View allAll Photos Tagged PSYCHOANALYSIS
… a good example of the Queen Ann Revival architecture that was all the rage in London in the early 1920s. Thank God for Modernism and Art Deco.
I like this place however. This is where Sigmund Freud spent the last year of his life and finished Moses and Monotheism. It was also the residence of his daughter Anna for most of her life.
Socorro, New Mexico.
"The camera introduces us to unconscious optics as does psychoanalysis to unconscious impulses."
~ unknown
....... ziaOptx ...............
```
"The aim of psychoanalysis is to relieve people of their neurotic unhappiness so that they can be normally unhappy".
Sigmund Freud
with the exception of their occupation ;-)
Karl Kraus
HGGT! HFF!! Justice Matters! No one is above the law! Vote!!!
cosmos, j c raulston arboretum, ncsu, raleigh, north carolina
Choose yours.
noun
1. an act or instance of isolating.
2. the state of being isolated.
3. the complete separation from others of a person suffering from contagious or infectious disease; quarantine.
4. the separation of a nation from other nations by isolationism.
5. Psychoanalysis. a process whereby an idea or memory is divested of its emotional component.
6. Sociology. social isolation.
7. The act of being shunned by one's peers for being different. For shining a little brighter.
Careful, dog in psychoanalysis.
Saw this on a front gate last weekend.
Better viewed large and thank you for your favourites.
In psychiatry, the term means a specific and unique mental condition of a patient, often accompanied by neologisms. In psychoanalysis and behaviorism, it is used for the personal way a given individual reacts, perceives and experiences a common situation: a certain dish made of meat may cause nostalgic memories in one person and disgust in another.
"...Ki farag valaha bennünket egészre,
ha nincs kemény vésőnk, hogy magunkat vésne,
ha nincs kalapácsunk, szüntelenül dúló,
legfájóbb mélyünkbe belefúró fúró?..."
Babits Mihály: Psychoanalysis christiana, részlet
“When I reflect that you are much better and deeper than your disbelief, and that I am much worse and more superficial than my faith, I conclude that the abyss between us cannot yawn so grimly.”
-Sigmund Freud–Oskar Pfister, Sigmund Freud, Psychoanalysis and Faith: Dialogues with the Reverend Oskar Pfister (New York: Basic Books, 1963), p. 122.
We're Here! : Love to Leap Thursday
Strobist: AB800 with gridded HOBD-W overhead. Triggered by Cybersync.
Public Art at Brooklyn Bridge Park
From the Public Art website:
On Elbows, 2022
Dozie Kanu (b. 1993, Houston, TX; lives and works in Santarém, Portugal) has created an ensemble of surreal objects that highlights the tensions between public and private aspects of the self. A vessel of black liquid that pulses at the rate of a human heartbeat and a chaise longue chair (typically associated with psychoanalysis) cast in concrete evoke self-reflection and also the murky depths of the individual and collective unconscious. The sofa’s “Texan Wire Wheels” rims (also referred to as “elbows” or “swangas”) reference the vibrant automobile “SLAB culture” of the artist’s native Houston. He describes the customization of cars within this tradition as a “free and playful fashioning of one’s own material property – gestures that I find deeply complex and layered given the relationship that Black Americans continue to navigate between ownership and agency.”
The Alsergrund district of Vienna in Austria.
It is located just north of the first, central district, Innere Stadt. Alsergrund was incorporated in 1862, with seven suburbs. The area is densely populated, with much government-built housing. According to the census of 2001, there were 37,816 inhabitants over 2.99 square km (1.15 sq. mi).
Many departments of the University of Vienna, TU Wien and the University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences (BOKU) are in Alsergrund. Until 2013 the University of Economics and Business (Wirtschaftsuniversität Wien) was also located in the 9th district, but eventually moved to the 2nd district. There are also many large hospitals, including the biggest in Vienna, the AKH (Allgemeines Krankenhaus, German for General Hospital).
