Skip to content
FREE SHIPPING ON ALL DOMESTIC ORDERS $35+
FREE SHIPPING ON ALL US ORDERS $35+

The Interpretation of Dreams

Availability:
Out of stock
Sold out
Original price $5.99 - Original price $5.99
Original price $5.99
$9.99
$9.99 - $9.99
Current price $9.99
HarperCollins is proud to present its range of best-loved, essential classics.

The virtuous man contents himself with dreaming that which the wicked man does in actual life.

At the turn of the twentieth century, Sigmund Freud published a controversial and groundbreaking theory. Our dreams, he proposed, are as complex and multifaceted as human nature itself, and understanding the unconscious mind is key to revealing our true hopes and desires. Highly engaging and compelling, Freud’s research explores dreams and nightmares of every kind, including his own.

First published in 1900, The Interpretation of Dreams is considered by many to be Freud’s most significant work, helping to establish his reputation as the founder of psychoanalysis and continuing to fascinate readers today.

ISBN-13: 9780008646769

Media Type: Paperback

Publisher: William Collins

Publication Date: 01-09-2024

Pages: 640

Product Dimensions: 7.00h x 4.38w x 1.56d

Series: Collins Classics

Sigmund Freud was born in Moravia in 1856 and lived in Vienna for most of his life. Founder of psychoanalysis, Freud is regarded as one of the most influential neurologists of the twentieth century,

Read an Excerpt

CHAPTER ONE

THE SCIENTIFIC LITERATURE DEALING WITH THE PROBLEMS OF DREAMS

In the pages that follow I shall bring forward proof that there is a psychological technique which makes it possible to interpret dreams, and that, if that procedure is employed, every dream reveals itself as a psychical structure which has a meaning and which can be inserted at an assignable point in the mental activities of waking life. I shall further endeavour to elucidate the processes to which the strangeness and obscurity of dream are due and to deduce from those processes the nature of the psychical forces by whose concurrent or mutually opposing action dreams are generated. Having gone thus far, my description will break off, for it will have reached a point at which the problem of dreams merges into more comprehensive problems, the solution of which must be approached upon the basis of material of another kind.

I shall give by way of preface a review of the work done by earlier writers on the subject as well as of the present position of the problems of dreams in the world of science, since in the course of my discussion I shall not often have occasion to revert to those topics. For, in spite of many thousands of years of effort, the scientific understanding of dream has made very little advance--a fact so generally admitted *'in the literature that it seem unnecessary to quote instances in support of it. In these writings, of which a list appears at the end of my work, many stimulating observations are to be found and a quantity of interesting material bearing upon our theme, but little or nothing that touches upon the essential natureof dreams or that offers a final solution of any of their enigmas. And still less, of course, has passed into the knowledge of educated laymen.

It may be asked what view was taken of dreams in prehistoric times by primitive races of men and what effect dreams may have had upon the formation of their conceptions of the world and of the soul; and this is a subject of such great interest that it is only with much reluctance that I refrain from dealing with it in this connection. I must refer my readers to the standard works of Sir John Lubbock, Herbert Spencer, E. B. Tylor and others, and I will only add that we shaft not be able to appreciate the wide range of these problems and speculations until we have dealt with the task that lies before us here---the interpretation of dreams.

The prehistoric view of dreams is no doubt echoed in the attitude adopted towards dream by the peoples Of classical antiquity. They took it as axiomatic that dream were connected with the world of superhuman beings in whom they believed and that they were revelations from gods and daemons. There could he no question, moreover, that for the dreamer dreams had an important purpose, which was as a rule to foretell the future. The extraordinary variety in the content of dreams and in the impression they produced made it difficult, however, to have any uniform view of them and made it necessary to classify dreams into numerous groups and subdivisions according to their importance and trustworthiness. The position adopted towards dreams by individual philosophers in antiquity was naturally dependent to some extent upon their attitude towards divination in general.

In the two works of Aristotle which -deal with dreams, they have already become a subject for psychological study. We are told that dreams are not sent by the gods and are not of a divine character, but that they are 'daemonic,' since nature is 'daemonic' and not divine.

Dreams, that is, do not arise from supernatural manifesta-tions but follow the laws of the human spirit, though thelatter, it is true, is akin to the divine. Dreams are definedas the mental activ ity of the sleeper in so far as he isasleep.'

Aristotle was aware of some of the characteristics of dream-life. He knew, for instance, that dreams give a magnified construction to small stimuli arising during steep. 'Men think that they are walking through fire and are tremendously hot, when there is only a slight heating about certain parts.' And from this circumstance he draws the conclusion that dreams may very well betray to a physician the first signs of some bodily change which has not been observed in waking.

Before the time of Aristotle, as we know, the ancients regarded dreams not as a product of the dreaming mind but as something introduced by a divine agency; and already the two opposing currents, which we shall find influencing opinions of dream-life at every period of history, were making themselves felt. The distinction was drawn between truthful and valuable dreams, sent to the sleeper to warn him or foretell the future, and vain, deceitful and Worthless dreams, whose purpose it was to mislead or destroy him.

The Interpretation of Dreams. Copyright © by Sigmund Freud. Reprinted by permission of HarperCollins Publishers, Inc. All rights reserved. Available now wherever books are sold.

Table of Contents

Introduction vii
Note on the Text xxxviii
Note on the Translation xl
Select Bibliography xlviii
A Chronology of Sigmund Freud lii
Foreword 5
The Scientific Literature on the Problems of Dreams 7
(a) The Relationship of Dreams to Waking Life 9
(b) The Dream-Material—Memory in Dreams 12
(c) Dream-Stimuli and Dream-Sources 20
(d) Why Do We Forget Our Dreams After We Wake? 38
(e) The Distinctive Psychological Features of Dreams 42
(f) Ethical Feelings in Dreams 55
(g) Theories of Dreams and the Function of Dreams 62
(h) The Relations Between Dreams and Mental Illnesses 74
II The Method of Interpreting Dreams 78
III The Dream is a Wish-Fulfilment 98
IV Dream-Distortion 106
V The Material and Sources of Dreams 126
(a) Recent and Insignificant Material in Dreams 127
(b) Material from Infancy as a Source of Dreams 144
(c) The Somatic Sources of Dreams 169
(d) TypicalDreams 185
VI The Dream-Work 211
(a) The Work of Condensation 212
(b) The Work of Displacement 232
(c) The Means of Representation in Dreams 236
(d) Regard for Representability 254
(e) Examples: Calculating and Speaking in Dreams 262
(f) Absurd Dreams. Intellectual Performance in Dreams 271
(g) Affects in Dreams 298
(h) Secondary Revision 318
VII The Psychology of the Dream-Processes 330
(a) Forgetting in Dreams 332
(b) Regression 346
(c) On Wish-Fulfilment 359
(d) Arousal by Dreams. The Function of Dreams.
Anxiety-Dreams 374
(e) Primary and Secondary Revision. Repression 385
(f) The Unconscious and Consciousness. Reality 403
Freud's Bibliography 413