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What is the current understanding of Freud's theories in modern psychology?
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[QUOTE="Klystron, post: 6498855, member: 614295"] You may be pleased to know that the medical sciences of neurology and psychiatry and social science of psychology have greatly advanced since the early work of [URL='https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sigmund_Freud']Sigmund Freud[/URL], Carl Jung and many others. Freund proposed many theories during his career, even collaborating with physicist Albert Einstein on causes of systemic violence and methods of resolving human conflicts without violence and intimidation. Freud's theories appear to go into and out of vogue over the years among therapists and mental health practitioners, not to mention in popular science. Certainly the causes (etiology) and treatments of neurological disorders have markedly advanced since Freud. I assume the theory you reference connected to narcissism is that humans acquire and develop personality traits and basic sexual identity at young ages; that early life experiences affect the expression of inherited and learned characteristics? [/QUOTE]
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What is the current understanding of Freud's theories in modern psychology?
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