Alsergrund is associated with many notable names of Viennese art and science. It is the birthplace of Romantic composer Franz Schubert. Classic music composer Ludwig van Beethoven died here in his apartment at Schwarzspanierstraße 15. Berggasse 19 is the former residence and office of Sigmund Freud. It was Freud's home from 1891 until his flight to England in 1938 and is currently the site of the Vienna Sigmund Freud Museum. Most of the patients Freud treated during the development of his theories of psychoanalysis visited him at his Alsergrund office.
In addition, the park in front of the Votivkirche, on the corner of Währingerstrasse and Schottenring, was named after Freud, in memory of his frequent visits there.
Information Source:
Poor Miss Porchester. She had sacrificed herself on the altar of Victorian morality, and I am afraid the consciousness that she had behaved beautifully was the only benefit she had got from it.
― Somerset Maugham
By the time the Victorian era began in 1837, women enjoying almost anything at all was associated with sinfulness.
― Mallory O'Meara
It is perhaps little wonder that the end of Victorianism almost exactly coincided with the invention of psychoanalysis.
― Bill Bryson
Basilica Santa Maria Assunta, Genova
La psicoanalisi è una confessione senza assoluzione
(GK Chesterton )
Psychoanalysis is a confession without absolution
Questo lo dice Chesterton , io penso sia il contrario
The awakening©immaginEmozioni Photography (Il risveglio)
©immaginEmozioni Photography All rights reserved www.immaginemozioni.com
One does not become enlightened by imagining figures of light, but by making the darkness conscius [...] Who looks outside, dreams; who looks inside awakens. Carl Gustav Jung
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Non si raggiunge l'illuminazione immaginando figure di luce, ma portando alla coscienza l'oscurità interiore [...] Chi guarda fuori sogna, chi guarda dentro si sveglia. C.G. Jung
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Korean translation (2004)/Open Books Publisher
This is what Freud lectured at the University of Vienna.
Covered the basics of psychoanalysis and theories of analysis.
It took a lot of time to read because I had to concentrate very hard, but I had fun studying it. I think it is a study that helps me understand not only myself but also others.
Now I want to read Jung.
A Great Egret creates a reverse ink blot on Horsepen Bayou. I see a white fire-breathing dragon with a diamond collar emerging from the depths. No, wait, it's an alabaster stairway leading into an ornate cave entrance passing underneath a waterfall. Other interpretations welcome (except from Jerome).
The Alsergrund district of Vienna in Austria.
It is located just north of the first, central district, Innere Stadt. Alsergrund was incorporated in 1862, with seven suburbs. The area is densely populated, with much government-built housing. According to the census of 2001, there were 37,816 inhabitants over 2.99 square km (1.15 sq. mi).
Many departments of the University of Vienna, TU Wien and the University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences (BOKU) are in Alsergrund. Until 2013 the University of Economics and Business (Wirtschaftsuniversität Wien) was also located in the 9th district, but eventually moved to the 2nd district. There are also many large hospitals, including the biggest in Vienna, the AKH (Allgemeines Krankenhaus, German for General Hospital).
Alsergrund is associated with many notable names of Viennese art and science. It is the birthplace of Romantic composer Franz Schubert. Classic music composer Ludwig van Beethoven died here in his apartment at Schwarzspanierstraße 15. Berggasse 19 is the former residence and office of Sigmund Freud. It was Freud's home from 1891 until his flight to England in 1938 and is currently the site of the Vienna Sigmund Freud Museum. Most of the patients Freud treated during the development of his theories of psychoanalysis visited him at his Alsergrund office.
In addition, the park in front of the Votivkirche, on the corner of Währingerstrasse and Schottenring, was named after Freud, in memory of his frequent visits there.
