The British Journal of Psychiatry 166: 251-253 (1995)
© 1995 The Royal College of Psychiatrists
The influence of Nietzsche on Freud's ideas
AH Chapman and M Chapman-Santana
Samur Hospital, Vitoriada Conquista, Bahia, Brazil.
BACKGROUND. The striking analogies between the ideas of Freud and Friedrich
Nietzsche, whose works were published from one to three decades before
those of Freud, have been commented upon, but no previous systematic
correlation of the ideas of Nietzsche and Freud has been made. METHOD. The
major works of Nietzsche were read, and each possible analogy to an idea
later broached by Freud was correlated by a systematic review of his works.
Any references to Nietzsche in Freud's writings and reported conversation
were culled. RESULTS. Concepts of Nietzsche which are similar to those of
Freud include (a) the concept of the unconscious mind; (b) the idea that
repression pushes unacceptable feelings and thoughts into the unconscious
and thus makes the individual emotionally more comfortable and effective;
(c) the conception that repressed emotions and instinctual drives later are
expressed in disguised ways (for example, hostile feelings and ideas may be
expressed as altruistic sentiments and acts); (d) the concept of dreams as
complex, symbolic "illusions of illusions" and dreaming itself as a
cathartic process which has healthy properties; and (e) the suggestion that
the projection of hostile, unconscious feelings onto others, who are then
perceived as persecutors of the individual, is the basis of paranoid
thinking. Some of Freud's basic terms are identical to those used by
Nietzsche. CONCLUSION. Freud repeatedly stated that he had never read
Nietzsche. Evidence contradicting this are his references to Nietzsche and
his quotations and paraphrases of him, in causal conversation and his now
published personal correspondence, as well as in his early and later
writings.