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(1972) Models of man, Dordrecht, Springer.

The psychoanalytic model prediction and control through the training of the id

James Dagenais

pp. 50-75

Psychoanalysis, one of the great innovations of the twentieth century, both as a therapeutic technique and as a general personality theory destined to change man's image of man profoundly, begins of course with Sigmund Freud. In a real sense, it also ends with Freud. The great theories which we owe to him as explanations of personality development, deformation, and re-establishment (the key idea of the Oedipus Complex and its psychical adjuncts in personality dynamics, Id. Ego, and Superego) were the result of Freud's self-analysis as much as observational inductions from his therapeutic practice. Insofar, then, as every psychoanalysis undergone in terms of psychoanalytic orthodoxy is a repetition of Freud's self-analysis, we shall be forced to consider the career of Sigmund Freud as the paradigm of psychoanalysis, and only secondarily to reflect upon the "Post-Freudians" and their "Neo-Freudian" endeavors.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-94-010-2792-2_3

Full citation:

Dagenais, J. (1972). The psychoanalytic model prediction and control through the training of the id, in Models of man, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 50-75.

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