The Interpretation of Dreams by Sigmund Freud
CHAPTER 1, Section G
G. Dream-Theories and the Function of
the Dream
A statement concerning the dream which
seeks to explain as many as possible of its observed characteristics
from a single point of view, and which at the same time defines the
relation of the dream to a more comprehensive sphere of phenomena, may
be described as a theory of the dream. The individual theories of the
dream will be distinguished from one another by their designating as
essential this or that characteristic of dreams, and relating thereto
their data and their explanations. It is not absolutely necessary that
we should deduce from the theory of the dream a function, i.e., a use or
any such similar role, but expectation, being as a matter of habit
teleologically inclined, will nevertheless welcome those theories which
afford us some insight into a function of dreams.
We have already become acquainted with
many conceptions of the dream, which in this sense are more or less
deserving of the name of dream-theories. The belief of the ancients that
dreams were sent by the gods in order to guide the actions of man was a
complete theory of the dream, which told them all that was worth knowing
about dreams. Since dreams have become an object of biological research
we have a greater number of theories, some of which, however, are very
incomplete.
Provided we make no claim to
completeness, we might venture on the following rough grouping of
dream-theories, based on their fundamental conception of the degree and
mode of the psychic activity in dreams:
1. Theories, like those of Delboeuf,
which allow the full psychic activity of the waking state to continue in
our dreams. Here the psyche does not sleep; its apparatus remains
intact; but under the conditions of the sleeping state, which differ
from those of the waking state, it must in its normal functioning give
results which differ from those of the waking state. As regards these
theories, it may be questioned whether their authors are in a position
to derive the distinction between dreaming and waking thought entirely
from the conditions of the sleeping state. Moreover, they lack one
possible access to a function of dreams; one does not understand to what
purpose one dreams- why the complicated mechanism of the psychic
apparatus should continue to operate even when it is placed under
conditions to which it does not appear to be adapted. There are only two
purposeful reactions in the place of the reaction of dreaming: to sleep
dreamlessly, or to wake when affected by disturbing stimuli.
2. Theories which, on the contrary,
assume for the dream a diminution of the psychic activity, a loosening
of connections, and an impoverishment of the available material. In
accordance with these theories, one must assume for sleep a
psychological character entirely different from that given by Delboeuf.
Sleep encroaches widely upon the psyche; it does not consist in the mere
shutting it off from the outer world; on the contrary, it enters into
its mechanism, and makes it for the time being unserviceable. If I may
draw a comparison from psychiatry, I would say that the first group of
theories construes the dream like a paranoia, while the second
represents it as a type of mental deficiency or amentia.
The theory that only a fragment of the
psychic activity paralysed by sleep finds expression in dreams is that
by far the most favoured by medical writers, and by scientists in
general. In so far as one may presuppose a general interest in
dream-interpretation, one may indeed describe it as the most popular
theory of dreams. It is remarkable how nimbly this particular theory
avoids the greatest danger that threatens every dream-interpretation;
that is, shipwreck on one of the contrasts incorporated in dreams. Since
this theory regards dreams as the result of a partial waking (or, as
Herbart puts it in his Psychologie uber den Traum, "a gradual, partial,
and at the same time very anomalous waking"), it is able to cover the
whole series, from the inferior activities of dreams, which betray
themselves by their absurdity, to fully concentrated intellectual
activity, by a series of states of progressive awakening, ending in
complete wakefulness.
Those who find the physiological mode of
expression indispensable, or who deem it more scientific, will find this
theory of dreams summarized in Binz's description (p. 43):
"This state (of torpor), however,
gradually comes to an end in the hours of early morning. The accumulated
products of fatigue in the albumen of the brain gradually diminish. They
are slowly decomposed, or carried away by the constantly flowing
blood-stream. Here and there individual groups of cells can be
distinguished as being awake, while around them all is still in a state
of torpidity. The isolated work of the individual groups now appears
before our clouded consciousness, which is still powerless to control
other parts of the brain, which govern the associations. Hence the
pictures created, which for the most part correspond to the objective
impressions of the immediate past, combine with one another in a wild
and uncontrolled fashion. As the number of brain-cells set free
constantly increases, the irrationality of the dream becomes constantly
less."
