Morbid fears and compulsions: their psychology and psychoanalytic treatment
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
London
Routledge
1999
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Ausgabe: | Repr. |
Schriftenreihe: | The international library of psychology
174 |
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Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XXVIII, 568 S. |
ISBN: | 0415210925 |
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650 | 4 | |a Neuroses | |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | CONTENTS
CHAPTER I
PAOE
The Sexual Synthesis 1
Sexual origin of functional neuroses suspected by the
ancients given a scientific basis by Freud. Meaning of
the term sexual. The individual as a separate entity
and as a member of the race. The instincts preserva¬
tive of individual and of race—hunger and sex. Every
human feeling traceable to one of these two. Everything
connected with hunger on the one hand and reproduction
on the other forming two groups, the second correspond¬
ing to the broad use of the word sexual. Self preserva¬
tive instinct and holophilic instinct. The parallel be¬
tween higher and lower is reproduced in the parallel be¬
tween infant and adult and first adequately recognized
by Freud. Adult sexuality a composite of impulses
already present in the infant. All physical sexual
machinery present in infancy, needing only the new
secretions of adulthood to set it in motion. Three
phases of development of human sexuality: 1. infantile
or pre inhibitory, 2. childhood and 3. adult. Infantile
holophilic phenomena. Erogenous zones and pleasure
from their stimulation. Pleasure incidental to alimen¬
tation later sought for its own sake. Reason why these
pleasures are classed as holophilic and not as self pre¬
servative in their latest manifest connection with the holo¬
philic. Similarities between thumb sucking and adult
sexuality. In infancy all erogenous zones equal in pleas¬
ure sensibility .and independent of each other. The par¬
tial impulses: sadism masochism, exhibitionism, impulse
to touch and be touched. Polymorphous perverse and
autoerotic nature of infantile sexuality. Allerotic phe¬
nomena in infancy differing from adult in lack of syn¬
thesis of the erogenous zones and the partial impulses
under the primacy of the genital. In adults the re¬
lation of partial impulses to the erogenous zones that of
fore pleasure to end pleasure, while in infancy all holo¬
philic pleasures are end pleasures. Inhibitions in period
of childhood: shame, modesty, disgust, etc. Ameliora¬
tion of the CEdipus complex. The latency period and the
normal interruption of it at puberty. The building up
of the hierarchy under the primacy of the genital sys¬
tem. Morbid disturbances possible at every step in this
development. Infantile sexual theories and their sig¬
nificance in determining psychoneurotic symptoms in
adult life. Later amnesia.
zxi
xxii CONTENTS
CHAPTER II
PAGE
The Unconscious 30
The concept of cause and effect valid in the psychical as
well as in the physical realm. Objections answered.
Illustrations from hypnosis, abnormal psychology, prej¬
udices and religious beliefs. Rationalization blinds us to
the validtiy of the causal principle in psychology. The
Foreconscious and the Unconscious distinguished; ideas
in the Foreconscious accessible; those in the Uncon¬
scious inaccessible to consciousness except by analytical
inference. Repression the cause of this inaccessibility;
repression and activation. Activation and counter
activation, the former mediated by pain, the latter by
society. Origin of repression in infancy. The first re¬
pression; the Narcissistic period; the period of the ego
ideal. The Ego ideal as an assimilation of the social
environment. Conscience as a re externalization of the
father imago, and contains more than specific morality.
The Ego ideal a structure of the foreconscious and not
consciously formulated. The Censor as an effect of
trends in the foreconscious. The Unconscious present in
the psychic apparatus from the beginning both of the
race and of the individual, and has no regard for reality
or for time. Difference between the blind, instinctive
urge and its visible manifestations. The former as real
as the latter. Instinct as a creator of tensions inhibited
in the foreconscious, which is the seat of counter activa¬
tions. The foreconscious likened to a screen not so good
a metaphor as being likened to a theatrical manager, who
impresses certain attributes upon the unconscious ma¬
terial. Instability of the control of the foreconscious.
The drug taking compulsion. Its origin in an infantile
sexual theory. The descendants of the repressed. The
second or superficial censor.
