Classics and the Western Canon discussion
Freud, Interpretation of Dreams
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Foreword through "Distinctive Psychological Features"
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So far it's a little dry. It reminds me of the way Aristotle starts his Physics and Metaphysics, with overviews of the traditional ways of thinking that he is about to depart from. It's a good way to outline the territory and present the phenomena he's addressing, but it's no way to sell books. The first edition of IOD was published in 600 copies and it took 8 years for them to sell out.

I'm hanging in there because I'm curious to see how he's going to get to where he wants to go.



I think so. He's interested in what the psyche is doing, rather than the body. The psyche seems to act on its own, freely, when it dreams. So he asks questions like, What sorts of material does the psyche come up with for its dreams, and why is that material chosen? Are they composed of memories, and why are those memories chosen?" (my paraphrase) These questions turn inward to the psyche, away from the external, somatic world of the senses.

I think so. He's interested in what the psyche is doing, rather than the body..."
I may have misunderstood him, but I didn’t see him as dismissing external stimuli entirely.
He gave a whole bunch of examples and experiments of external stimuli as corresponding to part of the dream content as to be recognized as the source of the dream, for example, the sound of thunder as corresponding to a battle in a dream; a blanket slipping off at night may cause us to dream we are walking naked or falling into water; etc. He goes on to argue that the external stimuli influencing senses during sleep do not appear in the same form in the dream but are indistinct and manifested differently.
In other words, I don’t see him as saying it is an either/or proposition. I interpret him as saying external stimuli are a contributing factor in dreams—albeit a modest one—but they are not the only source.

" external (objective) sensory stimuli, internal (subjective) sensory stimuli, internal (organic) somatic stimuli, and purely psychical sources of stimulus."
The first type is easiest to understand: a noise on the street gets incorporated into a dream somehow.
Internal subjective sensory stimuli are a little more dubious I think: "hynagogic hallucinations", retinal disturbances of some kind. I think of this as something like driving all day and then closing your eyes at night and still feeling like you're in the car looking at the road.
Internal organic somatic stimuli are created within the body of the dreamer. Muscular, gastric, sexual processes that occur when the person is sleeping are the sources of stimuli that get incorporated in the dream.
Psychical sources are the most interesting, and he says that eventually "an unexpected source of stimulus in the psyche" will solve the riddle of how dreams are formed. (End of section c.) I'm not sure what "psychical" stimuli are exactly, but they seem to be the exceptions: any kind of stimuli that doesn't fit into the first three categories is psychical. (It's important to note though that he thinks even these are stimuli have an organic basis, but the connection hasn't yet been discovered...yet. "But where in the present state of our knowledge, we cannot but regard the psychical as the end of the road, that is no reason for denying it.")
I'm going to guess that these purely psychical non-somatic sources is where he's headed, to "solve the riddle." (like Oedipus maybe?)



It's interesting that he doesn't reject divine explanations out of hand. He says the pietistic and mystical writers "do right to occupy the remains of the once extensive realm of the supernatural, as long as it has not been conquered by scientific explanation". What follows is a survey of the attempts made by the scientific community to replace the mystical theories.
His review of the science reveals that there are no general rules that allow him to analyse dream life. There are somatic stimuli that occur when someone is sleeping -- noises, cold, sensory disturbances, etc. -- and then there are psychical stimuli -- memories of waking life. Somehow these stimuli are associated with each other in dreams, but so far science has not been able to explain how or why that happens. Do these associations mean anything at all or are they just random nonsense?

Despite all these contradicting and diverse explanations, I think Freud is not going to just throw this discussion off as being just random nonsense as shown towards the end of this part 1 (e):
the efforts of all those investigating the dream seem to be based on the assumption that a characterization of the dream does exist, universally valid in its essential features, which would reconcile these contradictions.


It's interesting that there still is no scientific way of analyzing dream..."
My gut tells me that this is because dreaming is a product of the psyche, simlar to art. There is no scientific way of analyzing art either. Even the analysis we do, like the analysis we do of literature in this group, is a kind of art. That doesn't mean that it's nonsense, but it's far from scientific.
Much has changed in the intervening century since Freud. We know much more about the brain and neurological processes and how and why we dream. Freud was first and foremost a scientist and a physician, as well as a follower of Darwin, and he is obviously trying to present his ideas with some rigor. As dreaming subjects we still have the same experience that Freud had, and that his patients had, and so I hope we can discreetly put aside modern science for now and look at the work from the perspective of the late 19th century.
The first part of the book is an overview of the scientific literature on dreams available to Freud in the late 1890s. It is rather long but it raises some key questions about dreams. Firstly, what is a dream? Where do dreams come from? Most importantly, I think, is the question of how the dreamer "chooses" the material for her dream. (Freud uses that term -- choice -- which I think is important.)
He discusses the somatic and "organic" stimuli associated with dreams, while leaving plenty of room for "psychical" stimuli, which he teases will solve the riddle of dreams. Is this the direction he is going? Does the material so far suggest that dreams are the royal road to the unconscious?