The conception of the dream as an
incomplete, partial waking state, or traces of the influence of this
conception, will of course be found in the works of all the modern
physiologists and philosophers. It is most completely represented by
Maury. It often seems as though this author conceives the state of being
awake or asleep as susceptible of shifting from one anatomical region to
another; each anatomical region seeming to him to be connected with a
definite psychic function. Here I will merely suggest that even if the
theory of partial waking were confirmed, its finer superstructure would
still call for exhaustive consideration.
No function of dreams, of course, can
emerge from this conception of the dream-life. On the contrary, Binz,
one of the chief proponents of this theory, consistently enough denies
that dreams have any status or importance. He says (p. 357): "All the
facts, as we see them, urge us to characterize the dream as a physical
process, in all cases useless, and in many cases definitely morbid."
The expression physical in reference to
dreams (the word is emphasized by the author) points, of course, in more
than one direction. In the first place, it refers to the aetiology of
dreams, which was of special interest to Binz, as he was studying the
experimental production of dreams by the administration of drugs. It is
certainly in keeping with this kind of dream-theory to ascribe the
incitement to dreaming, whenever possible, exclusively to somatic
origins. Presented in the most extreme form the theory is as follows:
After we have put ourselves to sleep by the banishment of stimuli, there
would be no need to dream, and no reason for dreaming until the morning,
when the gradual awakening through the fresh invasion of stimuli might
be reflected in the phenomenon of dreaming. But, as a matter of fact, it
is not possible to protect our sleep from stimuli; like the germs of
life of which Mephistopheles complained, stimuli come to the sleeper
from all directions- from without, from within, and even from all those
bodily regions which never trouble us during the waking state. Thus our
sleep is disturbed; now this, now that little corner of the psyche is
jogged into the waking state, and the psyche functions for a while with
the awakened fraction, yet is thankful to fall asleep again. The dream
is the reaction to the disturbance of sleep caused by the stimulus, but
it is, when all is said, a purely superfluous reaction.
The description of the dream- which,
after all, remains an activity of the psychic organ- as a physical
process has yet another connotation. So to describe it is to deny that
the dream has the dignity of a psychic process. The old simile of "the
ten fingers of a person ignorant of music running over the keyboard of
an instrument" perhaps best illustrates in what esteem the dream is
commonly held by the representatives of exact science. Thus conceived,
it becomes something wholly insusceptible of interpretation. How could
the ten fingers of a player ignorant of music perform a musical
composition?
The theory of partial wakefulness did not
escape criticism even by the earlier writers. Thus Burdach wrote in
1830: "If we say that dreaming is a partial waking, then, in the first
place, neither the waking nor the sleeping state is explained thereby;
secondly, this amounts only to saying that certain powers of the mind
are active in dreams while others are at rest. But such irregularities
occur throughout life..." (p. 482).
The prevailing dream-theory which
conceives the dream as a "physical" process finds a certain support in a
very interesting conception of the dream which was first propounded by
Robert in 1866, and which is seductive because it assigns to the dream a
function or a useful result. As the basis of his theory Robert takes two
objectively observable facts which we have already discussed in our
consideration of dream-material (chapter I., B). These facts are: (1)
that one very often dreams about the most insignificant impressions of
the day; and (2) that one rarely carries over into the dream the
absorbing interests of the day. Robert asserts as an indisputable fact
that those matters which have been fully settled and solved never evoke
dreams, but only such as lie incompleted in the mind, or touch it merely
in passing (p. 10). "For this reason we cannot usually explain our
dreams, since their causes are to be found in sensory impressions of the
preceding day which have not attained sufficient recognition on the part
of the dreamer." The condition permitting an impression to reach the
dream is, therefore, that this impression has been disturbed in its
elaboration, or that it was too insignificant to lay claim to such
elaboration.
