Sigmund Freud
FeNi III-
FeNi III- Directive
NOTE: This is a speculative typing, so a limited sample of footage was used for this typing conclusion.
Freud: "The mind is like an iceberg, it floats with one-seventh of its bulk above water."
Freud: "Illusions commend themselves to us because they save us pain and allow us to enjoy pleasure instead. We must therefore accept it without complaint when they sometimes collide with a bit of reality against which they are dashed to pieces."
Freud: "Most people do not really want freedom, because freedom involves responsibility, and most people are frightened of responsibility."
Freud: "The goal towards which the pleasure principle impels us - of becoming happy - is not attainable: yet we may not - nay, cannot - give up the efforts to come nearer to realization of it by some means or other."
Freud: "Being entirely honest with oneself is a good exercise."
Freud: "What we call happiness in the strictest sense comes from the preferably sudden satisfaction of needs which have been dammed up to a high degree."
Freud: "Dreams are often most profound when they seem the most crazy."
Freud: "A civilization which leaves so large a number of its participants unsatisfied and drives them into revolt neither has nor deserves the prospect of a lasting existence."
Freud: "The first human who hurled an insult instead of a stone was the founder of civilization."
Freud: "I have found little that is 'good' about human beings on the whole. In my experience most of them are trash, no matter whether they publicly subscribe to this or that ethical doctrine or to none at all. That is something that you cannot say aloud, or perhaps even think."
Freud: "My love is something valuable to me which I ought not to throw away without reflection. ... If I love someone, they must deserve it."
Freud: "Obviously one must hold oneself responsible for the evil impulses of one's dreams. In what other way can one deal with them? Unless the content of the dream rightly understood is inspired by alien spirits, it is part of my own being."
Freud: "Love and work... work and love, that's all there is."
Freud: "The great question that has never been answered, and which I have not yet been able to answer, despite my thirty years of research into the feminine soul, is 'What does a woman want?'"
Freud: "Children are completely egoistic; they feel their needs intensely and strive ruthlessly to satisfy them."
Freud: "The conscious mind may be compared to a fountain playing in the sun and falling back into the great subterranean pool of subconscious from which it rises."
Freud: "We are never so defensless against suffering as when we love."
Freud: "Analysis does not set out to make pathological reactions impossible, but to give the patient's ego freedom to decide one way or another."
Freud: "Whoever loves becomes humble. Those who love have, so to speak, pawned a part of their narcissism."
Freud: "If a man has been his mother's undisputed darling he retains throughout life the triumphant feeling, the confidence in success, which not seldom brings actual success along with it."
Freud: "The goal of all life is death."