussions of Freudian dream theory and its relation to the neuroscientific evidence is the notion of "disguise-censorship" and its relation to dream bizarreness. The discussion to date, however, has neglected the conceptual basis of repression and disguise-censorship, and this paper aims to clarify the role of repression in dreaming and its contribution to dream bizarreness. An analysis of disguise-censorship and repression reveals two competing accounts in Freud's theory. Freud's account of the "dream-censor", acting as an agency intentionally disguising cognitive content, is found to be problematic. However, Freud's alternative account of repression, in terms of cognitive inhibition instigated by mot...
The unconscious is implicated in Romantic and liberal discourses of autonomous individuality, and th...
In the latter part of the 19th century, Sigmund Freud developed a theory that attempted to explain h...
Theories of the dreaming-waking relationship vary dramatically. Historically, the dominant view was ...
THESIS 6983This thesis is a contribution to the tradition in philosophy of psychoanalysis in analyti...
This article replies directly to the two cornerstones of Hobson's legendary transposition of Freud's...
Freud's theories about repression and defense grew to maturity alongside those about dreams. In The ...
I applaud Boag for his attempt to redirect the dream debate to its unresolved conceptual issues. In ...
Abstract: Repression has become an empirical fact that is at once obvious and problematic. Fragmente...
The repression-aetiology of neurotic disorders is the cornerstone of the psychoanalytic theory of un...
Starting with Freud and Jung, dreams have always been considered a core source of information for ps...
The goal of this thesis is to accentuate the communicational aspect of dealing with unconscious mani...
From Freud’s statement that the manifest or remembered dream is a disguised fulfillment of a suppres...
Consumption is not only for satisfying the needs, now it has become a process based on a lack of “de...
Commentary on Simon Boag's paper, 'Freudian dream theory, dream bizarreness, and the disguise-censor...
Reply by the current author to the comments made by Mark J. Blechner, Rosalind Cartwright, Claudio C...
The unconscious is implicated in Romantic and liberal discourses of autonomous individuality, and th...
In the latter part of the 19th century, Sigmund Freud developed a theory that attempted to explain h...
Theories of the dreaming-waking relationship vary dramatically. Historically, the dominant view was ...
THESIS 6983This thesis is a contribution to the tradition in philosophy of psychoanalysis in analyti...
This article replies directly to the two cornerstones of Hobson's legendary transposition of Freud's...
Freud's theories about repression and defense grew to maturity alongside those about dreams. In The ...
I applaud Boag for his attempt to redirect the dream debate to its unresolved conceptual issues. In ...
Abstract: Repression has become an empirical fact that is at once obvious and problematic. Fragmente...
The repression-aetiology of neurotic disorders is the cornerstone of the psychoanalytic theory of un...
Starting with Freud and Jung, dreams have always been considered a core source of information for ps...
The goal of this thesis is to accentuate the communicational aspect of dealing with unconscious mani...
From Freud’s statement that the manifest or remembered dream is a disguised fulfillment of a suppres...
Consumption is not only for satisfying the needs, now it has become a process based on a lack of “de...
Commentary on Simon Boag's paper, 'Freudian dream theory, dream bizarreness, and the disguise-censor...
Reply by the current author to the comments made by Mark J. Blechner, Rosalind Cartwright, Claudio C...
The unconscious is implicated in Romantic and liberal discourses of autonomous individuality, and th...
In the latter part of the 19th century, Sigmund Freud developed a theory that attempted to explain h...
Theories of the dreaming-waking relationship vary dramatically. Historically, the dominant view was ...