Listening Length: 3 hours and 55 minutes Program Type: Audiobook Version: Abridged Publisher: Naxos AudioBooks Audible.com Release Date: February 10, 2005 Language: English
Sigmund Freud, the founder of psychoanalysis, developed a totally new way of looking at human nature. Only now, with the hindsight of the half-century since his death, can we assess his true legacy to current thought. As an experienced psychiatrist himself, Anthony Storr offers a lucid and objective look at Freud's major theories, evaluating whether they have stood the test of time, and in the process examines Freud himself in light of his own ideas. An excellent introduction to Freud's work, this book will appeal to all those broadly curious about psychoanalysis, psychology, and sociology.
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FILE LIST
Filename
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cover.jpg
180.2 KB
Disc1/01 Life and character.mp3
1 MB
Disc1/02 Freud enrolled in the medical department of the University of Vienna.mp3
1 MB
Disc1/03 From the mid-1890s onward.mp3
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Disc1/04 Like most people with this type of personality.mp3
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Disc1/05 Freud exhibited a number of other obsessional habits and traits.mp3
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Disc1/06 Freud had a lively appreciation of literature.mp3
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Disc1/07 Freud's honesty compelled him substantially to modify or revise his ideas.mp3
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Disc1/08 Excessive generalisation is a temptation for all original thinkers.mp3
1.3 MB
Disc1/09 From trauma to phantasy.mp3
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Disc1/10 These reminiscences were of a special kind.mp3
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Disc1/11 At first, Freud thought of the repressed affect as being always associated with trauma.mp3
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Disc1/12 Freud's next step was to assert that, in many cases of hysteria.mp3
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Disc1/13 For Freud, sex was especially suitable as a linchpin.mp3
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Disc1/14 There were three reasons for Freud's subsequent abandonment of the seduction theory.mp3
1.1 MB
Disc1/15 It is quite possible that psychoanalysts have underestimated.mp3
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Disc1/16 Exploring the past.mp3
1.1 MB
Disc1/17 Freud pictured the infant's sexuality as 'polymorphously perverse'.mp3
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Disc1/18 Of a variety of oral characteristics described.mp3
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Disc1/19 The Oedipus complex.mp3
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Disc1/20 The female version of the Oedipus complex is less clearly worked out.mp3
1.3 MB
Disc1/21 In putting forward his ideas about infantile sexuality.mp3
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Disc1/22 Infantile amnesia.mp3
892.9 KB
Disc1/23 Many common human problems.mp3
970.3 KB
Disc1/24 Free association, dreams and transference.mp3
644.6 KB
Disc1/25 Dreams.mp3
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Disc1/26 Freud regarded dreams as if they were neurotic symptoms.mp3
1.2 MB
Disc1/27 Freud's technique of dream interpretation is notably ingenious.mp3
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Disc2/01 Today, very few psychoanalysts support Freud's theory in its original form.mp3
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Disc2/02 Transference.mp3
1.2 MB
Disc2/03 It is surely because Freud was by nature an impersonal investigator.mp3
1.1 MB
Disc2/04 Ego, super-ego and id.mp3
1.2 MB
Disc2/05 Freud was essentially a dualist.mp3
1.3 MB
Disc2/06 Structure of the mental apparatus.mp3
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Disc2/07 The ego is that part of the mind representing consciousness.mp3
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Disc2/08 The origin of Freud's concept of the super-ego.mp3
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Disc2/09 Aggression.mp3
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Disc2/10 Freud's first full acknowledgement of an aggressive instinct.mp3
1.1 MB
Disc2/11 The death instinct.mp3
1.1 MB
Disc2/12 Aggression, depression and paranoia.mp3
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Disc2/13 Melancholia would today be described as a severe depressive illness.mp3
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Disc2/14 What Freud suggests is illuminating.mp3
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Disc2/15 Today we might describe the person prone to melancholia rather differently.mp3
1.5 MB
Disc2/16 We commented earlier on the accuracy of Freud's description.mp3
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Disc2/17 Jokes and The Psycho-Pathology of Everyday Life.mp3
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Disc2/18 Freud's explanation is extremely ingenious.mp3
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Disc2/19 Art and literature.mp3
1.2 MB
Disc2/20 Since content, rather than style.mp3
1.1 MB
Disc2/21 One cannot blame the art historians.mp3
1.4 MB
Disc2/22 Freud's paper 'The Moses of Michelangelo'.mp3
1.3 MB
Disc2/23 Culture and religion.mp3
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Disc2/24 Totem and Taboo.mp3
1.1 MB
Disc3/01 The ritual totemic meal could be interpreted as a 'return of the repressed'.mp3
911.9 KB
Disc3/02 Some of the same criticisms which have been levelled at Totem and Taboo.mp3
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Disc3/03 Freud believed that religion originated in man's feelings of helplessness.mp3
1.2 MB
Disc3/04 The impression gained from reading Freud.mp3
1.4 MB
Disc3/05 Freud as therapist.mp3
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Disc3/06 Earlier two reasons were given for requiring the patient to lie supine upon a couch.mp3
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Disc3/07 A certain degree of detachment is undoubtedly required of the analyst.mp3
1.1 MB
Disc3/08 Freud advised that most analytic patients should be seen every day.mp3
1.2 MB
Disc3/09 Freud's own cases.mp3
1.3 MB
Disc3/10 Any reader who studies the case of Dora without prejudice.mp3
1 MB
Disc3/11 The 'Rat Man' is an entirely different proposition.mp3
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Disc3/12 Freud gave his account of the 'Wolf Man'.mp3
1.4 MB
Disc3/13 The 'Wolf Man' reveals that Freud discussed Dostoevsky with him.mp3
1.1 MB
Disc3/14 Psychoanalysis today.mp3
1.1 MB
Disc3/15 Earlier some aspects of the obsessional personality were outlined.mp3
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Disc3/16 Freud defined the therapeutic aim of psychoanalysis as follows.mp3
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Disc3/17 Patients who seek psychoanalysis today are rather different.mp3
1.4 MB
Disc3/18 Modern psychoanalysts have recognized the difficulty of defining.mp3
1.3 MB
Disc3/19 The appeal of psychoanalysis.mp3
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Disc3/20 Freud is often linked with Darwin and Marx.mp3
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Disc3/21 Psychoanalysis has often been referred to as a religion.mp3
1.5 MB
Disc3/22 Freudian theory made western man suspicious of conduct.mp3