Most psychologists don’t care about Freud’s work outside of a historical sense and kinda hate him as a person. His work was quite literally used as an example of pseudoscience by Karl Popper.

And yet for some reason philosophers have an obsession with integrating his views into their work and artists keep using his views as inspiration and analyze existing works via the lens of psychoanalysis.

Why?

  • Chainweasel
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    318 months ago

    Honestly I think it’s as simple as his notariety.
    He is one of the most well-known psychologists and is a bit of a pop culture icon.
    It’s like how you see most non-physicists talk about Einstein more than they do Feynman or Higgs.

  • @morrowind@lemmy.ml
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    8 months ago

    They spend multiple weeks on him in Intro to psychology classes. Even though they tell you at the end it’s a bunch of rot (if you haven’t figured it out yourself), if that’s like 1/5 of your psychological knowledge, you’re gonna use it

    • Instigate
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      48 months ago

      His work is important to study from an historical perspective in order to see how psychology grew into what it is today, in the same way that it’s important that we learn about outdated concepts like tabula rasa and phrenology in order to better understand what is correct. The fact that he applied so much of his own subjective thoughts to his brand of psychology shows us how we, as potential future psychologists, also have the same capacity to search for confirmatory evidence and eschew disproving evidence in search of a theory. He’s a great example of what not to do when it comes to psychology.

    • @CanadaPlus
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      68 months ago

      Modern psychology doesn’t necessarily support a subconscious, either. At best some individual practitioners like the concept.

      Freud’s big contribution was therapy, or a “talking cure” as he called it. The rest was cocaine-fueled nonsense

      • @intensely_human@lemm.ee
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        88 months ago

        That is bullshit. Everyone with a pulse knows the brain processes information unconsciously. It’s the basis for most of cognitive psychology, in fact.

        • @CanadaPlus
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          18 months ago

          Unconsciously, sure. Like, it turns three colour channels into a rainbow plus shades. Subconsciously, no, there’s no (measured) suppressed self that wants to fuck mom or whatever.

          • @intensely_human@lemm.ee
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            08 months ago

            Of course there is. For example there’s the study where they brushed chairs with testosterone.

            The response to that chemical being present demonstrates goal-driven personality operating below the level of consciousness.

            Uncovering unconscious motivations is like 95% of therapy. Everything that isn’t yet articulated is the subconscious.

            • @CanadaPlus
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              18 months ago

              Uncovering unconscious motivations is like 95% of therapy.

              I’ve done a ton of it, from multiple different practitioners, and none of it was like that. It was more about changing habits and examining conscious but unchallenged beliefs.

              Even good psych has replication problems. I don’t know where your funky chair study was published or the methodology and sample size, but I’m skeptical that amounts to a lot of evidence of anything.

  • @hitmyspot@aussie.zone
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    208 months ago

    Probably because his ideas is what made popular psychology known to the world. His ideas have largely been debunked but there are nuggets that have been developed and become something different, rather than abandoned.

    His ideas about ego, id superego etc are more commonly understood than the current psychiatric terms.

    So, just like we call it pop culture, pop psychology is well known and he’s the head.

  • @viking@infosec.pub
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    118 months ago

    It’s the only psychologist who has a name known to the bulk of laymen, so he’s quoted for the sake of sounding educated. And more often than not, entirely misquoted to produce a “credible” argument.

      • @Admetus@sopuli.xyz
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        18 months ago

        Well I know for sure he was a coked up one. And if he’s not a psychologist, then he was just cokehead.

    • @pingveno@lemmy.ml
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      28 months ago

      That’s about what I was thinking, the self-perpetuating fame. The general population just doesn’t know the names of many psychologists, but they’ve heard of Freud and a handful of Freud’s ideas.

  • wuphysics87
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    108 months ago

    It’s a way of framing discourse, ideas, and concepts. In the most general sense, id, ego, and super ego descibe that which is fundamental and can not change, that which can change but is not known at hand, and that which is presently known and can be actively changed. Try applying this framework to current events and you’ll see why people still discuss it.

    Police brutality is a good example. What is fundamental to a police officer and drives them? What more maleable mindset does this create? What conscious decisions and actions does an officer take?

    Obviously, this framing doesn’t perfectly capture the issue, but it does set you on a structured path to addressing it. If having an authoritative personality is what drives a police officer, how might we instill a more positive mindset when they are on patrol? How can the actions of a police officer negate that mindset?

    And so on, but sometimes a cop is just a cop…

  • @Jimmyeatsausage@lemmy.world
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    108 months ago

    I think some of this is also just that pop science often lags years or decades behind real science. Most people couldn’t name another famous psychologist, or an evolutionary scientist beyond Darwin, or a physicist beyond Einstein.

    Specifically regarding art and philosophy, even if Freud’s idea were wrong, you can still glean something useful (or at least interesting) from using them as a starting premise.

  • livus
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    8 months ago

    Laziness and expediency.

    Freud’s theories are pretty simple to understand and easy to map onto. Back when Freud was influential, people were easily able to import and use it in their literary theory, philosophy etc. Same thing happened with Lacan but since Lacan builds on Freud it’s essentially the same thing.

    In order to use an updated understanding of psychology or even better, neurology, people would have to learn a whe lot of much more complex theory and facts, and explain it to their readers, and apply it into their own thing.

    It’s much easier for an overworked academic to take this wrong but much-used system that everyone already knows.

  • @Anamnesis@lemmy.world
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    88 months ago

    To be clear, the vast majority of academic philosophers (at least in the Anglophone world) find Freud to be useless pseudoscience. Freud gets taken seriously in literary analysis and continental philosophy. The latter is a minority position (although drawing a hard and fast line between “analytic” and “continental” philosophy is pretty difficult these days).

    When I was getting my PhD in philosophy, I would have been laughed out of the room if I wrote a term paper that used Freud in any significant way.

  • @jeffw@lemmy.world
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    68 months ago

    This gets at the history of literary and art theory in the 20th century. The basic answer is that people in the arts adopted psychodynamic frameworks from Freud, Lacan, etc, while actual psychologists moved on.