FREUD AND THE NEUROSCIENCE OF MENTAL HEALING

FREUD AND THE NEUROSCIENCE OF MENTAL HEALING

From BRAINLAND by Ken Barrett

April 30, 2026 · 1h 9m · Season 3 · Episode 6

About this episode

Mark Solms discusses Freud's early work in neuroscience and its implications for mental healing.

Mark Solms is a neuroscientist and psychoanalyst fluent in German, which is why in the 1990s, he agreed to take on the daunting task of collating and translating Freud's 23 years of writing on the brain and neurology pre-psychoanalysis. In this episode Marks talks in detail about Freud's early work in neuroscience, and explains how this transitioned into his theories of the mind and how to help the mentally troubled. After discussing something of his own family life, we move on to his very difficult first case as an analyst and from that to an understanding of why psychoanalysis became so prone to squabbling and factions. We discuss the way Freud's notion of the unconscious and preconscious map onto current understanding of memory - short term/long term, declarative/non-declarative ('declarative' being memories that can be put into words, a function, interestingly, that gradually develops after the age of 2; 'non-declarative' that can't be put into words, including those powerful early life experiences. Mark also talks about the things Freud got wrong before moving on to the conditions that can benefit from long term therapy (certain personality disorders and major depression in…

People in this episode

Host: Ken Barrett

Guest: Mark Solms

Topics covered

  • neuroscience
  • psychoanalysis
  • mental health
  • memory
  • therapy
  • Freud's theories

Keywords

  • Freud
  • neuroscience
  • psychoanalysis
  • mental health
  • memory
  • therapy
  • depression
  • personality disorders

Mentioned in this episode

Organizations: Department of Neuropsychology

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