Information Source:
I've been tagged by KristyBee to share 16 things about myself - so here I go:
1. I don't eat any meat except for fish and am addicted to sushi
2. I have completed 2 half marathons
3. I am awkward and horribly clumsy (which sometimes means tripping over cracks on sidewalks)
4. I have no interest in having children of my own but am not disregarding adoption
5. I am always behind in keeping my apartment clean but usually get it done eventually
6. my longest romantic relationship has been 1 year and 1/2
7. I am atheist agnostic but consider myself to be spiritual
8. I am scared of heights but have bungee jumped twice
10. I just started drinking coffee a year ago
11. I have a cat, an aquarium and lots of plants (I want my apartment to be a jungle) I also love dogs but live in an apartment which isn't practical for having a dog
12. I have a sarcastic sense of humour
13. I am a huge proponent of psychoanalysis, in fact I have been seeing a therapist for a year
14. I read graphic novels, erotica and mystery novels
15. I have my drivers licence and even motorcycle licence but am terrified of driving in big city traffic, I used to own a 1983 Vespa PX200E
16. I have never had an eating disorder but have always been worried about getting fat and watch what I eat fastidiously.
16a. I have a weakness for men that talk with an accent.
16b. I have a weakness for women that talk with an accent
ok..I am tagging:
Flickr Explore #496 - 23 December 2008 Thanks for all the favs!
Still life with two biographies of women who have helped shape our thinking as women, about being women in the 20th century and beyond! Lilies with thanks to both of them....
Textures: my own
Happy Bokeh Wednesday ;o)
"Karen Horney (1885-1952) is one of the great figures in psychoanalysis, an independent thinker who dared to take issue with Freud's views on women. One of the first female medical students in Germany, and one of the first doctors in Berlin to undergo psychoanalytic training, she emigrated to the United States in 1932 and became a leading figure in American psychoanalysis."
Still Life Compositions: Here
My Bokeh set: Here
All kinds of Lilies: Here
read blogfrizz.wordpress.com/freud-de/
or blogfrizz.wordpress.com/freud-en/
like a Freudian couch, isn't it?
"The Hofburg is the official residence and workplace of the President of Austria and was formerly the principal imperial palace of the Habsburg dynasty. Located in the center of Vienna, it was built in the 13th century and expanded several times afterwards. It also served as the imperial winter residence, as Schönbrunn Palace was the summer residence.
Since 1279 the Hofburg area has been the documented seat of government. The Hofburg has been expanded over the centuries to include various residences (with the Amalienburg and the Albertina), the imperial chapel (Hofkapelle or Burgkapelle), the imperial library (Hofbibliothek), the treasury (Schatzkammer), the Burgtheater, the Spanish Riding School (Hofreitschule), the imperial mews (Stallburg and Hofstallungen).
The palace faces the Heldenplatz (Heroes Square) ordered under the reign of Emperor Franz Joseph I, as part of what was planned to become the Kaiserforum [de] but which was never completed.
Numerous architects have executed work at the Hofburg as it expanded, notably the Italian architect-engineer Filiberto Luchese, Lodovico Burnacini and Martino and Domenico Carlone, the Baroque architects Lukas von Hildebrandt and Joseph Emanuel Fischer von Erlach, Johann Fischer von Erlach, and the architects of the Neue Burg built between 1881 and 1913.
Vienna (/viˈɛnə/; German: Wien [viːn]) is the national capital, largest city, and one of nine states of Austria. Vienna is Austria's most populous city, with about 1.9 million inhabitants (2.6 million within the metropolitan area, nearly one third of the country's population), and its cultural, economic, and political center. It is the 6th-largest city by population within city limits in the European Union.
Until the beginning of the 20th century, Vienna was the largest German-speaking city in the world, and before the splitting of the Austro-Hungarian Empire in World War I, the city had 2 million inhabitants. Today, it is the second-largest German-speaking city after Berlin. Vienna is host to many major international organizations, including the United Nations, OPEC and the OSCE. The city is located in the eastern part of Austria and is close to the borders of the Czech Republic, Slovakia and Hungary. These regions work together in a European Centrope border region. Along with nearby Bratislava, Vienna forms a metropolitan region with 3 million inhabitants. In 2001, the city center was designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site. In July 2017 it was moved to the list of World Heritage in Danger. Additionally to being known as the "City of Music" due to its musical legacy, as many famous classical musicians such as Beethoven and Mozart who called Vienna home. Vienna is also said to be the "City of Dreams", because of it being home to the world's first psychoanalyst Sigmund Freud. Vienna's ancestral roots lie in early Celtic and Roman settlements that transformed into a Medieval and Baroque city. It is well known for having played a pivotal role as a leading European music center, from the age of Viennese Classicism through the early part of the 20th century. The historic center of Vienna is rich in architectural ensembles, including Baroque palaces and gardens, and the late-19th-century Ringstraße lined with grand buildings, monuments and parks.
