Story of Psychology - Morton Hunt [448]
64. “The Question of Lay Analysis,” S.E. XX:252.
65. “An Outline of Psycho-Analysis” (1940), S.E. XXIII:157n.
66. Solms, 2004; Zaretsky, 2004:5 (italics are Zaretsky’s).
67. January 24, 1925, quoted in Gay, 1988:454.
68. “An Autobiographical Study,” S.E. XX:73.
69. Ibid.:72.
70. Roazen, 1976:133–134; Rieff, 1961:1, 11.
71. “Psycho-Analysis” (1934), S.E. XX:266–267.
72. “Introductory Lectures on Psycho-Analysis” (1916–1917), S.E. XV:26–27.
73. Major sources: Three Essays on Sexuality (1905), part II, S.E. VII; lecture XXXIII in “New Introductory Lectures on Psycho-Analysis” (1933), S.E. XXII.
74. “Five Lectures on Psycho-Analysis” (1910), S.E. XI:42.
75. Major sources: “On Narcissism” (1914), S:E. XIV; The Ego and the Id (1923), S.E. XIX.
76. Gay, 1988:515.
77. Major sources: Beyond the Pleasure Principle (1920), S.E. XVIII; “The Ego and the Id” (1923), S.E. XIX.
78. “Some Psychical Consequences of the Anatomical Distinction Between the Sexes” (1925), S.E. XIX:257–258.
79. Adapted from Kline, 1984:19.
80. Major sources: Beyond the Pleasure Principle (1920), S.E. XVIII; “The Ego and the Id” (1923), S.E. XIX.
81. Bettelheim, 1983:103–104.
82. Major sources: “Introductory Lectures on Psycho-Analysis” (1916–1917), S.E. XV, XVI; “Inhibitions, Symptoms and Anxiety” (1926), S.E. XX; “New Introductory Lectures on Psycho-Analysis” (1933), S.E. XXII.
83. “Inhibitions, Symptoms and Anxiety” (1926), S.E. XX:94–95.
84. “Analysis of a Phobia in a Five-Year-old Boy” (1909), S.E. X:5–149.
85. “New Introductory Lectures” (1933), S.E. XX:83–84.
86. “On the History of the Psycho-Analytic Movement” (1914), S.E. XIV:16; “Repression” (1915), S.E. XIV:146–158, and James Strachey’s “Editor’s Note” to same, 143–144.
87. “Introductory Lectures,” S.E. XVI; “A Disturbance of Memory on the Acropolis” (1936), S.E. XXII:245; “Analysis, Terminable and Interminable” (1937), S.E. XXIII:235–236.
88. Grünbaum, 1984:277.
89. Ibid.:278.
90. Fisher and Greenberg, 1977:393, 395–396.
91. Kline, 1981:432, 437, 446.
92. Zaretsky, 2004:334–335; Solms, 2004.
93. Fisher & Greenberg, 1977:viii.
94. Quoted in Rudolf M. Lowenstein, Freud: Man and Scientist (New York: International Universities Press, 1951):17.
95. Hearnshaw, 1987:156–157.
96. Fancher, 1979:248.
97. Quoted in Adler, 2006.
98. Zaretsky, 2004:343–344.
99. Adler, 2006.
100. Solms, 2004.
101. Quoted in Solms, 2004.
CHAPTER 8
1. Forrest, 1974:181; Fancher, 1979:250–251.
2. Galton, 1907 [1883]:19–21.
3. Major biographical sources: Galton, 1908; Forrest, 1974.
4. Galton, 1908:287–289.
5. Quoted in Forrest, 1974:88.
6. Hereditary Genius (Galton, 1891 [1869]), quoted in Forrest, 1974:89.
7. Galton, 1891 [1869]:79.
8. Ibid.:1.
9. Galton, 1907 [1883]:17n.
10. Article in Frazier’s magazine, quoted in Forrest, 1974:136.
11. Galton, 1970 [1874]:12.
12. Galton, 1907 [1883]:167.
13. Boring, 1950:485–486.
14. Galton, 1908:304; Forrest, 1974:192.
15. Correlation of .47: Forrest, 1974:199.
16. George Miller, 1962:145.
17. Fancher, 1979:293–294.
18. Boring, 1950:482.
19. Angell, 1907; Robert Watson, 1979:424.
20. Major source: Woodworth, 1944.
21. Watson, 1979:408.
22. Murray, 1988:379; Watson, 1979:409–410.
23. Solomon Diamond, in Benjamin, 1988:265.
24. Major biographical sources on Binet: Wolf, 1973; Hothersall, 1984; Robert Watson, 1978.
25. Stephen Jay Gould, 1981:146, quoting Binet, 1898:294–295.
26. Reprinted in Binet and Simon, 1980 [1916]:40.
27. Ibid.:45–68.
28. Ibid.:41.
29. Ibid.:276 (adapted); for the three-year-old test: 184–195.
30. Boring, 1950:574.
31. Binet and Simon, 1980 [1916]:42.
32. Ibid.:37.
33. Ibid.:16–17, 101, 104, 257; Binet, cited in Gould, 1981:154.
34. Goddard’s introduction to Binet and Simon, 1980 [1916]:6.
35. Michael Sokal, in Benjamin, 1988:316.
36. Fancher, 1987.
37. Hothersall, 1984:308–309.
38. Terman, 1916:xi.
39.