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<text>
<title>
(1930s) Intellectual Provocateur:Freud
</title>
<history>TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1930s Highlights</history>
<article>
<source>Time magazine</source>
<hdr>
MEDICINE
Intellectual Provocateur
June 26, 1939
</hdr>
<body>
<p> For 50 of his 83 years Sigmund Freud has insisted on talking
seriously about subjects that other people did not want to
discuss. When he began lecturing on the sexual basis of neuroses,
in Vienna in 1896, his worldly colleagues regarded him with the
embarrassed annoyance reserved for those who hammer away at
something people would rather not talk about, even if talking
would teach them something. But for laymen, as Freud's theories
spread, he emerged as the greatest killjoy in the history of
human thought, transforming man's jokes and gentle pleasures into
dreary and mysterious repressions, discovering hatreds at the
root of love, malice at the heart of tenderness, incest in filial
affections, guilt in generosity and the repressed hatred of one's
father as a normal human inheritance.
</p>
<p> Last week, from his home in exile in London, this 83-year-
old disturber of human complacency calmly turned his attention to
another topic generally and understandably avoided. This time he
psychoanalyzed anti-Semitism. What, he asked, are the reasons for
a phenomenon of such intensity and lasting strength as popular
hatred of the Jews? Economic and political reasons Freud leaves
to others; in Moses and Monotheism he is concerned with hidden
motives.
</p>
<p> Most of the book is given over to an account of the infancy
of the Jewish people--not as it is known historically, but as it
emerges in their legends, beliefs and religious customs. Its
purpose is not to relate a factually, but a psychologically
accurate picture, thereby uncovering, Freud believes, the reasons
for popular hatred of the Jews and the reasons for the Jewish
attitudes toward the persecutions that have darkened their
history.
</p>
<p> Background. Only in view of the theory and practice of
psychoanalysis is Moses and Monotheism intelligible. And the
history of psychoanalysis is the history of Sigmund Freud.
</p>
<p> When young Dr. Freud, fresh from five years' research on the
nervous system, returned to his native Vienna and with high hopes
hung out his shingle, the gay city was thronged with neurotics,
"who hurried, with their troubles unsolved, from one physician to
another." Some were afraid of animals; others constantly washed
their hands, stammered, endured blinding headaches, lingering
illnesses, or even developed strange paralyses of the arms and
legs. All balanced precariously on the slender line between
sanity and insanity. That the cause of their maladies was
psychological, the 30-year-old psychiatrist was certain. But how
these maladies arose, and how they could be cured--that was his
great problem.
</p>
<p> In his Paris clinic, Hypnotist Charcot had often commanded
drowsy neurotics to shed their symptoms. But only a few obeyed
the doctor's powerful will and woke up cured. Yet hypnotism was
the only scientific light which could prick the deep caverns of
the unconscious mind, and even if it brought no lasting cures,
young Dr. Freud could not very well do without it.
</p>
<p> His first great step toward the development of
psychoanalysis came one day when his old friend, Dr. Josef
Breuer, a brilliant, popular family doctor, told him the
remarkable story of "Anna O."
</p>
<p> Anna O. was an intelligent girl of 21, who, while nursing
her father during a fatal illness, suddenly developed paralysis
of her right arm and both legs. To Dr. Breuer's amazement, when
he asked her questions under hypnosis, she explained to him the
origins of her symptoms, one by one. While nursing her father,
she had suppressed a swarm of impulses as frivolous, selfish or
immoral. And each suppressed desire had somehow turned into a
physical symptom.
</p>
<p> One evening, for instance, as Anna was sitting by her
father's bed, she heard dance music floating over from the house
next door. She longed to join the party, but sternly repressed
the wish. Afterward, whenever she heard the strong rhythm of
dance music, she began to cough, almost as though she were
beating time. Most astounding part of the case, said Dr. Breuer,
was this: as soon as Anna understood the origin and nature of her
symptoms, they disappeared.
</p>
<p> Greatly excited, Freud joined Breuer, tried the new method
of conversing with hypnotized neurotics. Their aim: to "purge"
constipated minds of unhealthy, repressed ideas.
</p>
<p> "Irresistible Attraction." Long after Breuer, discouraged by
criticism, had left the partnership, Freud continued his attempts
to find a more efficient method of mining buried thoughts. One
day an alert patient, when asked if he could remember his recent
experiences under hypnosis, repeated everything that had been
said to him, everything that he himself had said.
</p>
<p> This was a crucial discovery. Freud finally abandoned
hypnosis, merely invited his patients to lie on a couch in his
shaded office and talk of whatever entered their minds. This
"free association," Freud soon discovered, was not free at all.
For his patients, at first reluctantly mumbling trivialities,
gradually wandered back into the past, on to forgotten paths,
stumbling painfully over hidden, moss-covered memories, dabbling
in streams of old affection. Through sharp observation and almost
poetic analysis, Freud was able to interpret the mass of material
his patients dredged up, and explain the origin of their
symptoms.
