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Working in Vienna at the turn of
the 20th century,
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he began his career as a neurologist
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before pioneering the discipline
of psychoanalysis.
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He proposed that people are motivated by
unconscious desires
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and repressed memories,
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and their problems can be addressed
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by making those motivations conscious
through talk therapy.
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His influence towers above that of all
other psychologists in the public eye.
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But was Sigmund Freud right
about human nature?
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And were his methods scientific?
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Order, order. Today on the
stand we have… Dad?
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Ahem, no, your honor.
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This is Doctor Sigmund Freud,
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one of the most innovative thinkers
in the history of psychology.
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An egomaniac who propagated
pseudoscientific theories.
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Well, which is it?
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He tackled issues medicine
refused to address.
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Freud’s private practice treated women
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who suffered from what was
called hysteria at the time,
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and their complaints hadn’t been taken
seriously at all.
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From the women with depression he treated
initially
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to World War I veterans with PTSD,
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Freud’s talking cure worked,
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and the visibility he gave his patients
forced the medical establishment
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to acknowledge their psychological
disorders were real.
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He certainly didn’t help all his patients.
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Freud was convinced that our
behavior is shaped by
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unconscious urges and
repressed memories.
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He invented baseless unconscious or
irrational drivers
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behind the behavior of trauma
survivors – and caused real harm.
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How’s that?
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He misrepresented some of his most
famous case studies,
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claiming his treatment had cured patients
when in fact they had gotten worse.
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Later therapists influenced by his
theories
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coaxed their patients into ‘recovering’
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supposedly repressed memories of
childhood abuse that never happened.
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Lives and families were torn apart.
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You can’t blame Freud for later
misapplications of his work –
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that would be projecting.
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Plenty of his ideas were harmful
without any misapplication.
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He viewed homosexuality
as a developmental glitch.
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He coined the term penis envy—
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meaning women are haunted for life by
their lack of penises.
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Freud was a product of his era.
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Yes, some of the specifics were flawed,
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but he created a new space for future
scientists to explore,
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investigate, and build upon.
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Modern therapy techniques that millions of
people rely on
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came out of the work he started with
psychoanalysis.
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And today everyone knows there’s an
unconscious–
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that idea was popularized Freud.
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Psychologists today only believe in a
“cognitive unconscious,”
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the fact that you aren’t aware of
everything going on at a given moment.
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Freud took this idea way too far,
ascribing deep meaning to everything.
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He built his theories on scientific ideas
that were outdated even in his own time,
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not just by today’s standards—
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for example, he thought
individual psychology
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is derived from the biological inheritance
of events in ancient history.
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And I mean ancient – like the Ice
Age or the killing of Moses.
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Freud and his closest allies actually
believed these prehistorical traumas
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had ongoing impacts on human psychology.
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He thought that the phase of cold
indifference to sexuality
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during pubescence was literally an echo
of the Ice Age.
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With fantastical beliefs like these,
how can we take him seriously?
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Any renowned thinker from centuries past
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has ideas that seem fantastical
by today’s standards,
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but we can’t discount their
influence on this basis.
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Freud was an innovator linking
ideas across many fields.
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His concepts have become everyday terms
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that shape how we understand and talk
about our own experiences.
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The Oedipus complex? Ego and id?
Defense mechanisms? Death wishes?
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All Freud.
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But Freud didn’t present himself as a
social theorist –
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he insisted that his work was scientific.
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Are you saying he…repressed
inconvenient facts?
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Freud’s theories were unfalsifiable.
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Wait, so you’re saying he was right?
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No, his ideas were framed so that
there’s no way to empirically verify them.
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Freud didn’t even necessarily believe
in the psychoanalysis he was peddling.
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He was pessimistic about
the impact of therapy.
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What! I think I need to lie down!
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Many of Sigmund Freud’s ideas don’t hold
up to modern science,
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and his clinical practices don’t meet
today’s ethical standards.
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At the same time, he sparked a
revolution in psychology and society,
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and created a vocabulary
for discussing emotion.
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Freud made his share of mistakes.
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But is a thinker responsible for how
subsequent generations
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put their ideas to use?
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Do they deserve the blame, credit, or
redemption when we put history on trial?