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The Grand Constructors
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Inflation
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The Card Players
The Starry Night
Street scene
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Learning the tree
The roots
Garlic
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Invitation to voyage
October Leaves
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LIFE IN THE POSTWAR ERA
Watson and Crick
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THE DISCOVERY OF FRANCE
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China
The Boating Party
Woman Ironing
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Streetcar
Colonization
fronds
The Haywain
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Knows not....
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The Swing
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Freud’s Consulting Room in Vienna Freud developed his theories in a therapist while treating mental disorders. He sat in the armchair on the left. His patients lay on the couch and gazed away from him, in part because Freud could not bear being watched all day long (Photography by Edmund Engelman)
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According to Freud, human behavior is basically irrational. The key to understanding the mind is the primitive irrational unconscious, which he called the id. The unconscious is driven by sexual, aggressive, and pleasure-seeking desires and is locked in a constant battle with the other part of the mind: the rationalizing consciousness (the ego), which mediates what a person can do, and ingrained moral values (the superego), which tell what a person should do. Human behavior is a product of fragile compromise between instinctual drives and the controls of rational thinking and moral values. Since the instinctual drives are extremely powerful, the ever-present danger for individuals and whole societies is that unacknowledged drives will overwhelm the control mechanism in a violent, distorted way. Yet Freud also agreed with Nietzsche that the mechanism of rational thinking and traditional moral value can be too strong. They can repress sexual desires too effectively, crippling individuals and entire peoples with guilt and neurotic fears. ~ Page 899