Page:Freud - Wit and its relation to the unconscious.djvu/287

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.

disturbances. It is very probable that, following the assumption of old Griesinger, we would be in a position to understand the deliria of the insane and to turn them to good account as valuable information, if we would not make the demands of conscious thinking upon them, but instead treat them as we do dreams by means of our art of interpretation.[1] In the dream, too, we were able to show the “return of psychic life to the embryonal state.”[2]

In discussing the processes of condensation we have entered so deeply into the signification of the analogy between wit and dreams that we can here be brief. As we know that displacements in dream-work point to the influence of the censor of conscious thought, we will consequently be inclined to assume that an inhibiting force also plays a part in the formation of wit when we find the process of displacement among the techniques of wit. We also know that this is commonly the case; the endeavor of wit to revive the old pleasure in nonsense or the old pleasure in word-play meets with resistance in every normal state, a resistance which is exerted by the protest of critical reason, and which must be overcome in each individual

  1. In doing this we must not forget to reckon with the distortion brought about by the censor which is still active in the psychoses.
  2. The Interpretation of Dreams.