The Interpretation of Dreams by Sigmund Freud
CHAPTER 1, Section F
F. The Ethical Sense in Dreams
For reasons which will be intelligible
only after a consideration of my own investigations of dreams, I have
isolated from the psychology of the dream the subsidiary problem as to
whether and to what extent the moral dispositions and feelings of waking
life extend into dream-life. The same contradictions which we were
surprised to observe in the descriptions by various authors of all the
other psychic activities will surprise us again here. Some writers
flatly assert that dreams know nothing of moral obligations; others as
decidedly declare that the moral nature of man persists even in his
dream-life.
Our ordinary experience of dreams seems
to confirm beyond all doubt the correctness of the first assertion.
Jessen says (p. 553): "Nor does one become better or more virtuous
during sleep; on the contrary, it seems that conscience is silent in our
dreams, inasmuch as one feels no compassion and can commit the worst
crimes, such as theft, murder, and homicide, with perfect indifference
and without subsequent remorse."
Radestock (p. 146) says: "It is to be
noted that in dreams associations are effected and ideas combined
without being in any way influenced by reflection, reason, aesthetic
taste, and moral judgment; the judgment is extremely weak, and ethical
indifference reigns supreme."
Volkelt (p. 23) expresses himself as
follows: "As every one knows, dreams are especially unbridled in sexual
matters. Just as the dreamer himself is shameless in the extreme, and
wholly lacking in moral feeling and judgment, so likewise does he see
others, even the most respected persons, doing things which, even in his
thoughts, he would blush to associate with them in his waking state."
Utterances like those of Schopenhauer,
that in dreams every man acts and talks in complete accordance with his
character, are in sharpest contradiction to those mentioned above. R.
Ph. Fischer * maintains that the subjective feelings and desires, or
affects and passions, manifest themselves in the wilfulness of the
dream-life, and that the moral characteristics of a man are mirrored in
his dreams.
* Grundzuge des Systems der Anthropologie.
Erlangen, 1850 (quoted by Spitta).
Haffner says (p. 25): "With rare
exceptions... a virtuous man will be virtuous also in his dreams; he
will resist temptation, and show no sympathy for hatred, envy, anger,
and all other vices; whereas the sinful man will, as a rule, encounter
in his dreams the images which he has before him in the waking state."
Scholz (p. 36): "In dreams there is
truth; despite all camouflage of nobility or degradation, we recognize
our own true selves.... The honest man does not commit a dishonouring
crime even in his dreams, or, if he does, he is appalled by it as by
something foreign to his nature. The Roman emperor who ordered one of
his subjects to be executed because he dreamed that he had cut off the
emperor's head was not far wrong in justifying his action on the ground
that he who has such dreams must have similar thoughts while awake.
Significantly enough, we say of things that find no place even in our
intimate thoughts: 'I would never even dream of such a thing.'"
Plato, on the other hand, considers that
they are the best men who only dream the things which other men do.
Plaff, * varying a familiar proverb,
says: "Tell me your dreams for a time and I will tell you what you are
within."
* Das Traumleben und seine Deutung, 1868
(cited by Spitta, p. 192).
The little essay of Hildebrandt's from
which I have already taken so many quotations (the best-expressed and
most suggestive contribution to the literature of the dream-problem
which I have hitherto discovered), takes for its central theme the
problem of morality in dreams. For Hildebrandt, too, it is an
established rule that the purer the life, the purer the dream; the
impurer the life, the impurer the dream.
The moral nature of man persists even in
dreams. "But while we are not offended or made suspicious by an
arithmetical error, no matter how obvious, by a reversal of scientific
fact, no matter how romantic, or by an anachronism, no matter how
ridiculous, we nevertheless do not lose sight of the difference between
good and evil, right and wrong, virtue and vice. No matter how much of
that which accompanies us during the day may vanish in our hours of
sleep, Kant's categorical imperative dogs our steps as an inseparable
companion, of whom we cannot rid ourselves even in our slumber.... This
can be explained only by the fact that the fundamental element of human
nature, the moral essence, is too firmly fixed to be subjected to the
kaleidoscopic shaking-up to which phantasy, reason, memory, and other
faculties of the same order succumb in our dreams" (p. 45, etc.).
