Changes

Jump to: navigation, search

Preconscious

622 bytes removed, 08:24, 16 October 2006
no edit summary
Freud distinguishes between ==Freudian Dictionary==<blockquote>Everything unconscious that can easily exchange the unconscious condition for the consciousone, unconscious and preconscious systems (designated is better described as Cs., Ucs., and Pcs.). The preconscious is really a sub-division "capable of entering consciousness but cannot be classified along with consciousness because it consists largely of memory, including things we do without thinking about them, such " or as walking and driving a car. Something you actually have in your mind now obviously is conscious. Something you know but are not actually thinking about has to be somewhere else, where you can get hold of it when you want—the ''preconscious''. Ideas from the preconscious can slip into the unconscious, though unconscious thoughts can only enter the preconscious if subject to the usual censorship. For example, if you can’t remember the name of someone you know, it has temporarily slipped from the preconscious into the unconscious<ref>{{OoPA}} Ch.4</ref></blockquote>
<blockquote>From a purely descriptive point of view, the "preconscious" is also unconscious, but we do not give it that name, except when we are speaking loosely, or when we have to defend in general the existence of unconscious processes in mental life.<ref>{{NILP}} Ch. 3</ref></blockquote>
    Already<blockquote>That which is latent, and only unconscious in his 1896 letters to Wilhelm Fleiss ("Extracts from the Fliess Papers," 1950a), Freud connected the pre-conscious associated with verbal representations as being the ego. The full definition of descriptive and not in the dynamic sense, we call ''preconscious emerged only within ''; the delineation of term unconscious we reserve for the first topographical theorydynamically unconscious repressed, so that we now have three terms, conscious (Cs), although it was never precisely formulated.The preconscious (Pcs.) can only be conceived in opposition to the , and unconscious (Ucs.): It is the very differentiation between the two that makes it possible to think of a topography of the.., which are no longer purely descriptive in sense.  7, 133, 134, 145, 146, 154 <ref>Muller, John P. and William J. Richardson. Lacan and Language: A Reader's Guide to Ecrits. New York: International Universiites Press, Inc., 1982{{E&I}} Ch.1</ref> ==References==<references/blockquote
==See Also==
{{See}}
* [[Consciousness]]
||
* [[Unconscious]]
{{Also}}
[[Category:Psychoanalysis]]
[[Category:Terms]]
[[Category:Concepts]]
{{Freudian Dictionary}}
 
((!))
Root Admin, Bots, Bureaucrats, flow-bot, oversight, Administrators, Widget editors
24,656
edits

Navigation menu