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Thursday, January 31, 2019

Freud And Marx :: Sigmund Freud Karl Marx compare Essays

Freud and MarxFreud and Marx it can be argued were both, as individuals, dissatisfiedwith their societies. Marx more obviously than Freud, exclusively Freud can also be seenas discontent in certain aspects such as his cynical view of hu opus nature. sever allywere great thinkers and philosophers, but both seemed unhappy. Perhaps the loving ills and trouble apiece perceived in the world about them were only thereflections of what each of the thinkers held indoors themselves. Each personobserves the same world, but each of us interprets that study in adifferent way. They both saying the world as being injust or base. Each understoodthe disfunctions in society as being caused by some aspect of human rapacity orformer(a) similar instinct. They did however, disagree on what the vehicle for theseinstincts corrupting influences are. Freud claimed that focus caused by thestuggle to repress anti-social instincts eventually was released and caused thesocial evils he observed. Marx also saw instincts at work but not the tautnesssand Id that Freud saw, Marx simply credited mans greed and the subsequentoppression of other men as the root to all that was wrong with civilization. Itis interesting to note that both Freud and Marx saw conflict but each traced itback to sources each was respectively educated in.Freud was a psychoanalyst and his understanding of the mind was veryconflict oriented. He saw man as a kind of glorified animal who had the samedesires and necessarily as any other animal. The only true difference betwixt thehuman-animal and other animals was that the human-animal possessed an intellect.Freud divided mans psyche into three parts, the Id, Ego, and SuperEgo. Whatdiffered the human-animal from any other animal was the SuperEgo, which arosefrom mans intellect. The Super-Ego as Freud theorised it is the values of onesparents internalised. He went further to then rationalise that unhappiness in lifeis caused by the conflict between the Id and the S uperEgo. As stated, all ofFrueds philosophy was very conflict oriented so it is not difficult tounderstand then how Freud applied this view macrocosmically to society as awhole.Freud addressed this in his essay, Civilization and Its Discontents.In it, Freud claimed that civilizations are create through the channeling ofanti-social erotic and aggressive urges into constructive outlets. He wentfurther and explained that social ills are caused by those members of societywho are not satisfied with the substitutes supplied by the channelling of anti-social instincts into social creative energies. Such repression causes a certaintension which after awhile cannot be repressed and is released in socially

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