Robert therefore conceives the dream "as
a physical process of elimination which in its psychic reaction reaches
the consciousness." Dreams are eliminations of thoughts nipped in the
bud. "A man deprived of the capacity for dreaming would in time become
mentally unbalanced, because an immense number of unfinished and
unsolved thoughts and superficial impressions would accumulate in his
brain, under the pressure of which all that should be incorporated in
the memory as a completed whole would be stifled." The dream acts as a
safety-valve for the over-burdened brain. Dreams possess a healing and
unburdening power (p. 32).
We should misunderstand Robert if we were
to ask him how representation in the dream could bring about an
unburdening of the mind. The writer apparently concluded from these two
peculiarities of the dream-material that during sleep such an
elimination of worthless impressions is effected somehow as a somatic
process; and that dreaming is not a special psychic process, but only
the information which we receive of such elimination. Moreover,
elimination is not the only thing that takes place in the mind during
sleep. Robert himself adds that the stimuli of the day are likewise
elaborated, and "what cannot be eliminated from the undigested
thought-material lying in the mind is bound up into a completed whole by
mental clues borrowed from the imagination, and is thus enrolled in the
memory as a harmless phantasy-picture" (p. 23).
But it is in his criticism of the sources
of dreams that Robert is most flatly opposed to the prevailing theory.
Whereas according to this theory there would be no dream if the external
and internal sensory stimuli did not repeatedly wake the mind, according
to Robert the impulse to dream lies in the mind itself. It lies in the
overloading of the mind, which demands discharge, and Robert considers,
quite consistently, that those causes conditioning the dream which
depend on the physical condition assume a subordinate rank, and could
not incite dreams in a mind which contained no material for
dream-formation derived from the waking consciousness. It is admitted,
however, that the phantasy-images originating in the depths of the mind
may be influenced by nervous stimuli (p. 48). Thus, according to Robert,
dreams are not, after all, wholly dependent on the somatic element.
Dreaming is, of course, not a psychic process, and it has no place among
the psychic processes of the waking state; it is a nocturnal somatic
process in the apparatus of mental activity, and has a function to
perform, viz., to guard this apparatus against excessive strain, or, if
we may be allowed to change the comparison, to cleanse the mind.
Another author, Yves Delage, bases his
theory on the same characteristics of the dream- characteristics which
are perceptible in the selection of the dream-material, and it is
instructive to observe how a trifling twist in the conception of the
same things gives a final result entirely different in its bearings.
Delage, having lost through death a person very dear to him, found that
we either do not dream at all of what occupies us intently during the
day, or that we begin to dream of it only after it is overshadowed by
the other interests of the day. His investigations in respect of other
persons corroborated the universality of this state of affairs.
Concerning the dreams of newly-married people, he makes a comment which
is admirable if it should prove to be generally true: "S'ils ont ete
fortement epris, presque jamais ils n'ont reve l'un de l'autre avant le
mariage ou pendant la lune de miel; et s'ils ont reve d'amour c'est pour
etre infideles avec quelque personne indifferente ou odieuse." * But of
what does one dream? Delage recognizes that the material of our dreams
consists of fragments and remnants of impressions, both from the last
few days and from earlier periods. All that appears in our dreams, all
that we may at first be inclined to consider the creation of the
dream-life, proves on closer investigation to be unrecognized
reproduction, "souvenir inconscient." But this representative material
reveals one common characteristic; it originates from impressions which
have probably affected our senses more forcibly than our mind, or from
which the attention has been deflected soon after their occurrence. The
less conscious, and at the same time the stronger an impression, the
greater the prospect of its playing a part in our next dream.
* If they are very much in love, they
have almost never dreamed of each other before the marriage or during
the honeymoon; and if they have dreamed of love, it was to be unfaithful
with someone unimportant or distasteful.
These two categories of impressions- the
insignificant and the undisposed-of- are essentially the same as those
which were emphasized by Robert, but Delage gives them another
significance, inasmuch as he believes that these impressions are capable
of exciting dreams not because they are indifferent, but because they
are not disposed of. The insignificant impressions also are, in a sense,
not fully disposed of; they, too, owing to their character of new
impressions, are "autant de ressorts tendus," * which will be relaxed
during sleep. Still more entitled to a role in the dream than a weak and
almost unnoticed impression is a vivid impression which has been
accidentally retarded in its elaboration, or intentionally repressed.
