Psychological interpretation of dreams
Dreams are the embodiment of thoughts and wishes
Dreams are the satisfaction of wishes. In modern times, the person who has made pioneering discoveries about the solution to dreams is the famous psychological master Freud. He only attaches great importance to dreams because he discovered that interpretation of dreams is a tool for understanding the subconscious deep in people's hearts. Freud said that the id only wants happiness, while the ego talks about the principle of reality. He needs to see whether a wish is realistic and considers ways to satisfy his wish. Dreams are the truth of nature. Another master figure in the study of dreams is the Swiss psychologist Jung. Jung interpreted tens of thousands of dreams and had a very deep understanding of dreams, but his view was different from Freud's. He did not believe that dreams were simply to satisfy wishes, nor did he believe that dreams were disguised in any way. Jung believed that 'dreams are the spontaneous and undistorted products of the unconscious mind... dreams show us the unadorned truths of nature.' Dreams are symbolic language American psychologist Fromm believes that dreams are a symbolic language. He said: 'All myths and all dreams have something in common: they are all written in the same language, the language of symbols.' Fromm divided symbols into three categories: symbols of convention, symbols of chance and symbols of universal. Dreams are self-hypnosis. Adler, a disciple of Freud, later established his own psychological system. He believed that dreams were self-deception and self-hypnosis. In his view, rational and scientific people rarely dream. People who dream use their dreams to provoke one of their emotions so that they can do something irrational.