In the further discussion of the subject
we find in both these groups of authors remarkable evasions and
inconsequences. Strictly speaking, all interest in immoral dreams should
be at an end for those who assert that the moral personality of the
individual falls to pieces in his dreams. They could as coolly reject
all attempts to hold the dreamer responsible for his dreams, or to infer
from the immorality of his dreams that there is an immoral strain in his
nature, as they have rejected the apparently analogous attempt to prove
from the absurdity of his dreams the worthlessness of his intellectual
life in the waking state. The others, according to whom the categorical
imperative extends even into the dream, ought to accept in toto the
notion of full responsibility for immoral dreams; and we can only hope
that their own reprehensible dreams do not lead them to abandon their
otherwise firm belief in their own moral worth.
As a matter of fact, however, it would
seem that although no one is positively certain just how good or how bad
he is, he can hardly deny that he can recollect immoral dreams of his
own. That there are such dreams no one denies; the only question is: how
do they originate? So that, in spite of their conflicting judgments of
dream-morality, both groups of authors are at pains to explain the
genesis of the immoral dream; and here a new conflict arises, as to
whether its origin is to be sought in the normal functions of the
psychic life, or in the somatically conditioned encroachments upon this
life. The nature of the facts compels both those who argue for and those
who argue against moral responsibility in dream-life to agree in
recognizing a special psychic source for the immorality of dreams.
Those who maintain that morality
continues to function in our dream-life nevertheless refrain from
assuming full responsibility for their dreams. Haffner says (p. 24): "We
are not responsible for our dreams, because that basis which alone gives
our life truth and reality is withdrawn from our thoughts and our will.
Hence the wishes and actions of our dreams cannot be virtuous or
sinful." Yet the dreamer is responsible for the sinful dream in so far
as indirectly he brings it about. Thus, as in waking life, it is his
duty, just before going to sleep, morally to cleanse his mind.
The analysis of this admixture of denial
and recognition of responsibility for the moral content of dreams is
carried much further by Hildebrandt. After arguing that the dramatic
method of representation characteristic of dreams, the condensation of
the most complicated processes of reflection into the briefest periods
of time, and the debasement and confusion of the imaginative elements of
dreams, which even he admits must be allowed for in respect of the
immoral appearance of dreams, he nevertheless confesses that there are
the most serious objections to flatly denying all responsibility for the
lapses and offenses of which we are guilty in our dreams.
(p. 49): "If we wish to repudiate very
decisively any sort of unjust accusation, and especially one which has
reference to our intentions and convictions, we use the expression: 'We
should never have dreamt of such a thing.' By this, it is true, we mean
on the one hand that we consider the region of dreams the last and
remotest place in which we could be held responsible for our thoughts,
because there these thoughts are so loosely and incoherently connected
with our real being that we can, after all, hardly regard them as our
own; but inasmuch as we feel impelled expressly to deny the existence of
such thoughts even in this region, we are at the same time indirectly
admitting that our justification would not be complete unless it
extended even thus far. And I believe that here, although unconsciously,
we are speaking the language of truth."
(p. 52): "No dream-action can be imagined
whose first beginnings have not in some shape already passed through the
mind during our waking hours, in the form of wish, desire, or impulse."
Concerning this original impulse we must say: The dream has not
discovered it- it has only imitated and extended it; it has only
elaborated into dramatic form a scrap of historical material which it
found already existing within us; it brings to our mind the words of the
Apostle that he who hates his brother is a murderer. And though, after
we wake, being conscious of our moral strength, we may smile at the
whole widely elaborated structure of the depraved dream, yet the
original material out of which we formed it cannot be laughed away. One
feels responsible for the transgressions of one's dreaming self; not for
the whole sum of them, but yet for a certain percentage. "In short, if
in this sense, which can hardly be impugned, we understand the words of
Christ, that out of the heart come evil thoughts, then we can hardly
help being convinced that every sin committed in our dreams brings with
it at least a vague minimum of guilt."
Thus Hildebrandt finds the source of the
immorality of dreams in the germs and hints of evil impulses which pass
through our minds during the day as mental temptations, and he does not
hesitate to include these immoral elements in the ethical evaluation of
the personality. These same thoughts, and the same evaluation of these
thoughts, have, as we know, caused devout and holy men of all ages to
lament that they were wicked sinners. *
* It is not uninteresting to consider the
attitude of the Inquisition to this problem. In the Tractatus de Officio
sanctissimae Inquisitionis of Thomas Carena (Lyons edit., 1659) one
finds the following passage: "Should anyone utter heresies in his
dreams, the inquisitors shall consider this a reason for investigating
his conduct in life, for that is wont to return in sleep which occupies
a man during the day" (Dr. Ehniger, St. Urban, Switzerland).