The psychic energy accumulated during the day by inhibition or
suppression becomes the mainspring of the dream at night. In dreams
psychically suppressed material achieves expression. *(2)
* So many taut lines.
*(2) A novelist, Anatole France,
expresses himself to a similar effect (Le Lys Rouge): "Ce que nous
voyons la nuit ce sont les restes malheureux que nous avons neglige dans
la veille. Le reve est souvent la revanche des choses qu'on meprise ou
le reproche des etres abandonnes." [What we see at night are the unhappy
relics that we neglected while awake. The dream is often the revenge of
things scorned or the reproach of beings deserted.]
Unfortunately Delage does not pursue this
line of thought any farther; he is able to ascribe only the most
insignificant role in our dreams to an independent psychic activity, and
thus, in his theory of dreams, he reverts to the prevailing doctrine of
a partial slumber of the brain: "En somme le reve est le produit de la
pensee errante, sans but et sans direction, se fixant successivement sur
les souvenirs, qui ont garde assez d'intensite pour se placer sur sa
route et l'arreter au passage, etablissant entre eux un lien tantot
faible et indecis, tantot plus fort et plus serre, selon que l'activite
actuelle du cerveau est plus ou moins abolie par le sommeil." *
* In short, the dream is the product of
wandering thought, without end or direction, successively fixing on
memories which have retained sufficient intensity to put themselves in
the way and block the passage, establishing between themselves a
connection sometimes weak and loose, sometimes stronger and closer,
according to whether the actual work of the brain is more or less
suppressed by sleep.
3. In a third group we may include those
dream-theories which ascribe to the dreaming mind the capacity for and
propensity to special psychic activities, which in the waking state it
is able to exert either not at all or imperfectly. In most cases the
manifestation of these activities is held to result in a useful function
of dreams. The evaluations of dreams by the earlier psychologists fall
chiefly within this category. I shall content myself, however, with
quoting in their stead the assertion of Burdach, to the effect that
dreaming "is the natural activity of the mind, which is not limited by
the power of the individuality, nor disturbed by self-consciousness, nor
directed by self-determination, but is the vitality of the sensible
focus indulging in free play" (p. 486).
Burdach and others evidently consider
this revelling in the free use of its own powers as a state in which the
mind refreshes itself and gathers fresh strength for the day's work;
something, indeed, after the fashion of a vacation. Burdach therefore
cites with approval the admirable words in which the poet Novalis lauds
the power of the dream: "The dream is a bulwark against the regularity
and commonplace character of life, a free recreation of the fettered
phantasy, in which it intermingles all the images of life and interrupts
the constant seriousness of the adult by the joyful play of the child.
Without the dream we should surely grow old earlier, so that the dream
may be considered, if not precisely as a gift from above, yet as a
delightful exercise, a friendly companion on our pilgrimage to the
grave."
The refreshing and healing activity of
dreams is even more impressively described by Purkinje (p. 456). "The
productive dreams in particular would perform these functions. These are
the unconstrained play of the imagination, and have no connection with
the events of the day. The mind is loth to continue the tension of the
waking life, but wishes to relax it and recuperate from it. It creates,
in the first place conditions opposed to those of the waking state. It
cures sadness by joy, worry by hope and cheerfully distracting images,
hatred by love and friendliness, and fear by courage and confidence; it
appeases doubt by conviction and firm belief, and vain expectation by
realization. Sleep heals many sore spots in the mind, which the day
keeps continually open, by covering them and guarding them against fresh
irritation. On this depends in some degree the consoling action of
time." We all feel that sleep is beneficial to the psychic life, and the
vague surmise of the popular consciousness is apparently loth to
surrender the notion that dreaming is one of the ways in which sleep
bestows its benefits.
The most original and most comprehensive
attempt to explain dreaming as a special activity of the mind, which can
freely unfold itself only in the sleeping state, is that made by
Scherner in 1861. Scherner's book is written in a heavy and bombastic
style and is inspired by an almost intoxicated enthusiasm for the
subject, which is bound to repel us unless it can carry us away with it.
