00:02
Let's talk about freud.
00:07
So sigmund freud, as we all know, is one of the famous people in psychology.
00:12
And he was responsible for what is called psychoanalytic theory.
00:23
If you remember, freud was part at sort of the start of the 1800s.
00:28
And he was an austrian.
00:34
He was an austrian psychologist.
00:37
He worked with women who had steria, an extreme neurosis.
00:44
And he was fascinated by why maybe some of his patients acted the way that they did.
00:59
He was really curious why this behavior was so extremely different from anything going on.
01:06
So one of the main components of his theory is something that this question is asking us to know.
01:18
We're wondering, there's maybe little different components of it.
01:23
There's could it be maybe treffining.
01:31
I'm not sure if you remember what this is, but this is an ancient practice very, very, very long before psychology where people had skulls and if there was any kind of psychological damage going on where people were acting really strange or depressed, what they would do is they would cut a small fragment out of the skull and they would let some of the blood out to try and keep, let the spirits free is what they thought that they were doing.
02:01
So this clearly is not what freud has been doing.
02:04
Hopefully, we never find out that he was doing that.
02:09
So it wouldn't be something like trepening.
02:13
We know that it wouldn't be structuralism because we know that freud was psychoanalytic in his psychological orientation...