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After a series of lectures on Darwin by Carl Brühl (1820-1899), an eminent professor of zoology at the University of Vienna, Freud decided to study medicine rather than law and to become a researcher in order to "understand something about the enigmas of nature and perhaps even contribute to solving them." His decision was also inspired by "Nature," a text that has been attributed to Goethe. In the absence of faculties in the natural sciences, medicine substituted as basic training for biologists, zoologists, and physiologists. Freud, however, had no wish to become a physician. The freedom in organizing studies accorded by the edicts of 1872 suited his theoretical penchants.
Prepared by exercises with the microscope, he engaged for six semesters in intensive studies of zoology with Carl Claus (1835-1899), a Darwinian. Claus twice sent him on a university grant to the zoological station at Trieste, Italy, to study the sexual organs of the eel. Although Freud himself underestimated the value of this research, his description of the bisexual disposition of the fresh-water eel is considered a fundamental study in this domain. His studies of Aristotle with Franz von Brentano (1838-1917) caused him to nurture for some time the notion of doing a double doctorate in zoology and philosophy.
In the course of his seventh semester he moved away from Claus, an exceptional though not very directive master, and joined the laboratory of the physiologist Ernst Wilhelm von Brücke (1819-1892), who was assisted by Ernst Fleischl von Marxow (1846-1891) and Siegmund Exner (1846-1926). This was "the inexhaustible center that drove all Viennese medicine in the second half of the century," where Freud finally found "tranquility and total satisfaction," as well as individuals that he could "respect and take as models." Brücke was an outstanding figure whom Freud could identify with, like Jean Martin Charcot later.
Being more of a researcher than a student, Freud published five articles on neurophysiology before his doctorate. With "Über den Bau der Nervenfasern und Nervenzellen beim Flusskrebs" (On the structure of nerve fibers and cells in the crayfish) in 1882, he became a pioneer in neurological research. He nevertheless experienced failures in his work in the Institute for Experimental Pathology, headed by Salomon Stricker (1834-1898), and in the Chemistry Institute, run by Ernst Ludwig (1842-1915).
In 1879 and 1880 he translated works of John Stuart Mill, published in volume 12 of Mill's Gesammelte Werke (Complete works), in order to earn his living, since he found himself in a difficult financial situation in spite of grants from two Jewish organizations. At this time he did his military service while preparing for his doctorate. In the oral examinations for his doctorate he received grades of "excellent" for the first and third examinations and a grade of "good enough" in the second. He sat for a recapitulation exam in law for physicians and received his medical doctorate on March 31, 1881. Among his friends while he was a student were Carl Koller, Siegmund Lustgarten, and Eduard Silberstein.
Bibliography
Hemecker, Wilhelm. (1991). Vor Freud: philosophiegeschichtliche voraussetzungen der psychoanalyse. Munich, Germany: Philosophia.
Laible, Eva. (1993). Through privation to knowledge: unknown documents from Freud's university years. International Journal of Psycho-Analysis, 74, 4, 775-790.
Lesky, Erna. (1976). The Vienna medical school of the 19th century (L. Williams and I. S. Levij, Trans.). Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press. (Original work published 1965)
—EVA LAIBLE
Wikipedia on Answers.com:
University of Vienna |
| University of Vienna | |
|---|---|
| Universität Wien | |
| Latin: Universitas Vindobonensis, also called Alma Mater Rudolphina | |
| Established | March 12, 1365 |
| Type | Public |
| Rector | Heinz Engl |
| Students | 88,000[1] |
| Location | Vienna, Austria 48°12′47″N 16°21′35″E / 48.21306°N 16.35972°ECoordinates: 48°12′47″N 16°21′35″E / 48.21306°N 16.35972°E |
| Website | www.univie.ac.at/en |
The University of Vienna (German: Universität Wien) is a public university located in Vienna, Austria. It was founded by Duke Rudolph IV in 1365 and is the oldest university in the German-speaking world after Charles University in Prague which was founded in 1348.[2] It is the largest university in Austria and one of the largest in Europe.
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The University was founded on March 12, 1365 by Rudolf IV, Duke of Austria and his two brothers, Albert III, Duke of Austria and Leopold III, Duke of Austria, hence the additional name “Alma Mater Rudolphina”. After the Charles University in Prague and Jagiellonian University in Krakow, the University of Vienna is the third oldest university in Central Europe and the oldest university in the German-speaking world.