It places so many difficulties in the way of an analysis that we gladly
resort to the clearer and conciser presentation of Scherner's theories
made by the philosopher Volkelt: "From these mystical conglomerations,
from all these outbursts of splendour and radiance, there indeed flashes
and shines an ominous semblance of meaning; but the path of the
philosopher is not illumined thereby." Such is the criticism of
Scherner's exposition by one of his own followers.
Scherner is not one of those writers for
whom the mind carries its undiminished faculties into the dream-life. He
even explains how, in our dreams, the centrality and spontaneous energy
of the ego become enervated; how cognition, feeling, will, and
imagination are transformed by this decentralization; how the remnant of
these psychic forces has not a truly intellectual character, but is
rather of the nature of a mechanism. But, on the other hand, that
activity of the psyche which may be described as phantasy, freed from
all rational governance, and hence no longer strictly controlled, rises
to absolute supremacy in our dreams. To be sure, it borrows all its
building-material from the memory of the waking state, but with this
material it builds up structures which differ from those of the waking
state as day differs from night. In our dreams it reveals itself as not
only reproductive but also productive. Its peculiarities give the
dream-life its singular character. It shows a preference for the
unlimited, the exaggerated, the prodigious; but by its liberation from
the inhibiting categories of thought, it gains a greater flexibility and
agility, and indulges in pleasurable turns. It is excessively sensitive
to the delicate emotional stimuli of the mind, to its stirring and
disturbing affects, and it rapidly recasts the inner life into an
external, plastic visibility. The dream-phantasy lacks the language of
concepts. What it wishes to say it must express in visible form; and
since in this case the concept does not exert an inhibitory control, it
depicts it in all the fulness, power, and breadth of visible form. But
hereby its language, plain though it is, becomes cumbersome, awkward,
and prolix. Plain speaking is rendered especially difficult by the fact
that it dislikes expressing an object by its actual image, but prefers
to select an alien image, if only the latter is able to express that
particular aspect of the object which it is anxious to represent. Such
is the symbolizing activity of the phantasy.... It is, moreover, very
significant that the dream-phantasy reproduces objects not in detail,
but only in outline, and in the freest possible manner. Its paintings,
therefore, are like light and brilliant sketches. The dream-phantasy,
however, does not stop at the mere representation of the object, but
feels an internal urge to implicate the dream-ego to some extent with
the object, and thus to give rise to action. The visual dream, for
example, depicts gold coins lying in the street; the dreamer picks them
up, rejoices, and carries them away.
According to Scherner, the material upon
which the dream-phantasy exerts its artistic activity consists
preponderantly of the organic sensory stimuli which are so obscure
during the day (cf. p. 151 above); hence it is that the over-fantastic
theory of Scherner, and perhaps too matter-of-fact theories of Wundt and
other physiologists, though otherwise diametrically opposed to each
other, are in perfect agreement in their assumptions with regard to
dream-sources and dream-stimuli. But whereas, according to the
physiological theory, the psychic reaction to the inner physical stimuli
becomes exhausted with the arousing of any of the ideas appropriate to
these stimuli (as these ideas then, by way of association, call to their
aid other ideas, so that on reaching this stage the chain of psychic
processes appears to terminate), according to Scherner, on the other
hand, the physical stimuli merely supply the psyche with material which
it may utilize in fulfilling its phantastic intentions. For Scherner
dream-formation begins where, according to the views of other writers,
it comes to an end.
What the dream-phantasy does with the
physical stimuli cannot, of course, be regarded as purposeful. The
phantasy plays a tantalizing game with them, and represents the organic
source of the stimuli of the dream in question by any sort of plastic
symbolism. Indeed, Scherner holds- though here Volkelt and others differ
from him- that the dream-phantasy has a certain favourite symbol for the
organism as a whole: namely, the house. Fortunately, however, for its
representations, it does not seem to limit itself to this material; it
may also employ a whole series of houses to designate a single organ;
for example, very long streets of houses for the intestinal stimulus. In
other dreams particular parts of the house may actually represent
particular regions of the body, as in the headache-dream, when the
ceiling of the room (which the dream sees covered with disgusting
toad-like spiders) represents the head.