Vienna is known for its high quality of life. In a 2005 study of 127 world cities, the Economist Intelligence Unit ranked the city first (in a tie with Vancouver and San Francisco) for the world's most livable cities. Between 2011 and 2015, Vienna was ranked second, behind Melbourne. In 2018, it replaced Melbourne as the number one spot and continued as the first in 2019. For ten consecutive years (2009–2019), the human-resource-consulting firm Mercer ranked Vienna first in its annual "Quality of Living" survey of hundreds of cities around the world. Monocle's 2015 "Quality of Life Survey" ranked Vienna second on a list of the top 25 cities in the world "to make a base within." The UN-Habitat classified Vienna as the most prosperous city in the world in 2012/2013. The city was ranked 1st globally for its culture of innovation in 2007 and 2008, and sixth globally (out of 256 cities) in the 2014 Innovation Cities Index, which analyzed 162 indicators in covering three areas: culture, infrastructure, and markets. Vienna regularly hosts urban planning conferences and is often used as a case study by urban planners. Between 2005 and 2010, Vienna was the world's number-one destination for international congresses and conventions. It attracts over 6.8 million tourists a year.
Evidence has been found of continuous habitation in the Vienna area since 500 BC, when Celts settled the site on the Danube. In 15 BC the Romans fortified the frontier city they called Vindobona to guard the empire against Germanic tribes to the north.
Close ties with other Celtic peoples continued through the ages. The Irish monk Saint Colman (or Koloman, Irish Colmán, derived from colm "dove") is buried in Melk Abbey and Saint Fergil (Virgil the Geometer) served as Bishop of Salzburg for forty years. Irish Benedictines founded twelfth-century monastic settlements; evidence of these ties persists in the form of Vienna's great Schottenstift monastery (Scots Abbey), once home to many Irish monks.
In 976, Leopold I of Babenberg became count of the Eastern March, a district centered on the Danube on the eastern frontier of Bavaria. This initial district grew into the duchy of Austria. Each succeeding Babenberg ruler expanded the march east along the Danube, eventually encompassing Vienna and the lands immediately east. In 1145 Duke Henry II Jasomirgott moved the Babenberg family residence from Klosterneuburg in Lower Austria to Vienna. From that time, Vienna remained the center of the Babenberg dynasty.
In 1440 Vienna became the resident city of the Habsburg dynasty. It eventually grew to become the de facto capital of the Holy Roman Empire (800–1806) in 1437 and a cultural center for arts and science, music and fine cuisine. Hungary occupied the city between 1485 and 1490.
In the 16th and 17th centuries Christian forces twice stopped Ottoman armies outside Vienna, in the 1529 Siege of Vienna and the 1683 Battle of Vienna. The Great Plague of Vienna ravaged the city in 1679, killing nearly a third of its population.
In 1804, during the Napoleonic Wars, Vienna became the capital of the newly formed Austrian Empire. The city continued to play a major role in European and world politics, including hosting the Congress of Vienna in 1814/15. After the Austro-Hungarian Compromise of 1867, Vienna remained the capital of what became the Austro-Hungarian Empire. The city functioned as a center of classical music, for which the title of the First Viennese School (Haydn/Mozart/Beethoven) is sometimes applied.
During the latter half of the 19th century, Vienna developed what had previously been the bastions and glacis into the Ringstraße, a new boulevard surrounding the historical town and a major prestige project. Former suburbs were incorporated, and the city of Vienna grew dramatically. In 1918, after World War I, Vienna became capital of the Republic of German-Austria, and then in 1919 of the First Republic of Austria.
