________________
15.
aet, 1.12-4-5.
16.
acte, CO 73, # 74
17.
ELTACTE. HULUMT THAT FETT, TCH TO
TATE, gʻo MTTRACT, *T TOTYK fait, *To fco tanto, utenot YkT, 70.
18.
You remember that the conflict of two mental frotora, which we roughly call the repressed unconscious and conscious, nominatag our life and that the resistence against the interpretation of dreams, the hall mark of the dream-censorship 1 none other them the repression. resistence, which keeps these two factors apart.
New Introductory lectures on Psychoanalysis, Sigmund Freud, Translated by J.H. 3prott, Third artition. Nogarth press, London and the Institute of Psychoanalye sis, 1946, p. 26.
19.
The sleeper has to dream because the nightly relaxation of mpression allows the upward thrust of the tramatic fixation to become active.
Ibid. p. 44.
20. EINSTein's conception of science, P.S.C. Northrop
Philosopher Scientist, edited by Paul Arthur Schilpp. Second dition, 1951, Tudor Publishing Company, New York, p. 400-402.
21.
The process of dream work has given us our first glimpse into those proco88 which go on in our unconscious mental system and shows us that they are quite different from what we know about our conscious thought, Ibid, p. 27.