How does psychology explain dreams
How does psychology explain the phenomenon of dreams Psychologists believe that dreams are the embodiment of a person's thoughts and wishes, and that dreams come true during dreams. The famous psychology master Freud believes that the dream is the manifestation of a person's subconscious, the self only seeks happiness, the self tells the reality principle, and only the subconscious in the dream is the real display. Jung, on the other hand, believes that dreams are the truth of nature, he does not think that dreams are merely to satisfy wishes, nor does he think that dreams are disguised. 'Dreams are the spontaneous and undistorted product of the unconscious mind... Dreams show us the unvarnished truth of nature.' Fromm, an American psychologist, believes that dreams are a symbolic language. 'All myths and all dreams have one thing in common: they are all 'written' in the same language, the symbolic language.' Fromm divided symbols into three categories: customary symbols, accidental symbols, and universal symbols.
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