The general occurrence of these
contrasting thoughts in the majority of men, and even in other regions
than the ethical, is of course established beyond a doubt. They have
sometimes been judged in a less serious spirit. Spitta quotes a relevant
passage from A. Zeller (Article "Irre," in the Allgemeine Encyklopadie
der Wissenschaften, Ersch and Gruber, p. 144): "An intellect is rarely
so happily organized as to be in full command of itself at all times and
seasons, and never to be disturbed in the lucid and constant processes
of thought by ideas not merely unessential, but absolutely grotesque and
nonsensical; indeed, the greatest thinkers have had cause to complain of
this dream-like, tormenting and distressing rabble of ideas, which
disturbs their profoundest contemplations and their most pious and
earnest meditations."
A clearer light is thrown on the
psychological meaning of these contrasting thoughts by a further
observation of Hildebrandt's, to the effect that dreams permit us an
occasional glimpse of the deepest and innermost recesses of our being,
which are generally closed to us in our waking state (p. 55). A
recognition of this fact is betrayed by Kant in his Anthropology, when
he states that our dreams may perhaps be intended to reveal to us not
what we are but what we might have been if we had had another
upbringing; and by Radestock (p. 84), who suggests that dreams disclose
to us what we do not wish to admit to ourselves, and that we therefore
unjustly condemn them as lying and deceptive. J. E. Erdmann asserts: "A
dream has never told me what I ought to think of a person, but, to my
great surprise, a dream has more than once taught me what I do really
think of him and feel about him." And J. H. Fichte expresses himself in
a like manner: "The character of our dreams gives a far truer reflection
of our general disposition than anything that we can learn by
self-observation in the waking state." Such remarks as this of Benini's
call our attention to the fact that the emergence of impulses which are
foreign to our ethical consciousness is merely analogous to the manner,
already familiar to us, in which the dream disposes of other
representative material: "Certe nostre inclinazioni che si credevano
soffocate e spente da un pezzo, si ridestano; passioni vecchie e sepolte
revivono; cose e persone a cui non pensiamo mai, ci vengono dinanzi" (p.
149). Volkelt expresses himself in a similar fashion: "Even ideas which
have entered into our consciousness almost unnoticed, and which,
perhaps, it has never before called out of oblivion, often announce
their presence in the mind through a dream" (p 105). Finally, we may
remember that according to Schleiermacher the state of falling asleep is
accompanied by the appearance of undesired imaginings.
We may include in such "undesired
imaginings" the whole of that imaginative material the occurrence of
which surprises us in immoral as well as in absurd dreams. The only
important difference consists in the fact that the undesired imaginings
in the moral sphere are in opposition to our usual feelings, whereas the
others merely appear strange to us. So far nothing has been done to
enable us to reconcile this difference by a profounder understanding.
But what is the significance of the emergence of undesired
representations in dreams? What conclusions can the psychology of the
waking and dreaming mind draw from these nocturnal manifestations of
contrasting ethical impulses? Here we find a fresh diversity of opinion,
and also a different grouping of the authors who have treated of the
subject. The line of thought followed by Hildebrandt, and by others who
share his fundamental opinion, cannot be continued otherwise than by
ascribing to the immoral impulses, even in the waking state, a latent
vitality, which is indeed inhibited from proceeding to action, and by
asserting that during sleep something falls away from us which, having
the effect of an inhibition, has kept us from becoming aware of the
existence of such impulses. Dreams therefore, reveal the true, if not
the whole, nature of the dreamer, and are one means of making the hidden
life of the psyche accessible to our understanding. It is only on such
hypotheses that Hildebrandt can attribute to the dream the role of a
monitor who calls our attention to the secret mischief in the soul, just
as, according to the physicians, it may announce a hitherto unobserved
physical disorder. Spitta, too, must be influenced by this conception
when he refers, for example, to the stream of excitations which flow in
upon the psyche during puberty, and consoles the dreamer by assuring him
that he has done all that is in his power to do if he has led a strictly
virtuous life during his waking state, if he has made an effort to
suppress the sinful thoughts as often as they arise, and has kept them
from maturing and turning into action. According to this conception, we
might designate as "undesired imaginings" those that are suppressed
during the day, and we must recognize in their emergence a genuine
psychic phenomenon.
