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Zida Grant's avatar

You write a lovely summary of the good ideas that Freud popularized, but don’t mention the profoundly damaging ideas that he also popularized. The most famous was replacing his seduction theory with the Oedipal theory as written about by Jeffrey Masson in his book Assault on Truth and his 1984 Atlantic article: Freud and the Seduction Theory.

So I feel that your article is unbalanced—whitewashing even—and as someone who has been harmed by Freud’s ideas I feel a need to say something. He influenced therapists to deny incest, and more generally he deflected patients from focusing on any of the abuse inflicted on them by their families.

Consider the example you mention of the psychoanalyst saying to their patient “the root of your problems is hatred of your father.” This is the kind of psychic conflict that psychoanalysts are still focused on. They are not nearly so interested in what the father did to provoke the hatred.

They say they believe in repression, but they prefer to focus on the emotions and desires that are repressed rather than the memories of the abuse so many of us have suffered from fathers and other family members.

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Niall Boyce's avatar

A fair and insightful piece. In my view, Freud’s great innovation was not to propose that there are mental processes outside of our waking knowledge and control (the early modern hierarchy of mental faculties, for example, is a similar concept), but to posit that these different versions of the self could be brought into dialogue in a therapeutic process. One simply can’t get around the immensity of this simple shift in thinking, whether in mental health or the broader culture.

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