773 Quotes by Sigmund Freud

  • Author Sigmund Freud
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    The Devil would be the best way out as an excuse for God; in that way he would be playing the same part as an agent of economic discharge as the Jew does in the world of the Aryan ideal. But even so, one can hold God responsible for the existence of the Devil just as well as for the existence of the wickedness which the Devil embodies.

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  • Author Sigmund Freud
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    Beauty has no obvious use; nor is there any clear cultural necessity for it. Yet civilization could not do without it.

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  • Author Sigmund Freud
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    I do not think our successes can compete with those of Lourdes. There are so many more people who believe in the miracles of the Blessed Virgin than in the existence of the unconscious.

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  • Author Sigmund Freud
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    One... gets an impression that civilization is something which was imposed on a resisting majority by a minority which understood how to obtain possession of the means to power and coercion. It is, of course, natural to assume that these difficulties are not inherent in the nature of civilization itself but are determined by the imperfections of the cultural forms which have so far been developed.

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  • Author Sigmund Freud
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    Innately, children seem to have little true realistic anxiety. They will run along the brink of water, climb on the window sill, play with sharp objects and with fire, in short, do everything that is bound to damage them and to worry those in charge of them, that is wholly the result of education; for they cannot be allowed to make the instructive experiences themselves.

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  • Author Sigmund Freud
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    We believe that civilization has been created under the pressure of the exigencies of life at the cost of satisfaction of the instincts.

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  • Author Sigmund Freud
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    Philosophers stretch the meaning of words until they retain scarcely anything of their original sense. They give the name of "God" to some vague abstraction which they have created for themselves; having done so they can pose before all the world as deists, as believers of God, and they can even boast that they have recognized a higher, purer concept of God, notwithstanding that their God is not nothing more than an insubstantial shadow and no longer the mighty personality of religious doctrines.

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  • Author Sigmund Freud
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    Whatever fosters the growth of civilization works at the same time against war.

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  • Author Sigmund Freud
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    Man has, as it were, become a kind of prosthetic God. When he puts on all his auxiliary organs, he is truly magnificent; but those organs have not grown on him and they still give him much trouble at times.

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