Is there a scientific spirit in the text Moses and the monotheism of Sigmund Freud?

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Marta Quesada-Ramírez

Abstract

Sigmund Freud was born on 6 May 1856 in Freiberg, a village in present-day Czechoslovakia. From the age of four he and his family moved to Vienna.
From his youth he had Freud to fight the environment. Within German society his Jewish origin caused him to suffer an inevitable sense of inferiority. The economic situation of his parents was at that time quite precarious. However, the young man prevailed for his talent and application to scientific subjects.
As a medical student, he acted as an assistant to the celebrated physiologist Ernest Bruke. In 1885 he decided to go to Paris to study with the great neurologist of his time Charcot, who already pronedized the chasms of the unconscious.
While Vienna and professional associations did not favor Jews, Freud was able to acquire medical training in that city and then develop psychoanalysis. Given his lack of religious belief, he was also marginalized in the Jewish community. That favored his free and revolutionary view of conflict.
He had a very productive life as the creator of the theory that underpins Psychoanalysis; humbly acknowledged his lack, the mistakes he had made in his cases, so that others would not commit them.

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How to Cite
Quesada-RamírezM. (2021). Is there a scientific spirit in the text Moses and the monotheism of Sigmund Freud?. Acta Académica, 32(Mayo). Retrieved from http://201.196.25.14/index.php/actas/article/view/1160
Section
Foro Estudiantil

References

Obras completas de Sigmund Freud. Moisés y el monoteísmo. Tomo XX.. Santiago Rueda, editor, Buenos Aires.
Morales Ascencio Heli. El Sujeto del Inconsciente. Editorial UNAM
Guy Le Gaufey. La evicción del Origen. Editorial Edelp, Francia. Traducción Carlos Schilling.
Alain Juranville. Lacan y la Filosofía. Ediciones Nueva Visión, Buenos Aires.