CHAPTER III
Two Kinds of Thinking, and the Psychology of
the Dream 89
Thinking according to the Reality Principle and that
according to the principle of Pain and Pleasure. The
former done mostly in words, is fatiguing, is directed by
a goal idea, the latter in images and not so directed and
does not fatigue. The two types correspond roughly to
the two psychic systems, Pleasure Thinking to the uncon¬
scious, Reality Thinking to the conscious system. Suck¬
ling infant realizes satisfaction by the hallucinatory route.
CONTENTS xxiii
PAGE
Gives place to Reality Thinking in adult life, but not
completely. Day dreams and night dreams a residue of
Pleasure Thinking in adult life. The dream the imag¬
inary fulfillment of a wish. Falsity of this statement
only apparent. The dream interpretable somewhat as a
rebus, allegory or cartoon. Dream of Palmer s perfume.
Roman soldier cartoon. Symbols in dream and in car¬
toon, the latter labelled, the former not. Dream of
Springfield, Mass.; of the peri anus. Manifest and latent
content of dreams. In night dreams the wish disguised.
Dream of shop window, and interpretation. The dream
processes: 1. Condensation, 2. Displacement, 3. Drama¬
tization. Typical symbolism in dreams. 4. Secondary
Elaboration. The dream a preserver, not a disturber, of
sleep (except nightmares). Significance of the dream
for psychoanalysis. Symptom and dream.
CHAPTER IV
The Mechanisms of Psychopathological Mani¬
festations 124
Neurotic symptoms have psychical mechanisms, the
same as those in dreams. The cause of a young woman s
forgetting the name Milton. Overcompenaation. Com¬
pensatory hypertrophy and its analogue in the psychic
sphere—overcompensation. The neurotic girl s constant
alarm concerning her mother. Married woman s extrava¬
gant solicitude for her children. Interest in Christian
Science. Overcompensation in a militant feminist and
what it covered. Most radical movements have neurotics
as conspicuous supporters. Antivivisectionism, Southern
chivalry and lynching as overcompensations for sadistic
trends. Displacement. Sublimation one of its forms.
Sublimation of a sadistic trend in the study of chem¬
istry. Displacements of the drug taking young woman;
of the man catching trains; the young man who breaks
rules. Origjn._of Jcleptomania. Displacement in young
man needing a studio away from his home. Diffuse
displacement. Projection ordinarily a defense mechan¬
ism, e.g., in the widow who moved away from a sub¬
urb to New York. A girl s projection of her guilty
feelings into an attack on the physician. The projection
of a reproach. A girl s projection of her desires on to
the teachers with whom she studied. A man s projection
of self reproach for impotence, into accusing his wife
of infidelity. Morbid jealousy in women and in men.
Introjection. The reverse of projection and also called
Identification, of which there are two kinds, subjective
and objective. Normal identification. Case of a woman
identifying herself with Evelyn Nesbit Thaw; of a phy¬
sician who identified himself with a murderer; of a
xxiv CONTENTS
r*ax
patient who identified himself with a patient of Dr.
Brill s. Rationalization. Neurotics rather more intel¬
ligent than the average. Few even normal people really
biow the causes of their actions. Patient who declared
he would marry a rich girl gives wrong reason for
marrying a poor girl. Rationalization in another pa¬
tient s arguments in favor of woman suffrage, of elec¬
tion of Wilson, against Wilson s election. A married
woman rationalizes her wearing of black clothes. De¬
fense and Distortion Mechanisms. Patient with un¬
conscious wish for mother s death distorted to re¬
morse at death of another. Patient who dissuaded his
prospects from buying advertising space, on account of
not giving full return for value received. Patient who
would not bathe in cold water on account of small
penis complex. Washing compulsions; religious and
charitable work. The physician who blames the patient
for lack of understanding. Transference or objective
identification. Examples. The conditioned reflex and
the sensory pattern. Reaction patterns formed before
the end of sixth year, e. g., the CEdipus and Electra com¬
plexes. Freud s Interpretation of Dreams quoted.
