

#3954
Mentioned in 13 episodes
Beyond the Pleasure Principle
Book • 1920
In 'Beyond the Pleasure Principle,' Sigmund Freud expands his earlier theories on libido and the role of pleasure-seeking in human behavior.
He introduces the concept of the death drive (Thanatos) and the life drive (Eros), arguing that these two opposing instincts are fundamental to human behavior.
Freud questions the dominance of the pleasure principle, which posits that people seek pleasure and avoid pain, and instead suggests that human behavior is driven by an interplay between the life and death instincts.
This work marks a significant turn in Freud's thinking, deepening the understanding of the human psyche and its often contradictory motivations.
It also links Western psychoanalysis with Eastern perspectives on life and death, making it essential reading for students of psychology, history, and literature.
He introduces the concept of the death drive (Thanatos) and the life drive (Eros), arguing that these two opposing instincts are fundamental to human behavior.
Freud questions the dominance of the pleasure principle, which posits that people seek pleasure and avoid pain, and instead suggests that human behavior is driven by an interplay between the life and death instincts.
This work marks a significant turn in Freud's thinking, deepening the understanding of the human psyche and its often contradictory motivations.
It also links Western psychoanalysis with Eastern perspectives on life and death, making it essential reading for students of psychology, history, and literature.
Mentioned by
Mentioned in 13 episodes
Mentioned by 

when discussing Freud's death drive and freedom beyond the pleasure principle.


Slavoj Žižek

66 snips
Slavoj Zizek: “Buddhism Can’t Explain This”
Mentioned by ![undefined]()

as an exploration of the moments where Freud takes his theory of the clinic and the psyche and moves it to a society.

Ryan Angley

50 snips
Pluribus
Mentioned in the episode description as one of the other sources cited.

41 snips
Theory of the Gooner: Baudrillard vs Lacan // 229
Mentioned by 

regarding Freud's discovery of the concept of the death drive.


Todd McGowan

35 snips
Sigmund Freud: The Most Misunderstood Man (Ft. Todd McGowan)
Mentioned by Craig as one of the thinkers discussed in the Anti-Oedipus Files reading group.

28 snips
Is Hegel Cool? Josh Wretzel's "The Coolness of the Absolute" Live at Webster's Cafe in State College, PA
Mentioned by 

in the context of different interpretations of Rapunzel.


Michael Garfield

20 snips
J.F. Martel on Machines vs. Fractals, Black Box Personhood, and Navigating The AI Fairy Tale
Mentioned by Stephen Connor.

13 snips
Idleness
Mentioned by 

as an earlier Freud work related to themes in the episode's primary text.


Taylor Atkins

Sigmund Freud - Group Psychology and the Analysis of the Ego
Mentioned by ![undefined]()

in the context of discussing Hamlet in terms of human agency.

Jemma Deer

Jemma Deer, "Radical Animism: Reading for the End of the World" (Bloomsbury, 2020)
Mentioned in the context of Freud's reflections and the introduction of the death drive and life drives.

Sigmund Freud - The Ego and the Id