From the late-19th century to 1938 the city remained a center of high culture and of modernism. A world capital of music, Vienna played host to composers such as Brahms, Bruckner, Mahler and Richard Strauss. The city's cultural contributions in the first half of the 20th century included, among many, the Vienna Secession movement in art, psychoanalysis, the Second Viennese School (Schoenberg, Berg, Webern), the architecture of Adolf Loos and the philosophy of Ludwig Wittgenstein and the Vienna Circle. In 1913 Adolf Hitler, Leon Trotsky, Josip Broz Tito, Sigmund Freud and Joseph Stalin all lived within a few kilometres of each other in central Vienna, some of them becoming regulars at the same coffeehouses. Austrians came to regard Vienna as a center of socialist politics, sometimes referred to as "Red Vienna"(“Das rote Wien”). In the Austrian Civil War of 1934 Chancellor Engelbert Dollfuss sent the Austrian Army to shell civilian housing such as the Karl Marx-Hof occupied by the socialist militia." - info from Wikipedia.
Summer 2019 I did a solo cycling tour across Europe through 12 countries over the course of 3 months. I began my adventure in Edinburgh, Scotland and finished in Florence, Italy cycling 8,816 km. During my trip I took 47,000 photos.
Now on Instagram.
Become a patron to my photography on Patreon.
In this mesmerizing art collection, we delve into a world where Salvador Dalí's iconic "The Persistence of Memory" melds with the eerie, surreal landscapes of Zdzisław Beksiński. Created in 1931, Dalí's masterpiece is renowned for its captivating, yet bewildering portrayal of melting clocks in a desolate landscape. This piece has become a symbol of the fluidity and strangeness of time, especially in the context of the then-emerging theory of relativity and the subconscious realms explored by psychoanalysis.
Dalí's work is a testament to Surrealism, a movement that sought to unlock the power of the subconscious mind, blending dream and reality into an almost hallucinatory clarity. The melting clocks, often interpreted as a rejection of time's rigid control, invites viewers into a world where conventional perceptions of reality are challenged and reshaped.
In this collection, the haunting beauty and surreal atmospheres of Beksiński's work intertwine with Dalí's fluid conceptions of time and reality. Beksiński, known for his dystopian surrealism, adds a layer of profound depth and emotion, creating landscapes that are both dreamlike and nightmarish. The synergy of these two artists' visions produces a series of images that are not only visually arresting but also rich in symbolic meaning, offering a contemplative journey through distorted realities and the enigmatic nature of time and existence.
Each piece in this collection invites the viewer to step into a world where the boundaries between dreams and reality blur, where the persistence of memory and the echoing depths of the subconscious mind create a surreal tapestry of haunting beauty and timeless mystery.
Poem
In realms where time’s soft hands do fade,
And memories like shadows parade,
Beneath a sky, both grim and bright,
Lies a world beyond the night.
Echoes of Dalí’s twisted clocks,
In Beksiński’s land of paradox,
Where trees of bone and rivers deep,
Whisper secrets they cannot keep.
A canvas painted with surreal dreams,
Where nothing is quite as it seems,
In every stroke, a story untold,
Of a world that's both new and old.
A dance of light, a twist of fate,
In these scenes that time creates,
Here lies the beauty, eerie and sublime,
In every corner of this timeless clime.
Haiku
Twisted time whispers,
In surreal, dreamlike visions,
Eternal echoes.
To comprehend his vision of the world, one has to be attuned to the tonality of his feeling, expressed through the metaphors of fire and music he so often used, speaking about a note, a melody, a sound, a rhythm that beat at the heart of the universe—or the spark of fire, the glow, the leaping up of a flame, the blaze of fire that sets alight and consumes....
...The French philosopher Gaston Bachelard devoted a whole study to The Psychoanalysis of Fire, in which he links the vital intensity of fire to the intensity of being, to the whole creative process of the imagination and the work of the poet. “Imagination works at the summit of the mind like a flame,” Bachelard wrote. That is a quotation Teilhard would have loved.
