Symptom

Across the depth-psychology corpus, 'symptom' occupies a position of theoretical centrality rather than peripheral nosology. Freud establishes the governing axiom: symptoms are fulfilments of unconscious wishes, placing them at the terminus of a chain of repressed libidinal energies and making their interpretation the royal road into the unconscious. Janet, approaching from a dissociative rather than libidinal framework, reads the hysterical symptom as a complex, variable sign whose surface presentation — the convulsive fit, the anesthesia, the fugue — masks underlying contractions of consciousness and failures of psychological synthesis. Bleuler, working within psychiatric phenomenology, distinguishes primary from accessory symptoms in schizophrenia, insisting that even somatic manifestations are inseparable from psychic process. Rank extends Freud by tracing neurotic physical symptoms to prenatal fixations, collapsing the psychic/organic distinction into a unified regression model. Post-Freudian voices complicate the picture further: Schwartz in IFS therapy reframes the physical symptom as a communicating 'part' of the psychic system, worthy of direct dialogue; Perls and the Gestalt tradition (via Yalom) argue that symptoms are chosen expressions of unfinished emotional business. Nijenhuis, working at the trauma-dissociation interface, provides empirical granularity for somatoform symptoms as dissociative phenomena. The persistent tension across these positions concerns whether the symptom is primarily a message to be decoded, a defence to be dissolved, or a voice to be heard.

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the theory governing all psychical symptoms culminates in a single proposition, which asserts that they are to be regarded as fulfilments of unconscious wishes.

Freud advances the foundational psychoanalytic thesis that all psychopathological symptoms are expressions of unconscious wish-fulfilment, positioning the dream as merely the first member of a wider class of such phenomena.

Freud, Sigmund, The Interpretation of Dreams, 1900thesis

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some morbid organic condition — perhaps an inflammation, or an injury — very commonly sets the work of symptom-formation in motion; so that the latter process swiftly seizes upon the symptom supplied by reality, and uses it to represent those unconscious phantasies that have only been lying in wait for some means of expression.

Freud elaborates his theory of symptom-formation, arguing that organic conditions serve merely as occasions that unconscious fantasy seizes upon to materialise repressed content in bodily form.

Freud, Sigmund, Introductory Lectures on Psycho-Analysis, 1917thesis

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The hysterical fit of convulsions, far from being a simple phenomenon, is, on the contrary, a very variable and complex symptom. The convulsions have all sorts of meaning; sometimes they are in connection with sensations or ideas and very complicated states of consciousness.

Janet challenges Charcot's structural typology of the hysterical fit, arguing that the symptom is always variable, contextually saturated, and tied to complex states of consciousness rather than a simple organic process.

Janet, Pierre, The Major Symptoms of Hysteria, 1907thesis

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not only the mechanism but also the form and content of neurotic physical symptoms become intelligible... it is a matter of indifference whether an anatomic lesion of the brain, or a toxic irritation, or lastly a purely psychogenetic experience compels the Ego to give in to the eternal pressure of the Unconscious.

Rank dissolves the organic/psychogenic distinction in symptom aetiology, arguing that all neurotic physical symptoms converge on a common mechanism of regression to the primal source of libidinal protection.

Rank, Otto, The Trauma of Birth, 1924thesis

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We guide the client to focus on a physical symptom, and then we are curious and listen, as we generally do with parts. We speak directly to the symptom as a part.

Schwartz reconfigures the physical symptom as a communicative 'part' of the psychic system within the IFS model, replacing interpretive analysis with direct dialogic engagement.

Schwartz, Richard C, Internal Family Systems Therapy, 1995thesis

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the analysis of each single hysterical symptom leads to a whole chain of former impressions, which upon their return may be literally described as having been hitherto forgotten. This chain reaches, on the one hand, back to the earliest years of childhood.

Freud demonstrates that the hysterical symptom is structurally anchored in a chain of forgotten impressions extending back to infantile amnesia, linking symptom analysis to the recovery of repressed biographical memory.

Freud, Sigmund, Introductory Lectures on Psycho-Analysis, 1917supporting

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the symptoms of the psychoneuroses express the mental consequences of some disturbance in this function... the actual neuroses represent the direct somatic consequences of sexual disturbances.

