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Sigmund Freud's Interpretation of Dreams, including
nightmares and irrational fears.
Despite the widely-recognized failure of Freudian psychotherapy to heal disturbed people effectively and the
rejection of many of his major theories Freud remains one of the most influential figures of the 20th century.
Freud's basic insight that our minds preserve memories and emotions which are not always consciously
available to us has transformed the way humanity views itself ever since. Freud said that there had been
three great humiliations in human history: Galileo's discovery that we were not the center of the universe,
Darwin's discovery that we were not the crown of creation, and his own discovery that we are not in control of
our own minds. The tendency of modern people to trace their problems to childhood traumas or other
repressed emotions begins with Freud. One of Freud's more important discoveries is that emotions buried in
the unconscious surface in disguised form during dreaming, and that the remembered fragments of dreams
can help uncover the buried feelings. Whether the mechanism is exactly as Freud describes it, many people
have derived insights into themselves from studying their dreams, and most modern people consider dreams
emotionally significant, unlike our ancestors who often saw them either as divine portents or as the bizarre
side-effects of indigestion. Freud argues that dreams are wish-fulfillments, and will ultimately argue that
those wishes are the result of repressed or frustrated sexual desires. The anxiety surrounding these desires
turns some dreams into nightmares.
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