How does experience turn into explanation? How does the private life of the theorist become realized in his or her theory? A specific moment of disorder and early sorrow, viewed from the inside, may so sensitize the theorist to certain aspects of the human condition that he or she sees connections that the rest of us never discover. From these insights may come a plausible and useful theory. But the same private event may also bring with it a feeling of inevitability that becomes translated into theoretical rigidity and an intolerance for disagreement, discussion, or accommodation. Because it happened to me, goes the argument, it must happen to everyone, and I am the authority.Louis Breger's new biography, Freud: Darkness in the Midst of Vision, brings us the clearest picture to date of these two sides of Freud's history. We see, in perhaps more detail than ever before, the bleak nature of his early childhood; can begin to sense how exposed he was to loss, to separation, and to unrelieved misery; and begin to understand how these early impressions may have sensitized him to certain developmental traumas that few others were aware of, making for a significantly different theory of the mind. But Breger also makes clear Freud's ruthless need to be right, to stifle argument and dissension and claim discovery of universal laws when, at best, he was only catching sight of a possible hypothesis. Opposing views were dismissed by polemic and ad hominem accusation, and Breger's chapters on Adler and Jung give us a sobering picture of the
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.