Abstract

The article discusses the socio-political views of Z. Freud's view of the connection of the human psyche (especially his subconscious) with social institutions and norms. His concept of culture, the hypothesis of the primitive horde and the system of taboos among primitive peoples are reconstructed and analyzed. The role of psychoanalysis in the cognition of political and legal institutions and norms is shown. The role of drives and the mechanism of sublimation in the formation of law and power institutions is revealed. Freud's views on the possibilities of culture in the confrontation with the destructive manifestations of human nature are analyzed.

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