Warning against misunderstanding Freud s statements.
The Imago, not necessarily an accurate picture. Pa¬
tient transfers to physician feelings she has had for
father. Resemblance of this process to psychical proc¬
esses of certain primitive races. Case of young man
infatuated with divorcee older than he, to whom he had
transferred his mother imago. Reactions from father
complex; and from mother complex in man who could
have intercourse only with servants. Transference to
physician occurs, in every analysis, both positive and
negative; and is uncovered, but not created by it.
CHAPTER V
The Neurosis as a Whole 220
Neurosis at time of its appearance seems something
unprecedented in the individual, but is really not dis¬
continuous with patient s former life. Continuity every¬
where complete. Neurosis conditioned by a failure of
repression, which is, however, never complete. Neurotic
symptoms, like dreams, are manifestations of the Uncon¬
scious, which can only wish. Each symptom an at¬
tempted realization of one or more unconscious wishes,
chiefly sexual or holophilic. Question why this is so not
relevant. Sexual factor, present in all reported cases,
even when not seen or admitted by the writers. Physi¬
cian with unsolved complexes unable to remove his own
and patients resistances against sex confessions. Neu¬
rosis the negative of the sexual perversion; both repre
CONTENTS xxv
PAGE
senting a partial arrest of development. Fixation and
inhibition of instincts by habit. Fixation of holophilic
impulse not merely upon an object but upon an aim or
type of action. Holophilic impulses not specific in aim,
a condition which alone renders sublimation possible.
Libido fixed on type of action becomes specific. Second
object selection occurring after puberty influenced in
normals by the unconscious portion of the libido, and
dominated in neurotics. The love specifications of the
neurotic more numerous. Early fixed libido can only
exceptionally be satisfied in reality and wishes must
remain in the Unconscious. Fundamental difference be¬
tween neurotic and normal person is that neurotic has
learned to love and hate too soon. Fixation points are
weak points in the holophilic synthesis. Regression of
libido to earlier lines of discharge paralleled by a regres¬
sion to more internal paths of imagination, producing
Introversion. Masturbation and phantasies later giving
way to a real sexual object, a process reversed in neuro¬
sis. Regression a preliminary to neurosis. The neu¬
rotic uses bis illness as a means to attain various ends.
The neurosis a defense against the pain of non realiza¬
tion of narcissistic wishes. Neurotics neither immoral
nor unmoral. Immediate cause of outbreak of neurosis
is deprivation of some love gratification; sexual absti¬
nence. Freud quoted. Morbid fear or anxiety a result
of damming up of libido. Difference between morbid and
normal fear is that former is a relatively excessive one,
and is a difference of origin. Normal fear originates
from external world, morbid from the Unconscious.
Nature of emotion—a deed yet retained within the or¬
ganism. Sexual emotion physiologically like any other,
but psychically less dependent on external stimulation
than other kinds. Anxiety neurosis as described by
Freud. Biological significance of fear. Source of mor¬
bid fear within the organism nothing novel as the dis¬
tinction between external and internal is comparatively
late in ontogenetic development. That which causes
pain is regarded as external. Morbid fear causes sub¬
ject to act toward a part of himself as if it were hostile.
Morbid fear in one sense not morbid but a normal re¬
action to an abnormal condition. Anxiety neurosis a
variety of anxiety hysteria. Warning against taking
Word sexual too narrowly.
CHAPTER VI
Psychology op the Compulsion Neurosis . . . 270
Neurasthenia a misnomer. Phobias and panics. Ex¬
amples of compulsions showing mesalliance between affect
and idea content, both qualitative and quantitative.
xxvi CONTENTS
PAGE
Source of affects entirely in the Unconscious, and affects
are attached to wrong ideas. Necessity of admitting un¬
conscious psychic activities. Repressed wishes just as .
dynamic as the unrepressed. Compulsion in the drug
taking case shows wish entering consciousness as a wish
but attached to new idea. In compulsive fears the wish
energy is transformed into anxiety. Case of young man
buying a straw hat, showing overcompensation. Role of
sadism in compulsion neuroses. Love and hate for same
object. Weakness of will, in matters of love, spreading
to other situations. Compulsions represent effort to
compensate for doubt in love life. Compulsions are sub¬
stitute activities. Two sided compulsive acts, opposite
impulses being discharged separately. Ambivalence.
