Home
»Unlabelled
» Read Online Group Psychology and the Analysis of the Ego Audible Audio Edition Sigmund Freud Joe Gomez MuseumAudiobookscom Books
By
Liliana Mullins on Sunday, 26 May 2019
Read Online Group Psychology and the Analysis of the Ego Audible Audio Edition Sigmund Freud Joe Gomez MuseumAudiobookscom Books
Product details - Audible Audiobook
- Listening Length 2 hours and 26 minutes
- Program Type Audiobook
- Version Unabridged
- Publisher MuseumAudiobooks.com
- Audible.com Release Date March 27, 2019
- Language English, English
- ASIN B07Q1CNQCD
|
Group Psychology and the Analysis of the Ego Audible Audio Edition Sigmund Freud Joe Gomez MuseumAudiobookscom Books Reviews
- Over the last few years, I have pondered the dynamics of group psychology. We see events on TV and the Internet, yet sometimes the underlying evil which appears to be present is difficult to assign to the individuals participating. In other words, the group actions may be unthinkable to an individual; nevertheless, the event happened when they all participated as a group. Curious about the possibilities, I ventured into Freud’s “Group Psychology.â€
This is a short book, but I would not classify it as a quick read. Sometimes it is the translation, other times it is the subject, but a little perseverance makes it all readable and understandable. Some of it seems to be common sense knowledge that appears to be already known by the reader, but sound reasoning is also present and the resultant knowledge gained on the psychology of crowds can be enlightening as well as unnerving. Interesting reading for the curious. Four stars. - This book is in the public domain and I downloaded it for free. As with all of these public domain works of Freud's that I've read so far the translation leaves a lot to be desired. I'm certain that Freud's message was clear and lucid in the original German, but here it's obscured by unnecessarily complicated sentence structure that often requires re-reading before it can be fully understood.
Here is an example of one of the shorter sentences "Contagion is a phenomenom of which it is easy to establish the presence, but that it is not easy to explain." To say that a sentence like this requires editing is an understatement. This might be one way to improve it "The presence of Contagion is easy to identify, but not so easy to explain." I could have given much worse, and far longer, examples, but the point of it all is that the readibility of the entire book could be better.
On the other hand, Freud gives a good description of group-think, and identifies the problems associated with groups. This is one insight (and I won't attempt to edit these examples) "...the individual forming part of a group acquires solely from numerical considerations, a sentiment f invincible power which allows him to yield to instincts which, had he been alone, he would perforce have kept under restraint." I think that it's worthy to note here that this shows that even otherwise reasonable persons can form up into unruly, destructive mobs. The reasoning power of a mob usually devolves to the lowest level of the members within the mob. "He possesses the spontaneity, the violence, the ferocity, and also the enthusiasm and heroism of primitive beings...then dwells especially upon the lowering in intellectual ability which an individual experiences when he becomes merged in a group." "...goes directly to extremes; if a suspicion is expressed, it is instantly changed into an incontrovertible certainty; a trace of antipathy is turned into furious hatred."
I think we can easily see how this applies to wide ranging events, whatever the place or time. Freud also illustrates how group-think also extends to politics and religion, often combining the two "If another group tie takes the place of the religious one—and the socialistic tie seems to be succeeding in doing so—then there will be the same intolerance toward outsiders as in the age of the Wars of Religion."
And to social networking "We have only to think of the troop of women and girls, all of them in love in an enthusiastically sentimental way, who crowd round a singer or pianist after his performance."
Keep in mind that this book was written in 1921, but indentifies group behavior that would accurately apply today. To Freud's insight, logic, and clarity of thought I would of course give five out of five stars. To the translated version, four stars only. I still recommend it to anyone who would like to get some insight into groups and group behavior. - This book was required reading at Pacifica Graduate Institute. Like most of Freud's written work it is biased and outdated. If you read German, read his works in German not English. I only recommend this book if it is required reading. Reading Freud in order to understand psychology is not my recommendation, there are better ways to go....
- I came across this little tome when I was in college. Exploded for me. Made me go on to read much of the Strachey editions in the library. Just reread it again. Still think it's amazing.
In the beginning, Freud makes a couple statements that are pretty fascinating that almost no one has written about group psychology and that perhaps there is no such thing as individual psychology.
And you could argue that Group Psych is even more important today than when Freud wrote this in the 1920s.
Finally, Freud is one of those writers who is rarely read, but often (mis)characterized by other writers. If you have never read an original Freud work, this is a great place to start. You'll be surprised. - I did like this in terms of understanding group dynamics from a psychoanalytic perspective. Once does need to infer and analytically think about the topics introduced so this is a deeply thought provoking book.
- Excellent product and excellent seller, a real asset for
- Great purchase.
- This appears to be a print-on-demand edition, but whatever source material the publisher used is dreadful. The footnotes (which are useful if not necessary), both Freud's and those that travel in the English "Standard Edition," are either missing or have been bafflingly and transparently folded into the body of the text; two words using Greek characters ("zoon politicon") have been replaced with font-error question marks; the types of typos one expects from hasty keyboarding/OCR abound.
DO NOT PURCHASE THIS EDITION OF THE BOOK! Offering this important text in this shoddy format almost constitutes a straight-up scam.