| Chapter One. The First Three Years | 1 |
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The Thesis: Freud’s Pro-Christian (and Anti-Christian) Unconscious, 2 His Catholic Nanny: General Importance, 3 His Nanny: Importance for Religion, 8 The Nanny: How Long Was She with Sigmund?, 12 Was His Nanny a Thief?, 16 Was Freud Secretly Baptized?, 17 Washed in the Blood of the Lamb, 20 Freud’s Response to the Loss of His Nanny, 22 Freud and Separation Anxiety, 23 Freud’s Travel “Phobia” and Separation Anxiety, 25 The Theme of the Two Mothers, 26 Freud’s First “Anna,” or What Was the Nanny Called?, 29 | |
| Chapter Two. Childhood and Student Days: 1860-1882 | 31 |
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Vienna Childhood: 1860-1872, 31 Freud’s Rejection of His Father, 36 The Alleged Affair of Amalia and Philipp, 39 The Meaning of the Name “Sigismund,”42 The Religious and Other Significance of the Amalia-Philipp Affair, 44 The Hannibal Complex: Freud’s Siding with Rome, 45 Don Quixote, 47 Silberstein and Fluss Letters, 47 University Years: 1873-1882, 48 The Influence of Franz Brentano, 50 Conclusion, 56 |