Regression of libido in compulsion neurosis which is the
negative of the sadistic perversion. The curiosity im¬
pulse causes morbid pondering. Superstition in compul¬
sion neurotics concerning the death of others. Omnipo¬
tence of wishes. Difference between compulsion neurosis
and hysteria. Case of prostitute showing failure to see
connection between her neurosis and her life.
CHAPTER VII
A Case op Compulsion Neurosis 308
Introduction. Historical. Results of previous treat¬
ment. Analytic data. Father complex. Separation
complex. Assault obsession. Resistance against mar¬
riage. Analysis of the assault obsession. Role of the
tuberculosis complex in the love choice. Analysis of the
Kishef obsession. Further details. Conclusion.
CHAPTER VIII
The Psychology of Anxiety Hysteria . ¦ . . 430
Most common in women, the compulsion neurosis in
men. Chief manifestation of anxiety hysteria is morbid
fear. Phobia and panic. Three examples. Ideational
element. Story of the farmer getting drunk. Genesis
of the anxiety through displacement of wish energy to
substitute idea of dangerous man. Fears cannot be
reasoned away. Revolver no protection against thirst.
Morbid fear an expression of essentially feminine traits
Anxiety neurosis the negative of the masochistic perver¬
sion. Stella s fear of dead souls displaced from anal
erotic wishes.
CONTENTS xxvii
CHAPTER IX
PAGE
A Case op Anxiety Hysteria 444
History. First seizure, followed by two others in
three weeks. Hypnotism suggested but rejected. Psy¬
choanalysis accepted. (1) The spookiness of hypno¬
tism, (2) The love look of the hypnotized subject, (3)
The expression: I m crazy about him! (4) The read¬
ing of newspaper reports about white slavery, (5) The
talk with the girl friend, (6) The fear of infection and,
(7) The association of it with hair on the back of Mr.
D. s hands. Relevance of these seven thoughts all point¬
ing to fear of sex. Dream of being chased ly a Japanese
girl. Dream of being bitten by a dog. Its interpreta¬
tion withheld. Associations: Talk with girl friend
about prostitution, disease and abduction. Phantasies
about first coitus show sado masochistic conception of
sexuality. Indentification of the dog in the dream as
Mr. D. The dream contradicts Miss S. s remarks about
disliking Mr. D. Her fears of going to the office now
explained as a fear that she would fulfill her sexual
wishes. Interpretation of dream presented to patient,
the first sex information imparted, produces increase
of resistance signifying a definite sexual experience,
which was then related by patient—an attempt at
masturbation by an older girl friend. Strong feeling of
remorse in spite of words of priest. Overcompensation.
More sex information imparted. Resistance at time of
explanation of dog dream due to the homosexual experi¬
ence. Resentment against her parents for not warning
her of possible sexual advance of girls. Protestations of
ignorance. Her learning about coitus at the age of thir¬
teen. Her enuresis from five to six. The consequent
connection of intercourse with dirtiness. New resist¬
ances. The flower incident. Fear to make the next visit.
Phantasy of the girl who eloped with a doctor. Trans¬
ference phenomena. Belittling the psychoanalyst caused
by the transference. The feelings thus discovered really
directed in the unconscious toward some one else now
represented by the psychoanalyst. Patient admits the
feeling for Mr. D. once experienced when he touched her
arm. Episode of Dr. Y. Interruption of the analysis.
The affair with Dr. Y. a compromise. Dream of riding
on a subway train. Its interpretation resulting in prog¬
ress. Her continued dislike of Mr. D. masking a real
sexual attraction toward him. Her ineradicable feeling
that sex was sinful. The dream of going for treatment.
Its interpretation. Reading of His Hour as material
for assault phantasies. Interpretation of the neurosis.
