Freud's Pleasure Principle

Victor Egon Richard FREUD (he was made a doctor of medical sciences later, but he went down in history as an analyst, one of the founders of psychoanalysis) - the son of a wealthy customs official. As a child, he had a difficult period associated with his parents' divorce, but then he was sent to study at one of the best private institutions in Austria-Hungary - the University of Vienna. After completing his studies, FREUD worked as a barber, and only then he was allegedly discovered by psychologists-professors Otto Lewy and Sigmund Freud, who later influenced the entire professional sphere. He was inclined towards nudism, was considered one and believed in healing from diseases with the help of eroticism, or rather, unbridledness, in fantasies.

FREUD wrote as intensely as he lived, and he himself was sometimes amazed at the mystery and openness of himself in this work. From early works (with fantastic characters to clarify the sensations of eating and sleeping) to later ones (including those written in English letters), little remains due to the characteristic work of the “right hemisphere” of the brain - outside the verbal expression of images. Like many people of his time, he continued to believe in the unconscious - that dark, all-knowing part of a person to which the path of reflection leads to freeing oneself from the burden of spiritual compromises. I was interested in music. Among the interesting facts about him is the inability to get used to the world of simple physical miracles, such as adding figures from matches or bending a paper clip.