Philosophy
If Freud, in his Psychoanalysis Theory, believes that each person - from infancy - represses impulses or desires, which its parents reject - and shuts these unwanted impulses out into the unconscious. These are what he calls repressed thoughts. He suggests that, since this process happens throughout life, that infant grows into adulthood, doing things out of the command of those repressed impulses and desires in the unconscious mind. He concludes that the only way a person with overwhelming repressed material can be cured is for an expert therapist to access his unconscious and bring these repressed material to his conscious awareness. And because it is not conscious, and therefore not within the conscious control of the person, he cannot be responsible for what he does from the irresistible command of his unconscious. This makes Freud a determinist in that he believes that human nature, rather than reason, determines a person's culpability in his willful acts.
But Sartre argues that what Freud claims as unconscious repression is only self-deception. He explains this by saying that the patient has the dormant awareness of what ails him. The only trouble is that he is afraid to face or admit that he knows it. Or he rejects such a truth. Sartre illustrates this, using the therapy situation itself: that the patient gets "cured" either by admitting or denying the therapist's analysis of the patient's condition by revealing and interpreting the latter's repressions. If the patient can confirm the therapist's analysis, Freud thinks that it is only because the patient has known the truth itself all along, for he cannot confirm something he has a greater hold of. And if he resists it, it can only be because he is aware of it but does not want to confront it. Either way, the awareness already lies in the patient...
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