Sigmund Freud

(Tùi Freud choán--lâi)

Sigmund Freud (1856 nî 5 goe̍h 6 ji̍t - 1939 nî 9 goe̍h 23 ji̍t), chhut-sì-miâ Sigismund Schlomo Freud, sī Tang-kok ê cheng-sîn-pēⁿ-ha̍k-ka, sī sim-lí-ha̍k ê cheng-sîn-hun-sek ha̍k-phài chhòng-sí-jîn. I kì-lo̍k hōan-chiá chòe tī-liâu ê kòe-têng, jî-chhiáⁿ chòe hun-sek. I mā thê-chhut chin-chòe iú-koan hā-ì-sek, sèng-io̍k, bîn-bāng ê lí-lūn.

Sigmund Freud
Sigmund Freud
Sigmund Freud, LIFE cha̍p-chì ê siòng-phìⁿ, c. 1921[1]
Chhut-sì
Sigismund Schlomo Freud

1856 nî 5 goe̍h 6 ji̍t(1856-05-06)
Freiberg in Mähren, Moravia, Austrian Empire
Koè-sin1939 nî 9 goe̍h 23 ji̍t (83 hòe)
Hampstead, London, England
Bú-hāuUniversity of Vienna (MD, 1881)
Tù-miâPsychoanalysis, including the theories of id, ego and super-ego, oedipus complex, repression, defense mechanism
Kiáⁿ-jîMathilde, Jean-Martin, Oliver, Ernst, Sophie, and Anna
Ti̍t-chióng
  • Goethe Prize (1930)
  • Foreign Member of the Royal Society[2]
Kho-ha̍k sing-gâi
Gén-kiù líng-i̍kNeurology, psychotherapy, psychoanalysis
Jīm-tsit ki-kòoUniversity of Vienna
Academic advisors
  • Franz Brentano
  • Ernst Brücke
  • Carl Claus
Kâng íng-hióng
Siū íng-hióng
  • List of psychoanalysts
  • List of psychoanalytical theorists
Chhiam-miâ

Tsù-kái