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Freud and civilization
Freud and civilization





freud and civilization freud and civilization freud and civilization

Men and women couple and produce children, and these children have “interrupted” sexual relationships with their parents, which cannot be consummated. They do so, Freud argues, by means of sexual love within family groups. Freud wonders whether societies are held together by this selfless love, and by its related religious feeling, but states that these instances of generosity alone cannot constitute a society.įreud then addresses how human beings come to join themselves to others. Freud wonders how religions function in society, and sees in religion a kind of generous, selfless love – at least, this love as an ideal. He wonders how these forces are manifest on the social level.įreud’s essay moves organically – that is, not in a strict order, but by association of related ideas. Freud isolates the individual’s ego, superego, and id – the self, the regulating self, and deep, base desires – as the three forces inherent on the personal level. Freud attempts, in his essay, to understand how people relate to their societies, how societies are formed, and how individual psychic forces interact with larger, group-level forces. Freud believes that religion is central to how societies function – even societies that no longer consist of orthodox believers. Sigmund Freud begins his long essay, Civilization and Its Discontents, by describing his inability to understand what he calls “religious feeling.” Freud is not religious himself, though he has good friends who are.







Freud and civilization