According to certain other authors, we
have no right to draw this last inference. For Jessen (p. 360) the
undesired ideas and images, in the dream as in the waking state, and
also in the delirium of fever, etc., possess "the character of a
voluntary activity laid to rest, and of a procession, to some extent
mechanical, of images and ideas evoked by inner impulses." An immoral
dream proves nothing in respect of the psychic life of the dreamer
except that he has somehow become cognizant of the imaginative content
in question; it is certainly no proof of a psychic impulse of his own
mind. Another writer, Maury, makes us wonder whether he, too, does not
ascribe to the dream-state the power of dividing the psychic activity
into its components, instead of aimlessly destroying it. He speaks as
follows of dreams in which one oversteps the bounds of morality: "Ce
sont nos penchants qui parlent et qui nous font agir, sans que la
conscience nous retienne, bien que parfois elle nous avertisse. J'ai mes
defauts et mes penchants vicieux; a l'etat de veille, je tache de lutter
contre eux, et il m'arrive assez souvent de n'y pas succomber. Mais dans
mes songes j'y succombe toujours, ou pour mieux dire j'agis par leur
impulsion, sans crainte et sans remords.... Evidemment les visions qui
se deroulent devant ma pensee, et qui constituent le reve, me sont
suggerees par les incitations que je ressens et que ma volonte absente
ne cherche pas a refouler."- * Le Sommeil (p. 113).
* Our tendencies speak and make us act,
without being restrained by our conscience, although it sometimes warns
us. I have my faults and vicious tendencies; awake I try to fight
against them, and often enough I do not succumb to them. But in my
dreams I always succumb, or, rather, I act at their direction, without
fear or remorse.... Evidently, the visions which unfold in my thoughts,
and which constitute the dream, are suggested by the stimuli which I
feel and which my absent will does not try to repel.
If one believed in the power of the dream
to reveal an actually existing, but suppressed or concealed, immoral
disposition of the dreamer, one could not express one's opinion more
emphatically than in the words of Maury (p. 115): "En reve l'homme se
revele donc tout entier a soi-meme dans sa nudite et sa misere natives.
Des qu'il suspend l'exercise de sa volonte, il devient le jouet de
toutes les passions contre lesquelles, a l'etat de veille, la
conscience, le sentiment d'honneur, la crainte nous defendent." * In
another place makes the striking assertion (p. 462): "Dans le reve,
c'est surtout l'homme instinctif que se revele.... L'homme revient pour
ainsi dire l'etat de nature quand il reve; mais moins les idees acquises
ont penetre dans son esprit, plus 'les penchants en desaccord' avec
elles conservent encore sur lui d'influence dans le rive." *(2) He then
mentions, as an example, that his own dreams often reveal him as a
victim of just those superstitions which he has most vigorously attacked
in his writings.
* In a dream, a man is totally revealed
to himself in his naked and wretched state. As he suspends the exercise
of his will, he becomes the toy of all the passions from which, when
awake, our conscience, horror, and fear defend us.
*(2) In a dream, it is above all the
instinctive man who is revealed.... Man returns, so to speak, to the
natural state when he dreams; but the less acquired ideas have
penetrated into his mind, the more his "tendencies to disagreement" with
them keep their hold on him in his dreams.
The value of all these acute observations
is, however, impaired in Maury's case, because he refuses to recognize
in the phenomena which he has so accurately observed anything more than
a proof of the automatisme psychologique which in his own opinion
dominates the dream-life. He conceives this automatism as the complete
opposite of psychic activity.
A passage in Stricker's Studien uber das
Bewusstsein reads: "Dreams do not consist purely and simply of
delusions; for example, if one is afraid of robbers in a dream, the
robbers indeed are imaginary, but the fear is real." Our attention is
here called to the fact that the affective development of a dream does
not admit of the judgment which one bestows upon the rest of the
dream-content, and the problem then arises: What part of the psychic
processes in a dream may be real? That is to say, what part of them may
claim to be enrolled among the psychic processes of the waking state?
Table of
Contents
THE SCIENTIFIC LITERATURE OF DREAM-PROBLEMS (UP
TO 1900)
The Relation of the Dream to the Waking State
The Material of Dreams- Memory in Dreams
Dream-Stimuli and Sources
External sensory stimuli
Internal (subjective) sensory stimuli
Internal (organic) physical stimuli
Psychic sources of excitation
Why Dreams Are Forgotten After Waking
The Psychological Peculiarities of Dreams
The Ethical Sense in Dreams
Dream-Theories and the Function of the Dream
The Relation between Dreams and Mental
Diseases
ADDENDUM 1909
ADDENDUM 1914