About This Book
Beyond the Pleasure Principle (1920 marks a pivotal turn in Sigmund Freud’s theoretical approach to psychology and psychoanalysis. In this work, Freud introduces the concept of the “death drive,” a fundamental tension between the life instincts that aim for survival, sexual reproduction, and pleasure, and the death instincts, which strive towards inanimate rest and a return to a state of non-existence.
Who Should Read This?
- Students of psychology
- Those intrigued by human behavior
- Readers interested in Freud’s theories
About the Author
Sigmund Freud was a pioneering Austrian neuropsychiatrist, renowned for developing psychoanalysis. His theories on the unconscious mind and defense mechanisms continue to influence psychology today. Among his other seminal works are The Interpretation of Dreams and Civilization and Its Discontents.