Freud developed a comprehensive theory about how the human mind works. He realized that what we think we’re thinking is just one part of what’s really happening in our heads. Beneath the surface level of the conscious mind lies the preconscious, containing thoughts and memories we can easily access. Below that is an even larger unconscious, where repressed thoughts, memories, emotions, impulses, and urges are stored. As well to these three main divisions of the mind, Sigmund Freud also identified three separate parts of human nature – the id, the super-ego, and the ego. The id is the wild, instinctual side of one’s personality, wanting immediate satisfaction of basic needs. The ego is the rational side of the mind, moderating and controlling the id. Finally, the super-ego is the moral sense that we learn from our parents and society. Any conflict between these opposing voices within the human psyche is the root cause of much psychological dysfunction.
Mind and brain
In many cultures around this world, there is the view that humans have a soul that exists independently of the physical body. For Greek philosophers, the soul was also viewed as the seat of our reasoning abilities - what we would call our minds today. While Aristotle...