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Sigumand Freud And Nietzsche: Personalities And The Mind

Statistics

  Counts

  Total Pages: 6.77
  Total Words: 1693
  Total Characters: 8948
  Number of Sentences: 81


  Averages

  Words per Sentences: 20.9
  Characters per Words: 5.29


  Readability

  Flesch Reading Ease: 49.95
  Fog Scale Level: 15.38
  Flesch-Kincaid Grade Level: 11.48  

Sigumand Freud and Nietzsche: Personalities and The Mind


      There were two great minds in this century.  One such mind was that of
Sigmund Freud (1856-1939).  In the year 1923 he created a new view of the mind.
That view encompassed the idea we have split personalities and that each one
have their own realm, their own tastes, their own principles upon which they are
guided.  He called these different personalities the id, ego, and super ego.
Each of them are alive and well inside each of our unconscious minds, separate
but yet inside the mind inhabiting one equal plane.  Then there was Nietzsche
(1844-1900) who formulated his own theories about the sub-conscious.  His ideas
were based on the fact that inside each and every one of us is a raging battle
going on.  This battle involves the two most basic parts of society, the
artistic Dionysian and the intelligent Apollonian.  Sometimes one being becomes
more dominant than the other or they both share the same plane.  Even though
individually created, these theories could be intertwined, even used together.
Thus it is the object of this paper to prove that the Freudian theory about the
unconscious id, and ego are analogous to the idea on the Apollonian and
Dionysian duality's presented by Nietzsche.
     "The division of the psychical into what is conscious and what is
unconscious is the fundamental premise of psycho-analysis; and it alone makes it
possible for psycho-analysis to understand the pathological processes in mental
life..." (Freud, The Ego and the Id, 3).  To say it another way, psycho-analysis
cannot situate the essence of the psychial in consciousness, but is mandated to
comply consciousness as a quality of the pyschial, which may be present (Freud,
The Ego and the ID, 3).   "...that what we call our ego behaves essentially
passively in life, and that, as he expresses it, we are 'lived' by unknown and
uncontrollable forces," (Groddeck, quoted from Gay, 635).  Many, if not all o...

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