Quite apart from the symbol of the house,
any other suitable object may be employed to represent those parts of
the body which excite the dream. "Thus the breathing lungs find their
symbol in the flaming stove with its windy roaring, the heart in hollow
chests and baskets, the bladder in round, ball-shaped, or simply hollow
objects. The man's dreams, when due to the sexual stimulus, make the
dreamer find in the street the upper portion of a clarinet, or the
mouthpiece of a tobacco-pipe, or, again, a piece of fur. The clarinet
and tobacco-pipe represent the approximate form of the male sexual
organ, while the fur represents the pubic hair. In the sexual dreams of
the female, the tightness of the closed thighs may be symbolized by a
narrow courtyard surrounded by houses, and the vagina by a very narrow,
slippery and soft footpath, leading through the courtyard, upon which
the dreamer is obliged to walk, in order perhaps to carry a letter to a
man" (Volkelt, p. 39). It is particularly noteworthy that at the end of
such a physically stimulated dream the phantasy, as it were, unmasks
itself by representing the exciting organ or its function unconcealed.
Thus the "tooth-excited dream" usually ends with the dreamer taking a
tooth out of his mouth.
The dream-phantasy may, however, direct
its attention not merely to the form of the exciting organ, but may even
make the substance contained therein the object of symbolization. Thus,
for example, the dream excited by the intestinal stimuli may lead us
through muddy streets, the dream due to stimuli from the bladder to
foaming water. Or the stimulus as such, the nature of its excitation,
and the object which it covets, are represented symbolically. Or, again,
the dream-ego enters into a concrete association with the symbolization
of its own state; as, for example, when in the case of painful stimuli
we struggle desperately with vicious dogs or raging bulls, or when in a
sexual dream the dreamer sees herself pursued by a naked man.
Disregarding all the possible prolixity of elaboration, a phantastic
symbolizing activity remains as the central force of every dream.
Volkelt, in his fine and enthusiastic essay, attempted to penetrate
still further into the character of this phantasy, and to assign to the
psychic activity thus recognized its position in a system of
philosophical ideas, which, however, remains altogether too difficult of
comprehension for anyone who is not prepared by previous training for
the intuitive comprehension of philosophical modes of thought.
Scherner attributes no useful function to
the activity of the symbolizing phantasy in dreams. In dreams the psyche
plays with the stimuli which are offered to it. One might conjecture
that it plays in a mischievous fashion. And we might be asked whether
our detailed consideration of Scherner's dream-theory, the arbitrariness
of which, and its deviation from the rules of all forms of research are
only too obvious, can lead to any useful results. We might fitly reply
that to reject Scherner's theory without previous examination would be
imposing too arrogant a veto. This theory is based on the impressions
produced by his dreams on a man who paid close attention to them, and
who would appear to be personally very well equipped for tracing obscure
psychic phenomena. Furthermore, it treats of a subject which (though
rich in its contents and relations) has for thousands of years appeared
mysterious to humanity, and to the elucidation of which science,
strictly so called, has, as it confesses, contributed nothing beyond
attempting- in uncompromising opposition to popular sentiment- to deny
its content and significance. Finally, let us frankly admit that it
seems as though we cannot very well avoid the phantastical in our
attempts to explain dreams. We must remember also that there is such a
thing as a phantasy of ganglion cells; the passage cited (p. 87) from a
sober and exact investigator like Binz, which describes how the dawn of
awakening floods the dormant cell-masses of the cerebral cortex, is not
a whit less fanciful and improbable than Scherner's attempts at
interpretation. I hope to be able to demonstrate that there is something
real underlying these attempts, though the phenomena which he describes
have been only vaguely recognized, and do not possess the character of
universality that should entitle them to be the basis of a theory of
dreams. For the present, Scherner's theory of dreams, in contrast to the
medical theory, may perhaps lead us to realize between what extremes the
explanation of dream-life is still unsteadily vacillating.
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