O dualismo pulsional em Freud
Resumo
The purpose of this paper is to discuss Freud's dualistic drive, arguing
that the transition from one dualism to another is not a rupture in his theory, but rather a
movement in his thinking. For this, we start from the analysis of the concept of drive,
marking its specificity when compared to the animal instinct and showing how the
sexual drives and the drives of self-preservation allowed the appearance of two different
ways of processing the psychic energy. Next, we deal with the psychic conflict that
begins with the process of repression and has as a background duel between sexuality
and self-preservation, a subject that interests us, because we will see how the clinic and
its impasses end up bringing problems to the first Theory. For this reason, we will deal
with the difficulties brought about by paraphrenias and by the concept of narcissism that
end up smoothing the first dualism. Finally, we will see how traumatic neurosis and the
compulsion to repetition bring new elements to Freud and culminate in the elaboration
of a new definition of the drive, which will now also be thought from the dispute
between the life drives and the death drive.