</p>
<p> Why his patients were "suggestible," why they accepted his
explanation, overcame their resistance, strove to know themselves
and conquer their symptoms, was at that time a problem to Freud.
One day, during her treatment, a woman patient suddenly threw her
arms around his neck.
</p>
<p> "The unexpected entrance of a servant relieved us from a
painful discussion," wrote Freud. "I was modest enough not to
attribute the event to my irresistible personal attraction." This
emotional "transference," which appeared as passionate, sensual
love or fierce hatred, arose in every analysis, accounted for the
powerful influence of an analyst over his patients. "[It is] the
best instrument of the analytic treatment," Freud wrote, "...and
it is resolved by convincing the patient that he is re-
experiencing emotional relations which had their origin [in early
childhood]." Thus Freud gained, in his patients' minds, the
authority of a dearly loved (or violently hated) father or
mother.
</p>
<p> Storms of Childhood. After examining a large group of
neurotics, Freud was surprised to discover that they all had one
thing in common: a frustrated sex life. "The neuroses," he
declared, "[are] without exception disturbances of the sexual
function."
</p>
<p> But it was not the unhappy marriages or love affairs of
adult life that were mainly responsible for neuroses. For the
same experiences that normal persons took in their stride were
sufficient to bowl neurotics over. The foundations of neuroses,
Freud discovered, were laid in the sex experiences of early
childhood. Upon this astonishing fact, which Freud painstakingly
confirmed in hundreds of cases, he built his famous theories of
the libido (Latin for lust) and the Oedipus complex.
</p>
<p> Most powerful force which drives human beings, said Freud,
is a primeval sex instinct, the libido. During childhood the
libido is bound up with such experiences as eating, excreting and
thumbsucking. In later years the libido may be transferred to
another person (marriage), may remain grounded in childish sex
play (perversion), or may overflow as artistic, literary, or
musical creation (sublimation). In fact, said Freud, greatest
source of creative work is the sex instinct.
</p>
<p> Driven by libido, all children fall in love with their
mothers, hate and fear their fathers as rivals. Sometimes they
may love their fathers too (ambivalence), but the fundamental
hostility remains throughout childhood. (Later on girls often
fall in love with their fathers.) This Oedipus complex (After the
old Greek myth of Oedipus, son of the King of Thebes, who killed
his father, married his mother.) sets the pattern for a child's
response to other persons throughout the rest of his life. Normal
persons outgrow the Oedipus situation by the time they reach
maturity. But weaker characters cannot tear themselves away from
their parents, hence, "fall into neuroses."
</p>
<p> There is no escaping the Oedipus complex, said Freud, for it
is our heritage from primitive ancestors, who killed their
fathers in fits of jealous rage. "We are all omnibuses in which
our ancestors ride, and every now and then one of them sticks his
head out and embarrasses us," perceptively observed Oliver
Wendell Holmes in his pre-Freudian novel The Guardian Angel
(1867).
</p>
<p> Friends & Enemies. In light-hearted pre-War Vienna, which
boasted of its sexual freedom, Freud was jeered at and shunned.
Prudish physicians complained that he made too much of sex, that
he destroyed beautiful illusions (such as the innocence of
childhood), that he invaded his patients' privacy.
</p>
<p> After the War, when Victorian taboos were thrown aside, and
cries of sex freedom rang in every parlor, Freud's doctrines were
eagerly gobbled up. Such words as "repression" and "mother
fixation" became a part of the common language. Many people still
mistakenly think that Freudianism is a doctrine of licence. On
the contrary, Freud believes that self-discipline is essential
for civilized living, that there is a middle road between
unhealthy repression, which bursts forth as neuroses, and free
abandonment to sexual pleasures.
</p>
<p> Among the most outstanding and faithful of Freud's U.S.
pupils: Dr. Abraham Arden Brill, who translated Freud's works for
U.S. readers; Dr. Fritz Wittels, Freud's biographer; Dr. Smith
Ely Jelliffe, Dr. Herman Nunberg, all of Manhattan; Dr. Isador
Henry Coriat of the Boston Psychoanalytic Institute.
</p>
<p> Because they do not believe in the primacy of the Oedipus
complex, a small group of analysts have seceded from the Freudian
union. Some of them do not agree that men are bound by primeval,
rigid instincts. Others hold that society inflicts more wounds
upon personality than the sex instinct. For these rebels,
orthodox Freudians, whose feelings run high, have nothing but
contempt.
</p>
<p> Most famed among the secessionists are Carl Jung of Zurich,
who has "retreated from psychoanalysis" into semi-religious
therapy, and Alfred Adler, who died in Aberdeen two years ago.
Adler held that man's mainspring is not sexual desire but a
desire for superiority. Physical infirmity or family bullying
produces an "inferiority complex." This complex, in turn, forces
"overcompensation," or a transformation of weakness into
strength. Because Demosthenes stuttered and Beethoven was deaf,
said Adler, they developed inferiority complexes. Demosthenes
compensated in magnificent oratory. Beethoven in magnificent
music.
