Introduction [zu: Varendonck, Julien, ›The Psychology of Day-Dreams‹] 1921-062/1921
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    I N T R O D U C T I O N

    B Y P R O F E S S O R D R . S I G M . F R E U D

    T h i s present volume of Dr. Varendonck's contains a signifi-
    cant novelty, and will justly arouse the interest of all
    philosophers, psychologists and psycho-analysts. After an
    effort lasting for some years the author has succeeded in
    getting hold of the mode of thought-activity to which one
    abandons oneself during the state of distraction into which
    we readily pass before sleep or upon incomplete awakening.
    He has brought to the consciousness the chains of thought
    originating in these conditions without the interference of the
    will; he has written them down, studied their peculiarities
    and differences with directed conscious thinking, and has
    made thereby a series of important discoveries which lead
    to still vaster problems and give rise to the formulation of
    still more far-reaching questions. Many a point in the
    psychology of the dream and the defective act finds, thanks
    to the observations of Dr. Varendonck, a trustworthy
    settlement.

    It is not my intention to give a review of the author's
    results. I will content myself with pointing to the signifi-
    cance of his work and will permit myself only a remark con-
    cerning the terminology which he has adopted. He includes
    the sort of thought-activity which he has observed in
    Bleuler's autistic thinking, but calls it, as a rule, f o r e -
    c o n s c i o u s t h i n k i n g, according to the custom prevailing in
    psycho-analysis. However, the autistic thinking of Bleuler
     

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    10 T H E P S Y C H O L O G Y O F D A Y - D R E A M S

    does not by any means correspond with the extension and
    the contents of the f o r e - c o n s c i o u s, neither can I admit that
    the name used by Bleuler has been happily chosen. The
    designation “fore-conscious” thinking itself as a characteristic
    appears to me misleading and unsatisfactory. The point in
    question is that the sort of thought-activity of which the
    well-known day-dream is an example—complete by itself,
    developing a situation or an act that is being brought to
    a close—constitutes the best and until now the only studied
    example. This day-dreaming does not owe its peculiarities
    to the circumstance that it proceeds mostly fore-consciously,
    nor are the forms changed when it is accomplished consciously.
    From another point of view we know also that even strictly
    directed reflection may be achieved without the co-operation
    of consciousness, that is to say, fore-consciously. For that
    reason I think it is advisable, when establishing a distinction
    between the different modes of thought-activity, not to utilize
    the relation to consciousness in the first instance, and to
    designate the day-dream, as well as the chains of thought
    studied by Varendonck, as freely wandering or phantastic
    thinking, in opposition to intentionally directed reflection.
    At the same time it should be taken into consideration
    that even phantastic thinking is not invariably in want of
    an aim and end-representations.