CHAPTER X
Some General Remarks on Psychoanalysis
As may easily be understood, psychoanalysis will never do for
polyclinic work, and will therefore always remain in the hands of
those few who, because of their innate and trained psychological
faculties, are particularly apt and have a special liking for this
profession. Just as not every physician makes a good surgeon,
so neither will every one make a good psychoanalyst. The predominant
psychological character of psychoanalytic work will
make it difficult for doctors to monopolize it. Sooner or later
other faculties will master it, either for practical uses or for its
theoretical interest. Of course the treatment must remain confined
entirely to the hands of responsible scientific people.
So long as official science excludes psychoanalysis from general discussion, as pure nonsense, we cannot be astonished if those belonging to other faculties master this material even before the medical profession. And this will occur the more because psychoanalysis is a general psychological method of investigation, as well as a heuristic principle of the first rank in all departments of mental science ("Geisteswissenschaften"). Chiefly through the work of the Zürich School, the possibility of applying psychoanalysis to the domain of the mental diseases has been demonstrated. Psychoanalytical investigation of dementia præcox, for instance, brought us the most valuable insight into the psychological structure of this remarkable disease. It would lead me too far were I to demonstrate to you the results of those investigations. The theory of the psychological determinants of this disease is already in itself a vast territory. Even if I had to treat but the symbolic problems of dementia præcox I should be obliged to lay before you so much material, that I could not possibly master it within the limits of these lectures, which must give a general survey.
The question of dementia præcox has become so extraordinarily complicated because of the quite recent incursion on the