</p>
<p> Exile. When the Nazis took Vienna last year they seized
Freud's property, money and psychoanalytical publishing house.
Although tortured by advanced cancer of the jaw, Freud at first
refused to leave his home. In vain did his nephew, Manhattan
Publicist Edward Bernays, plead with him to spend his last days
in the U.S. He surrendered only when London's famed Dr. Ernest
Jones flew to Vienna with a cargo of shrewd arguments.
</p>
<p> Early last June Freud went to England "for peace," joined
his son Architect Ernst. With him went another son, Lawyer
Martin, and his gentle, brown-eyed daughter Anna, a practicing
psychoanalyst. In a comfortable London House near Regent's Park,
filled with his Greek and Egyptian treasures, Freud answers
letters, continues his writing, even treats a few old patients.
Every Sunday evening he settles down in the parlor, coddles his
five young grandchildren, enjoys a lively card game called tarot
with his sons. Always at his call is his nine-year-old chow dog,
Lun. During his 16 years of suffering, throughout his 15
operations, he has never uttered a word of complaint. Patient and
resigned, secure in his fame, he spins out his last thoughts, and
basks in the sun.
</p>
<p> Anti-Semitism. In the shadow of exile Moses and Monotheism
was written. But no trace of lamentation shows in the tone of the
book. We live, says Freud imperturbably, in remarkable times. For
a long period it seemed that progress had made an alliance with
barbarism, as in Russia, where a great attempt to lift the people
to a higher standard of life was coupled with a ruthless
suppression of free speech and thought. But in Germany this
unnatural marriage has been dissolved, and barbarism proceeds
alone.
</p>
<p> In psychoanalytic procedure it is customary to counter the
patient's own history of his case with the analyst's
interpretation. Whether or not this psychoanalytic version is
"truer," it sometimes succeeds in shattering the patient's
preconceptions, in opening his mind to other alternatives of
thought and action. Thus, in reviewing Jewish history, legends
and attitudes, Freud very provocatively suggests: Moses, the
founder of the Jewish religion, was no Jew, but an Egyptian.
</p>
<p> Concrete evidence to support this belief is sparse; in
fact, "to my critical faculties," says Freud, "it seems like a
dancer balancing on one toe." Nevertheless, he proceeds, if Moses
was an Egyptian, Jewish history becomes psychologically
intelligible. If he was an Egyptian, he must have been an
Egyptian monotheist. In the reign of Amenhotep IV, monotheism,
the worship of one god, flourished briefly, when Amenhotep drove
out the multitude of local deities in which Egypt abounded. After
Amenhotep's death his religion was soon overthrown and the older
worship returned, but here & there disciples kept alive the
monotheistic idea. If Moses was an Egyptian, argues Freud, he
must have been one of these; in the period of anarchy that
followed Amenhotep's death he must have converted the enslaved
Jews, leading them out of Egypt, giving them laws, customs,
social order. He must have been an irascible, hot-tempered,
gifted, energetic and ambitious upper-class Egyptian
administrator. For the purposes of Freud's argument, the Jews
must eventually have killed Moses. But monotheism remained, its
soaring religious abstractions, ideals of truth and justice
replacing the worship of idols, of graven images, of magic, of
the spirits of the dead.
</p>
<p> If the Jews killed Moses, his memory must have persisted,
like the image of the father in childhood, as stern, implacable,
good. Yet, because of the crime of his murder, his memory is also
associated with feelings of guilt. That little plausible evidence
indicates that Moses was killed does not worry Freud--it is
precisely what an individual or a people forgets, he believes
(and which can only be recovered to the conscious memory by
psychoanalytic treatment), that reveals the source of their
psychological dilemmas.
</p>
<p> Hatred of the Jews, says Freud, is fundamentally hatred of
monotheistic religion. The Germans, who now excel in the practice
of anti-Semitism, were Christianized within historical times,
often to the accompaniment of cruel repressions whose traces
persist in their unconscious minds; their latent resentment
toward Christianity is diverted against the upholders of another
monotheistic religion. And meanwhile, the Jews themselves suffer
from a guilt-obsession arising from the forgotten murder of
Moses--an unconscious obsession from which they would presumably
be freed by the admission of their guilt.
</p>
<p> Moses and Monotheism is full of logical holes, doubtful
history, fanciful anthropology. But in spite of the book's
finespun hypotheses, Freud's psychoanalytic approach to the
Semitic and anti-Semitic "neuroses" still remains a bold attempt
in pioneering a dark continent.
</p>
<p> Mankind is not, Freud believes, so far removed from either
barbarism or animals as it likes to think. But the mood of his
last book is calm. If it does not answer all the questions that
anti-Semitism raises, it shows that Freud is no more dismayed by
this disorder than by the dark neuroses and perversions that he
has studied all his life.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>