SelfIn the [[history]] of [[psychoanalysis]], several [[philosophers]] became [[subjects]] of a privileged confrontation with [[Freud]]. One such [[philosopher]] was Baruch [[Spinoza]] (1632-analysis consists of interpreting one1677). From the 1920s intellectuals noted correspondences between [[Freudian]] [[thought]] and Spinoza's own preconscious and unconscious material [[philosophy]] (such as dreamsSmith, parapraxes1924; Alexander, memories1927). This [[discussion]] continues to more [[recent]] [[times]] (Bodei, fleeting thoughts1991; Ogilvie, and intense emotions1993).Psychoanalysis is to a great extent a result Freud himself rarely spoke of Freud's self-analysis between 1895 and 1902Spinoza. The analysis of his own dreams brought him confirmation of what Although he found referred to Spinoza in the dreams [[Leonardo]] [[da Vinci]] and a [[Memory]] of his patients and, reciprocally[[Childhood]] (1910c), he better understood their dreams on the basis of his owndid not explicitly mention. Freud's self-analysis only became systematic after the death of his father in October 1896, and that..
[[Category:Psychoanalysis]]
[[Category:Jacques Lacan]]
[[Category:Philosophy]]