-Christ in All Things: Exploring Spirituality with Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, Ursula King
1. Untitled, 2. Blue Bike / Red House, 3. High Lonesome Road, 4. Ilkley Moor, 5. Browns, 6. - vinyl -, 7. Fall Fog Board Walk, 8. Distance, 9. Neuschwanstein Castle, 10. C, 11. Utata on the bank of the river Thames, 12. Moose, 13. Clearing in LA, 14. IMG_0305, 15. psychoanalysis, 16. The inevitable suicide of Happiness., 17. Untitled, 18. look what i got!, 19. Blick von Mdina auf Malta, 20. [Portrait of Buddy Rich, Stanley Fishelson, Tommy Allison, Phil Gilbert, Bill Howell, Mario Daone, Bob Ascher, Chunky Koenigsberg, Eddie Caine, Jerry Thirkeld, Allen Eager, Mickey Rich, Harvey Levine, H. (Harvey) Leonard, Gene Dell, Tubby Phillips, and St, 21. watchers, 22. Moody Misty Morning, 23. Fall In Wisconsin, 24. Ilkley Moor_0642, 25. smoke break, stoop
Created with fd's Flickr Toys
Thurngasse in the Alsergrund district of Vienna in Austria.
It is located just north of the first, central district, Innere Stadt. Alsergrund was incorporated in 1862, with seven suburbs. The area is densely populated, with much government-built housing. According to the census of 2001, there were 37,816 inhabitants over 2.99 square km (1.15 sq. mi).
Many departments of the University of Vienna, TU Wien and the University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences (BOKU) are in Alsergrund. Until 2013 the University of Economics and Business (Wirtschaftsuniversität Wien) was also located in the 9th district, but eventually moved to the 2nd district. There are also many large hospitals, including the biggest in Vienna, the AKH (Allgemeines Krankenhaus, German for General Hospital).
Alsergrund is associated with many notable names of Viennese art and science. It is the birthplace of Romantic composer Franz Schubert. Classic music composer Ludwig van Beethoven died here in his apartment at Schwarzspanierstraße 15. Berggasse 19 is the former residence and office of Sigmund Freud. It was Freud's home from 1891 until his flight to England in 1938 and is currently the site of the Vienna Sigmund Freud Museum. Most of the patients Freud treated during the development of his theories of psychoanalysis visited him at his Alsergrund office.
In addition, the park in front of the Votivkirche, on the corner of Währingerstrasse and Schottenring, was named after Freud, in memory of his frequent visits there.
Information Source:
Hermann Rorschach was a Swiss Freudian psychiatrist and psychoanalyst, best known for developing a projective test known, from his name, as the Rorschach inkblot test.
When he was in high school, Rorschach was called Klecks, or "inkblot," by his friends. Like many other young people in his native Switzerland, he enjoyed Klecksography, the making of fanciful inkblot "pictures." However, unlike other young people, Rorschach would make inkblots his life's work.
An art teacher like his father, Rorschach showed great talent at painting and drawing conventional pictures. After graduating from high school he enrolled in medical school at the University of Zurich.
Rorschach studied under eminent psychiatrist Eugen Bleuler. The excitement in intellectual circles over psychoanalysis constantly reminded Rorschach of his childhood inkblots. He wondered why different people often see entirely different things in the same inkblots. While still a medical student, he began showing inkblots to schoolchildren and analyzing their results...
...taken through the window of Autogrill in Piazza Duomo...
Milan, Italy...
Calor, 40 grados centigrados, 18 hs.
Buenos Aires es una ciudad contradictoria. Conviven en ella el orden con el caos; lo moderno con lo antiguo, como consecuencia de la desidia y la dejadez.
Es una ciudad que lo tiene todo aunque a la vez está incompleta. Es cosmopolita, tierra del tango, del fútbol y del psicoanálisis; está en guerra con ella misma todos los días.
En la foto se puede ver la arquitectura art nouveau de hace 100 años, descuidada, desaliñada, la anarquía de los cables completan el contexto.
Un gran corte de luz en casi toda la ciudad en medio de una ola de calor insoportable empuja a la gente a los balcones.
Heat , 104 degrees Fahrenheit, 18 hs.
Buenos Aires is a contradictory city. Conviven order with chaos, modern with avenjentado by neglect and carelessness, the legacy of Borges with Maradona. It is a city that has it all yet incomplete. This cosmopolitan, land of tango, football and psychoanalysis is at war with herself every day.
