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Hi, need to submit a 2000 words essay on the topic Sigmund freud theory of dreams.Download file to see previous pages... Rather than trying to find solutions to the problem, he attempted to discover t
Hi, need to submit a 2000 words essay on the topic Sigmund freud theory of dreams.
Download file to see previous pages...Rather than trying to find solutions to the problem, he attempted to discover the mechanisms involved, eventually identifying several functions of the mind (the id, the ego and the superego) and various developmental processes that function in all humans as well as self-defense processes that occur differently among humans as responses to life events, all of which could be housed deep within the mind at a preconscious level. This, of course, led to the consideration of the dream state and just what it means when we dream. Just as Freud’s concepts of the various elements, developments and defense mechanisms of the mind continue to be challenged and elaborated upon, theories have continued to emerge attempting to provide a definitive answer to the question of what does it mean when we dream with no indisputable ‘correct’ answer in sight. Scientific theories have ranged from speculation that we dream as a means of learning more about ourselves through the revelation of repressed desires to the concept that dreams are a means of the subconscious providing the conscious mind with seemingly prophetic warnings developed through thousands of unconscious signals received during the waking hours. Other theories have suggested that we dream as a means of further developing our mental abilities and spiritual concepts, slowly assimilating what we’ve learned into our established worldview while still others have indicated that we dream as a means of dealing with our daily experiences by either getting rid of the memories or storing them away in our mental memory banks. What the various scientists have revealed in their dream studies is that there are a wide variety of ways in which dreams might have meaning to an individual, whether they realize it or not. However, it seems plausible that dreams will have more meaning to an individual who has a particular belief regarding what they might mean than an individual who reports they don’t dream at all or who believes that dreams have no meaning and doesn’t bother to remember them.  .  .  .  .  . Sigmund Freud is perhaps the most recognized individual in the field of dream theory. In developing his model of the mind, Freud determined that the dream functions as a sleeper’s defense against the disturbing thoughts and emotions of the subconscious mind (the id) by acting as a censor (Wilson, 2005). During the night, the mind battles such stimuli as our deepest fears, our petty dissatisfactions, our forbidden desires and the emotions of our previous day’s events. Placing the dream in terms of the psychoanalytic theory, “dreams occur in a state of ‘ego collapse’ when the demands of the Id (imperative bodily needs) and Superego (conscience ego ideals) converge upon the Ego (personal desires and mediator between the Id and Superego)” (Hutchinson, 2000). In other words, when an individual is unable to cope with these internal stimuli during their waking hours, it becomes attached to their preconscious mind. As a defense mechanism to help discharge this excess energy, the Superego works with the Id through the dream to allow these messages egress. Without this ‘safety valve’, Freud suggests, people would not be able to function within a civilized society.