Freud distinguishes psychoneurotic symptoms (as psychically mediated) from actual-neurotic symptoms (as direct somatic consequences of sexual dysfunction), grounding both in the theory of disturbed libidinal economy.

Freud, Sigmund, Introductory Lectures on Psycho-Analysis, 1917supporting

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there can be no symptoms without content. Thus hallucinations and delusions need not stem directly from the disease process itself. The latter provides only the predisposition, on the basis of which psychic processes develop the symptoms.

Bleuler distinguishes the biological disease process from the psychically elaborated symptom, arguing that even primary schizophrenic disturbances provide only a predisposition that psychic processes then shape into specific symptomatic content.

Bleuler, Eugen, Dementia Praecox or the Group of Schizophrenias, 1911supporting

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when an accident has disappeared, especially when it has disappeared too quickly, we should not at once cry out victory... another apparently quite different accident takes the place of the first.

Janet introduces the concept of symptom substitution in hysteria, observing that the rapid disappearance of one symptom regularly generates another, pointing to a deeper unresolved psychological economy.

Janet, Pierre, The Major Symptoms of Hysteria, 1907supporting

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We choose each of our symptoms. Perls felt; 'unfinished' or unexpressed feelings find their way to the surface in self-destructive, unsatisfying expressions.

Through Perls's Gestalt framework, Yalom presents symptoms as chosen expressions of avoided responsibility and incomplete emotional gestalts, radically shifting aetiological agency from the unconscious to the existential subject.

Yalom, Irvin D., Existential Psychotherapy, 1980supporting

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these symptoms suggest that the disease is based upon a more fundamental alteration of the brain, or perhaps even of the entire body. In acute cases one encounters severe psychic symptoms reminiscent of those due to intra-cranial pressure.

Bleuler frames schizophrenic somatic symptoms as indicators of a deeper systemic organic alteration, maintaining the importance of somatic substrate even within a predominantly psychodynamic nosology.

Bleuler, Eugen, Dementia Praecox or the Group of Schizophrenias, 1911supporting

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freezing, anesthesia-analgesia, and disturbed eating patterns all were highly characteristic of dissociative disorder patients, with discriminant indices of 5 or greater.

Nijenhuis provides empirical evidence that specific somatoform symptom clusters — particularly anesthesia-analgesia and freezing — function as reliable discriminant markers of dissociative disorders, grounding Janet's clinical observations in quantitative psychometrics.

Nijenhuis, Ellert, Somatoform Dissociation: Phenomena, Measurement, and Theoretical Issues, 2004supporting

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It would not be accurate to say that she is now completely free of symptoms, for an obsession may come to her mind. However, she is able to 'joke about it,' as she says; in short, to apply paradoxical intention.

Frankl argues that the therapeutic goal is not symptom elimination but the subject's altered relationship to the symptom through paradoxical intention, privileging attitudinal change over symptomatic cure.

Frankl, Viktor Emil, Man's Search for Meaning, 1946supporting

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Disturbances of unconscious activity are discussed... These disturbances should be regarded as expressions of the unconscious, as revelations of unadmitted tendencies. The gradual transition to the pathological is stressed throughout.

Jung frames pathological symptoms as expressions of unconscious tendencies along a continuous rather than categorical spectrum, emphasising their communicative function as revelations of unadmitted psychic material.

Jung, C.G., Collected Works Volume 18: The Symbolic Life, 1976supporting

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all motor symptoms are dependent upon psychic factors for their origin as well as their disappearance. The motor symptoms which we have been able to analyze could often be explained entirely on a psychic basis.

Bleuler argues for the psychic determinability of motor symptoms in schizophrenia, while acknowledging the unresolved possibility of organic predispositions within the motor apparatus.

Bleuler, Eugen, Dementia Praecox or the Group of Schizophrenias, 1911aside

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We do not know the causal factors which release these headaches, as far as the latter are a part of the schizophrenic symptoms. The occipital headache may have some relation to sexuality.

Bleuler documents somatic symptom phenomenology in schizophrenia, noting the aetiological opacity of headache symptoms while tentatively linking them to sexual factors.

Bleuler, Eugen, Dementia Praecox or the Group of Schizophrenias, 1911aside

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