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In Sigmund Freud and the Jewish Mystical Tradition, David Bakan posits that
Freud viewed Moses as the symbol of the yoke of the Law. Freud therefore,
he argues, killed Moses out of Sabbatean sentiments. [39] Yet Bakan's theory
is immediately suspect, since one does not require Sabbateanism as a motive
to kill off a symbol of authority. Furthermore, Bakan observes in the same
book that Freud created a Gentile Moses of high position (royal Egyptian
lineage) so that he could overcome his own feelings of lower status because
he was a Jew. [40] I dare say that even Freud was not so torn a personality
that he required Moses to be both an authoritarian target and a pattern for
assimilation! Nor does what we know about Freud's moral conservatism fit
with Bakan's theory that Freud saw himself as a new Moses whose mission it
was to rescind the Law. [41] Freud was not as concerned with abolishing accepted
moralities of religious traditions as he was with eradicating neuroses.
The conflicting views of Freud's self-image only point to the complexity
of that self-image and of its effect upon others, whether personally or through
Freud's writings. Though the truth about Freud's self-image will probably
always be veiled by the hidden inner dynamics that elude any psychoanalytical
study, the question remains important for our understanding of Fromm. For
whatever the contradictions involved in determining the Freudian self-image,
it is clear that Freud regarded himself as possessing authority to reassess
Scripture, that he was obsessed with the character of Moses (whether out
of guilt or identification), and that he did, in fact, employ biblical literature,
among other literatures, especially Greek and German, to illustrate his psychoanalytic
discoveries or reevaluations. It is also clear that Freud had good experiences
in Jewish education, as is indicated by his warm tribute to his teacher,
Professor Hammerschlag: "Religious instruction served him as a way of educating
towards love of the humanities and from the material of Jewish history he
was able to find means of tapping the sources of enthusiasm hidden in the
hearts of young people and making it flow out far beyond the limits of nationalism
or dogma." [42] I believe that it is safe to say, in view of the
evidence, that Freud internalizes biblical characters-or at least identified
greatly with some of them (Joseph, perhaps Moses)-while purporting to be
a Bible critic. He was also viewed as a biblical figure; he projected that
image, whether because he articulated his identifications (which, as we have
seen, he sometimes did), or because something in his bearing suggested it.
As Rieff testifies: Freud's orientation was ... close to the prophetic.
The function of a crisis psychology, as of the prophets, is to heighten the
sense of threat and fear in the face of losses of self-identity, and to offer
a control: hope, as the psychic state supplied by adhering to tradition,
with the prophet as instructor. Freud, in this sense, was on the side of
tradition. For him the past constituted the most dynamic part of the present.
Tradition was never remote, but continually in the process of reasserting
itself. He sought to remind people of it, and of its importance. [43]
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