Sigmund freud consider as the key to understanding the nervous disorders he observed the "The unconscious mind."
What is the unconscious mind?
The unconscious is referred to as a repository of sensations, thoughts, urges, or memories that are not conscious to the conscious mind in psychoanalytic theory by Sigmund Freud of personality.
The working of subconscious mind is by-
- It can be useful to think of the mind as an iceberg while trying to understand the unconscious mind. The conscious and unconscious are each represented by something above and below the water, respectively.
- Think about how an iceberg might appear if you could view it from all sides. This iceberg is actually just partially visible just above water. The massive volume of ice that composes the majority of the iceberg is submerged deeply beneath the surface of the ocean, and is therefore invisible from the surface.
- Our conscious awareness's objects are merely "the tip of a iceberg." Subsurface information contains the remaining knowledge that is not conscious. Even while this knowledge might not be conscious, it nevertheless has an impact on how people act now.
To know more about the Sigmund Freud's theory of the unconscious, here
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