Page:Freud - Group psychology and the analysis of the ego.djvu/81

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critical faculty [Instanz][1] within the ego, which even in normal times takes up a critical attitude towards the ego, though never so relentlessly and so unjustifiably. On previous occasions we have been driven to the hypothesis[2] that some such faculty develops in our ego which may cut itself off from the rest of the ego and come into conflict with it. We have called it the 'ego ideal', and by way of functions we have ascribed to it self-observation, the moral conscience, the censorship of dreams, and the chief influence in repression. We have said that it is the heir to the original narcissism in which the childish ego found its self-sufficiency; it gradually gathers up from the influences of the environment the demands which that environment makes upon the ego and which the ego cannot always rise to; so that a man, when he cannot be satisfied with his ego itself, may nevertheless be able to find satisfaction in the ego ideal which has bee differentiated out of the ego.

In delusions of observation, as we have further shown, the disintegration of this faculty has become patent, and has thus revealed its origin in the influence of

  1. [‘Instanz’—like 'instance' in the phrase 'court of first instance'—was originally a legal term. It is now used in the sense of one of a hierarchy of authorities or functions.—Translator?]
  2. 'Zur Einführung des Narzissmus', 'Trauer und Melancholie '.