Psychopathology of Everyday Life Audiobook By Sigmund Freud cover art

Psychopathology of Everyday Life

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Psychopathology of Everyday Life

By: Sigmund Freud
Narrated by: Robert Bethune
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About this listen

Sigmund Freud's Psychopathology of Everyday Life is surely the most approachable and enjoyable of all his works. By turning the spotlight of his ideas about the nature and function of the unconscious mind onto simple and easily understandable incidents that we have all experienced, such as slips of the tongue, sudden inexplicable clumsy actions, forgetfulness, and the like, he shows us, often in rather humorous ways, just how our unconscious minds have a powerful influence on everything we say and do.

The book is personal; many of the incidents he analyzes come directly from his own life and behavor. In many cases, the book is really a kind of wry autobiography, a psychoanalyst's analysis of himself. Few will finish this book without starting to take a fresh look at their own behavior, their own small slips of the tongue and faulty actions - perhaps with the same wry smile Freud seems to wear!

Public Domain (P)2012 Robert Bethune
Classics Mental Health Psychology World
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Critic reviews

"It opens up a most curious and fascinating new system of sel-examination which everyone may set about without worrying himself as to the state of his own nerves. It confines itself to the theory of the operations of memory within the confines of the average healthy man's life; and its revelations are as unexpected as they are often amusing in the disclosure of the unconscious motives by which we are influenced in important as well as in trivial actions." (from the Saturday Review of 1915, responding to the original publication)

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Definitely not Unabridged

I was having trouble staying focused on a print edition of Freud I was reading and purchased this audio book to listen to and follow along with the print edition. I was shocked when this audio skipped past the longest, and most fascinating, of the examples given in "Part III, Forgetting of names and order of words". This is the example of the the forgotten name of the psychic epileptic associated with the word "rabbit" as related by Brill, which covers 4 pages in the volume "The Basic Writings of Sigmund Freud, 1995 Random House Modern Library Edition, pp 24-28. That is 5-8 minutes (approx.) missing in the first hour of the audio book. Not the unabridged recording I was expecting. I hope I do not encounter more such abridgement.

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