In the photo you can see the art nouveau architecture almost 100 years ago, desacuidada, sloppy, sloppy, anarchy cables complete the backdrop.
A large power outage in most of the city amid a wave of unbearable heat pushes people to the balconies.
A two-storey house is reflected in the water surface of a calm lake in springtime.
Plastiras’s lake (aka Tavrōpos's Reservoir) is artificial, yet in harmony with nature. The snow-capped Agrafa mountains, too, are reflected in the lake near the city of Karditsa. Agrafa is the southernmost part of the Pindus range, in mainland Greece. The lake's surface acts as a mirror, reflecting the beauty of the entire serene scenery.
Water, mirrors, houses and reflections are elements with symbolic meaning in psychoanalysis: Its progenitor concluded that sexual instincts could not be wholly tamed, and that mental processes were unconscious and could “only reach the ego and come under its control through incomplete and untrustworthy perceptions.”
“The ego is not master in its own house.”
—Sigmund Freud (A Difficulty in the Path of Psycho-Analysis)
________________________________________________
Flower in the crushed wall,
I pick you out of the crack in the wall
Together with the roots I hold you in my hand,
Little flower - but if I could understand
What you're together with the roots and everything in everything.
I would know what God and Human."
Blume in der geborstenen Wand,
Ich pflücke dich aus den Mauerritzen,
Mitsamt den Wurzeln halt ich dich in der Hand,
Kleine Blume - doch wenn ich verstehen könte,
Was du mitsamt den Wurzeln und alles in allem bist,
Wüßte ich, was Gott und Mensch ist.
Tennyson
_____________________________________________________________________________
Source: "Zen-Buddhismus und Psychoanalyse" ("Zen Buddhism and Psychoanalysis") von Erich Fromm, D.T. Suzuki, Richard de Martino
Chapter: Über ZEN-Buddismus, I Ost und West, (About Zen Buddhism, I East and West, D.T. Suzuki
The Alsergrund district of Vienna in Austria.
It is located just north of the first, central district, Innere Stadt. Alsergrund was incorporated in 1862, with seven suburbs. The area is densely populated, with much government-built housing. According to the census of 2001, there were 37,816 inhabitants over 2.99 square km (1.15 sq. mi).
Many departments of the University of Vienna, TU Wien and the University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences (BOKU) are in Alsergrund. Until 2013 the University of Economics and Business (Wirtschaftsuniversität Wien) was also located in the 9th district, but eventually moved to the 2nd district. There are also many large hospitals, including the biggest in Vienna, the AKH (Allgemeines Krankenhaus, German for General Hospital).
Alsergrund is associated with many notable names of Viennese art and science. It is the birthplace of Romantic composer Franz Schubert. Classic music composer Ludwig van Beethoven died here in his apartment at Schwarzspanierstraße 15. Berggasse 19 is the former residence and office of Sigmund Freud. It was Freud's home from 1891 until his flight to England in 1938 and is currently the site of the Vienna Sigmund Freud Museum. Most of the patients Freud treated during the development of his theories of psychoanalysis visited him at his Alsergrund office.
In addition, the park in front of the Votivkirche, on the corner of Währingerstrasse and Schottenring, was named after Freud, in memory of his frequent visits there.
Information Source:
The uncanny: photography and psychoanalysis (essay)
Intentional Camera Movement
Olympus OM-D E-M5-Mark III + Olympus 17mm / 1.8
Mexico City / CDMX
November 7, 2020
Ominous !
This may not be a new series. I'm stuck at home and I want to keep myself busy.
here, the result that I dedicate to friday group ... and all of you my friends FlickR ^ _ ^
Ciao ♫
Flippant !
ce n'est peut-être pas une nouvelle série. Je suis cloué à la maison et je cherche à m'occuper. Voici le résultat que je dédie au groupe friday ... et à vous tous mes amis FlickR ^_^
Faites de belles photos et montrer tout cela... Good !
Ciao ♫
#FlickrFriday #ImminentDanger
DSC_1660