In 1365, Rudolph IV sanctioned a deed of foundation for a doctoral-level university in Vienna, modelled on the University of Paris. However, Pope Urban V did not ratify the deed, specifically in relation to the department of theology, presumably due to pressure exerted by Charles IV, Holy Roman Emperor, who wished to avoid competition for the Charles University in Prague. Approval was finally received from the Pope in 1384 and the University of Vienna was granted the status of a full university, including the Faculty of Catholic Theology. The first university building opened in 1385.
The current main building on the Ringstraße was built between 1877 and 1884 by Heinrich von Ferstel. The previous main building was located close to the Stuben Gate (Stubentor) on Iganz Seipel Square, current home of the old University Church (Universitätskirche) and the Austrian Academy of Sciences (Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften). Women were admitted as full students from 1897, although their studies were limited to Philosophy. The remaining departments gradually followed suit, although with considerable delay: Medicine in 1900, Law in 1919, Protestant Theology in 1923 and finally Roman Catholic Theology in 1946. Ten years after the admission of the first female students, Elise Richter became the first woman to receive habilitation, becoming professor of Romance Languages in 1907; she was also the first female distinguished professor.
Following the Anschluss, the annexation of Austria into Greater Germany by the Nazi regime, in 1938 the University of Vienna was reformed under political aspects and a huge number of teachers and students were dismissed for political and "racial" reasons.[3]
The academic facilities of the University of Vienna occupy more than sixty locations throughout the city of Vienna. The historical Main Building on the Ringstraße constitutes the University's center, as the seat of the university's executive and most of its administrative offices. The nearby Campus of the University of Vienna forms an additional, more spacious, focus of the University. A large number of academic facilities, including the new Lecture Hall Complex, are situated there.
The University of Vienna, like all universities and academies in Austria, once featured a system of democratic representation. Power in the university was divided equally among three groups: students (the largest group), junior faculty and full professors. All groups had the right to send representatives to boards, who then voted on almost every issue.
The former government, headed by then-chancellor Wolfgang Schüssel, reformed the university system so that power is now concentrated with the full professors. The reform also introduced a board of governors and tuition fees (about €367 per semester in 2007-these now only apply to non-EU students,students from within the EU only pay the ÖHfee). The reforms also separated the medical departments into separate medical schools, such as the Medical University of Vienna.
The research and teaching activity of the university is undertaken by some 6,500 scholars. Of these, approximately 980 are active in projects financed by third parties.
The faculties and centres of the University include: Catholic Theology; Protestant Theology; Law; Business, Economics and Statistics; Computer Science; Historical and Cultural Studies; Philological and Cultural Sciences; Philosophy and Education; Psychology; Social Sciences; Mathematics; Physics; Chemistry; Earth Sciences, Geography and Astronomy; Life Sciences; Translation Science; Sport Science and University Sports; and Molecular Biology.
Nobel Prize Laureates who taught at the University of Vienna include Robert Bárány, Julius Wagner-Jauregg, Hans Fischer, Karl Landsteiner, Erwin Schrödinger, Victor Franz Hess, Otto Loewi, Konrad Lorenz and Friedrich Hayek.
The University of Vienna was the cradle of the Austrian School of economics. The founders of this école who studied and later instructed at the University of Vienna included Carl Menger, Eugen von Böhm-Bawerk, Friedrich von Wieser, Joseph Schumpeter, Ludwig von Mises and Friedrich Hayek.
Other famous scholars who have taught at the University of Vienna are: Theodor W. Adorno, Manfred Bietak, Theodor Billroth, Ludwig Boltzmann, Franz Brentano, Anton Bruckner, Rudolf Carnap, Conrad Celtes, Viktor Frankl, Sigmund Freud, Eduard Hanslick, Edmund Hauler, Hans Kelsen, Adam František Kollár, Johann Josef Loschmidt, Fran Miklošič, Oskar Morgenstern, Otto Neurath, Johann Palisa, Pope Pius II, Baron Carl von Rokitansky, August Schleicher, Moritz Schlick, Ludwig Karl Schmarda, Joseph von Sonnenfels, Josef Stefan, Leopold Vietoris, Jalile Jalil, Carl Auer von Welsbach, and Olga Taussky-Todd.
