Page:Collected Papers on Analytical Psychology (1916).djvu/374

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revival gatherings of strange religious sects, experiencing in his own person love and hate and every kind of suffering. He would return laden with richer knowledge than his yard-long text-books could ever have given him, and thus equipped, he can indeed be a physician to his patients, for he understands the soul of man. He may be pardoned if his respect for the “corner-stones” of experimental psychology is no longer very considerable. There is a great gulf fixed between what science calls “psychology,” on the one hand, and what the practice of everyday life expects from psychology on the other.

This need became the starting-point of a new psychology whose inception we owe first and foremost to the genius of Sigmund Freud, of Vienna, to his researches into functional nervous disease. The new type of psychology might be described as “analytical psychology.” Professor Bleuler has coined the name “Deep Psychology,”[1] to indicate that the Freudian psychology takes as its province the deeper regions, the “hinterland” of the soul, the “unconscious.” Freud names his method of investigation “psychoanalysis,” and it is under this designation that this new direction in psychology is now everywhere recognised.

Before we approach the matter more closely, we must first consider the relationship of the new psychology to the earlier science. Here we encounter a singular little farce which once again proves the truth of Anatole France’s apothegm: “Les savants ne sont pas curieux.”

The first important piece of work[2] in this new field awakened only the faintest echo, in spite of the fact that it offered a new and fundamental conception of the neuroses. Certain writers expressed their approbation, and then, on the next page, proceeded to explain their cases of hysteria in the good old way. It was much as if a man should subscribe fully to the idea of the earth’s being spherical, and yet continue to

  1. Bleuler, “Die Psychoanalyse Freuds.” Jahrbuch für psychoanalytische Forschungen, vol. II., 1910.
  2. Breuer and Freud, “Selected Papers on Hysteria and other Psychoneuroses.” “Nervous and Mental Disease,” Monograph series, No. 4.