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      • Freud founded psychoanalysis as a way of listening to patients and better understanding how their minds work. Psychoanalysis continues to have an enormous influence on modern psychology and psychiatry. Sigmund Freud's theories and work helped shape current views of dreams, childhood, personality, memory, sexuality, and therapy.
      www.verywellmind.com/sigmund-freud-his-life-work-and-theories-2795860
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  2. Jul 18, 2024 · Sigmund Freud's theories and work helped shape current views of dreams, childhood, personality, memory, sexuality, and therapy. Freud's work also laid the foundation for many other theorists to formulate ideas, while others developed new theories in opposition to his ideas.

  3. May 22, 2024 · Sigmund Freud (1856 to 1939) was the founding father of psychoanalysis, a method for treating mental illness and a theory explaining human behavior. Freud believed that events in our childhood have a great influence on our adult lives, shaping our personality.

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  4. Oct 4, 2023 · How did Freud’s theories influence modern psychology? Freud’s theories have had a significant influence on modern psychology, particularly in the areas of psychoanalysis, personality theory, and clinical practice.

  5. Apr 2, 2024 · Freud suggested that our mental states were influenced by two competing forces: cathexis and anticathexis. Cathexis was described as an investment of mental energy in a person, idea, or object. Anticathexis involves the ego blocking the socially unacceptable needs of the id.

  6. Sigmund Freud was the founder of psychoanalysis and, over his immensely productive and extraordinary career, developed groundbreaking theories about the nature and workings of the human mind, which went on to have an immeasurable impact on both psychology and Western culture as a whole.

  7. Sep 19, 2024 · Throughout the 15 years of their intimacy Fliess provided Freud an invaluable interlocutor for his most daring ideas. Freud’s belief in human bisexuality, his idea of erotogenic zones on the body, and perhaps even his imputation of sexuality to infants may well have been stimulated by their friendship.

  8. In his writings on the origins of society, Freud combined his own theories of psychological conflict with Darwinian views on how the earliest humans lived in organized groups. Freud borrowed freely from contemporary anthropology.

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