Page:The International Journal of Psycho-Analysis II 1921 3-4.djvu/85

 THE SIGNIFICANCE OF PSYCHOANALYSIS IN THE HISTORY OF SCIENCE

by

JAMES S. VAN TESLAAR, Brookline, Mass.

^ In the history of science it is not often that it falls to the lot

of a single investigator to inaugurate an entirely new method of research or to discover a whole group of general laws, each valid, each equally fundamental.

Sigmund Freud, the founder of psychoanalysis, has done both:

he has inaugurated the analytic method of inquiry which is being

fw. successfully applied to all the manifestations and products of mental

' „' ' activity; and through the careful use of tliis technique he has un-

' covered fundamental principles hitherto either wholly unrecognised

or perceived but vaguely.

For the first time psychoanalysis introduces true order and .-, - understanding into some of the most obscure and bafHing pro-

vinces of the mind — phobias, compulsions, obsessions and dreams.

For the first time, too, we are acquiring true insight into the meaning, the psychic development and mechanism of that most dreadful of all personal calamities, mental brealcdown or insanity; and through the aid of psychoanalysis correct principles are being evolved for its prevention — in so far as mental disorder may be preventable.

Although psychoanalytic research is only in its initial stage, it has already thrown a flood of light on mental growth during in- fancy, childhood and adolescence; and the respective educational and hygienic requirements are becoming clear as the development of human personality is traced with scientific accuracy. The un- foldment of character traits is becoming a study as objective in its technique and results as any study of natural history. Human behaviour is being subjected to scientific scrutiny at last without the handicap of ego-centric presuppositions.

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