1. Flash of sexual feeling toward Mr. D. on subway, 2.
reading white slave reports, 3, reading His Hour, 4, in¬
cident of being chased by a man, and 5, her first attack on
xmii CONTENTS
PAGE
day of expected visit to her homosexual friend—all show
inclination for Mr. D. Her idealized love shown as an
infantility. Dream of flying bird. Dream of being in .
wedding dress. The divorce phantasy. Its unreasonable¬
ness not admitted. The displacement of disadvantage
mechanism. Dream of running away from marrying a
Chinaman. The wealthy foreigner. Money as a resist¬
ance against marrying Mr. D. Conclusion.
SYNOPSIS OF CHAPTER X
The Theory and Mechanism op the Psycho¬
analytic Cuke 496
Historical; use of hypnosis to restore memory aban¬
doned. Emphasis removed from symptom to resistance.
Neurotic compared to imprisoned man. Unhappiness of
both due to sense of guilt. Resistance due to conscience,
which is habit and not instinct. A retriever carries
birds as if they were full of pins. The neurotic acts in
accordance with an infantile pattern. Psychoanalysis
lets the patient know what he is doing. Filling of gaps
of memory is the removing of resistance, and shows the
patient the significance of his actions. The reformed
Jew and his reaction to ham. Case of male patient
losing affection for wife an instance of habit or complex
formed by childhood experience. Psychoanalytic expla¬
nation cured by showing him what he was doing. Psy¬
choanalysis diagnostic and disintegrative. The disinte¬
grations are accomplished in two ways; first by patient s
recalling the experiences which formed the complexes and
second by re living them in the form of transference.
Re jiving or re enactment described in the case of male
patient. While convention is frequently a pushing back
(repression), psychoanalysis is a true re education or
drawing out of the powers of the individual.
BlBUOGBAPHY 555
|
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institution | BVB |
isbn | 0415210925 |
language | English |
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physical | XXVIII, 568 S. |
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series2 | [The international library of psychology / Psychoanalysis] The international library of psychology |
spelling | Frink, Horace Westlake Verfasser aut Morbid fears and compulsions their psychology and psychoanalytic treatment H. W. Frink Repr. London Routledge 1999 XXVIII, 568 S. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier [The international library of psychology / Psychoanalysis] 11 The international library of psychology 174 Psychoanalyse Neuroses Neuroses Treatment Neurotic Disorders psychology Psychoanalysis Psychoanalytic Therapy Psychoanalysis] [<<The>> international library of psychology 11 (DE-604)BV013479074 11 The international library of psychology 174 (DE-604)BV013463615 174 HBZ Datenaustausch application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=009199683&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Frink, Horace Westlake Morbid fears and compulsions their psychology and psychoanalytic treatment The international library of psychology Psychoanalyse Neuroses Neuroses Treatment Neurotic Disorders psychology Psychoanalysis Psychoanalytic Therapy |
title | Morbid fears and compulsions their psychology and psychoanalytic treatment |
title_auth | Morbid fears and compulsions their psychology and psychoanalytic treatment |
title_exact_search | Morbid fears and compulsions their psychology and psychoanalytic treatment |
title_full | Morbid fears and compulsions their psychology and psychoanalytic treatment H. W. Frink |
title_fullStr | Morbid fears and compulsions their psychology and psychoanalytic treatment H. W. Frink |
title_full_unstemmed | Morbid fears and compulsions their psychology and psychoanalytic treatment H. W. Frink |
title_short | Morbid fears and compulsions |
title_sort | morbid fears and compulsions their psychology and psychoanalytic treatment |
title_sub | their psychology and psychoanalytic treatment |
topic | Psychoanalyse Neuroses Neuroses Treatment Neurotic Disorders psychology Psychoanalysis Psychoanalytic Therapy |
topic_facet | Psychoanalyse Neuroses Neuroses Treatment Neurotic Disorders psychology Psychoanalysis Psychoanalytic Therapy |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=009199683&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
volume_link | (DE-604)BV013479074 (DE-604)BV013463615 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT frinkhoracewestlake morbidfearsandcompulsionstheirpsychologyandpsychoanalytictreatment |