About This Book
The work challenges the notion that mental processes are governed only by a pleasure-seeking principle, arguing that a compulsion to repeat actions and experiences—including painful or neutral ones—cannot be reduced to pursuit of pleasure. Drawing on clinical observations of trauma, childhood play, and automatic repetitions, it develops a metapsychological account in which instincts include both life-directed tendencies toward binding and connection and a proposed destructive tendency aimed at a return to an earlier inorganic condition. It examines how repression, reality constraints, and instinctual conflict shape the economy of psychic energy and tentatively posits a death-oriented drive to explain persistent repetition beyond pleasure.
THE INTERNATIONAL
PSYCHO-ANALYTICAL
LIBRARY
EDITED BY ERNEST JONES
No. 4
BY
SIGM. FREUD, M.D., LL.D.
AUTHORIZED TRANSLATION
FROM THE SECOND GERMAN EDITION
BY C. J. M. HUBBACK
THE INTERNATIONAL PSYCHO-ANALYTICAL PRESS
LONDON MCMXXII VIENNA
COPYRIGHT 1911