Source: The Money Game (1968), Chapter 4, Is the Market Really A Crowd?, p. 49
“Freud describes the neurotic personality of the late nineteenth century as one suffering from fragmentation – that is, from repression of instinctual drives, blocking off of awareness, loss of autonomy, weakness and passivity of the ego, together with the various neurotic symptoms which result from this fragmentation. “Kierkegaard-who wrote the only known book before Freud specifically devoted to the problem of anxiety-analyzes not only anxiety but particularly the depression and despair which result from the individual’s self-estrangement, an estrangement he proceeds to clarify in its different forms and degrees of severity. Nietzsche proclaims ten years before Freud’s first book that the disease of contemporary man is that “his soul had gone stale” he is – he describes how blocked instinctual powers turn within the individual into resentment, self-hatred, hostility and aggression. Freud did not know Kierkegaard’s work, but he regarded Nietzsche as one of the authentically great men of all time.””
Source: The Discovery of Being (1983), p. 60-61
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Rollo May 135
US psychiatrist 1909–1994Related quotes
“Neurotics are anxiety prone, accident prone, and often just prone.”
The Complete Neurotic's Notebook (1981), Neurotics and neurosis
“The neurotic is always half-drowning in anxiety, and always being half-rescued.”
The Complete Neurotic's Notebook (1981), Neurotics and neurosis
"Anxiety Is a Part of Human Nature" https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/philosophy-stirred-not-shaken/201703/anxiety-is-part-human-nature, Psychology Today, (Mar 24, 2017).

Source: Love and Will (1969), Ch. 1 : Introduction : Our Schizoid World, p. 20

“Overt anxiety… that part of anxiety of which the individual is aware and ready to speak.”
Source: The Scientific Analysis of Personality, 1965, p. 372