honestrosewater said:
Me too- it is easy to knock Freud ;)
In the preface to
The Interpretation of Dreams Freud expressed his surprise that the people who criticized his work most strongly were the ones who hadn't read it.
He was amazed to find that people formulated complete and final opinions about him and his ideas based on reviews of his published works, and based on what people told other people he had said. People came to the conclusion they didn't need to read the original work and that it was obviously baloney, based on what other people characterized him to have said.
So, yes. It is easy to knock Freud, and always has been: No required reading!
So his observations were correct, but his explanations were wrong. Well, that is helpful
Strawman alert!
Freud was not the one who began to treat psychology as a science, William James did that.
And this is relevant to what? Einstein is unimportant because Galileo preceeded him in investigating Relativity? Is that your logic?
Freud relied more heavily on his own imagination than on evidence.
It would take at least a book-length essay for you to lay the foundaton of support for a bald assertion like this. Is this something you believe based on having read at least most of what he wrote, or is this something you read someone else say about him?
James contributed much more to modern psychology than did Freud.
Stipulating for the sake of argument, that this is true, what is the implication of the statement? Are you irritated by the injustice of Freud's undeserved fame relative to the greater William James? You think,
Honestrosewater that if you can catch this man, this
Buffalo Freud, it will stop that sound you hear in the middle of the night, that terrible
screaming of the lambs??
(Hehehehehe)
Freud is famous because he talked about sex. And as we all know, sex sells.
Freud is famous to the general population because misconstructions of what he said turned out to be fun to repeat and criticize and cast in a silly light. If you just twist what he said a little bit, it can sound ridiculous, and is great fodder for all kinds of jokes and comedy skits. Einstein, the icon, is the same: the prototypical "nutty professor", reputed to be brilliant but who comes off as scatterbrained, unkemped, and unconscious of elementary things.
But Freud is still read and seriously discussed by anyone practising or learning about psychology because for decades his thoughts about psychology were the most compelling ones around. A history of psychology has to include Freud.
Yes, happy thoughts,
Honestrosewater, and may you sleep peacfully, in the silence of the lambs.