Some of the University's better-known students include: Christian Doppler, Kurt Adler, Franz Alt, Bruno Bettelheim, Rudolf Bing, Lucian Blaga, Josef Breuer, F. F. Bruce, Elias Canetti, Ivan Cankar, Otto Maria Carpeaux, Felix Ehrenhaft, Mihai Eminescu, Paul Feyerabend, Heinz Fischer, O. W. Fischer, Ivan Franko, Sigmund Freud, Alcide De Gasperi, Ernst Gombrich, Kurt Gödel, Erich Göstl, Franz Grillparzer, Jörg Haider, Edmund Husserl, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Marie Jahoda, Elfriede Jelinek, Percy Lavon Julian, Karl Kautsky, Elisabeth Kehrer, Hans Kelsen, Rudolf Kirchschläger, Arthur Koestler, Jernej Kopitar, Karl Kordesch, Karl Kraus, Bruno Kreisky, Richard Kuhn, Paul Lazarsfeld, Gustav Mahler, Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk, Lise Meitner, Gregor Mendel, Franz Mesmer, Franc Miklošič, Alois Mock, Matija Murko, Pope Pius III, Maxim Podoprigora, Hans Popper, Karl Popper, Otto Preminger, Wilhelm Reich, Peter Safar, Mordkhe Schaechter, Arthur Schnitzler, Albin Schram, Wolfgang Schüssel, Theodor Herzl, John J. Shea, Jr., Adalbert Stifter, Yemima Tchernovitz-Avidar, Kurt Waldheim, Otto Weininger, Stefan Zweig, and Huldrych Zwingli.
There are total 15 Nobel Prize Laureates affiliated to the University as follows:
| Name | Field In | Year |
|---|---|---|
| Robert Bárány | Physiology or Medicine | 1914 |
| Richard Adolf Zsigmondy | Chemistry | 1925 |
| Julius Wagner-Jauregg | Physiology or Medicine | 1927 |
| Hans Fischer | Chemistry | 1930 |
| Karl Landsteiner | Physiology or Medicine | 1930 |
| Erwin Schrödinger | Physics | 1933 |
| Otto Loewi | Physiology or Medicine | 1936 |
| Victor Francis Hess | Physics | 1936 |
| Richard Kuhn | Chemistry | 1938 |
| Max Perutz | Chemistry | 1962 |
| Karl von Frisch | Physiology or Medicine | 1973 |
| Konrad Lorenz | Physiology or Medicine | 1973 |
| Friedrich Hayek | Economics | 1974 |
| Elias Canetti | Literature | 1981 |
| Elfriede Jelinek | Literature | 2004 |
The University Library of the University of Vienna comprises the Main Library and the 50 departmental libraries at the various university locations throughout Vienna. The library's primary responsibility is to the members of the university; however, the library's 350 staff members also provide access to the public. Use of the books in the reading halls is open to all persons without the need for identification, which is only required for checking out books. The library's website provides direct access to information such as electronic journals, online indices and databases.
Rudolph IV, in the Foundation Deed of 12 March 1365, had already provided for a publica libraria, where the valuable books bequeathed by deceased members of the University should be collected. Through many legacies, this collection was subsequently greatly increased and became the basis of the old Libreye that was accommodated in the same building as the student infirmary. In addition, there were libraries in the separate Faculties and in the Duke's College.
From the 17th Century, interest in the old library, with its manuscripts and incunabulae, went into decline and the modern library in the Jesuit College came to the fore. In 1756, the oldest university library was finally closed down and its books, 2787 volumes, were incorporated into the Court Library, of which Gerard van Swieten was then director. After the dissolution of the Jesuit order (1773), the new "Academic Library" was created out of the book collections of the five Lower Austrian Colleges and a large number of duplicates from the Court Library. This was opened on 13 May 1777, the birthday of Maria Theresa of Austria, in the building of the Academic College. Initially, the stock consisted of some 45,000 books and during Emperor Joseph II's dissolution of the monasteries, this was soon considerably extended. In contrast to its antecedents, the new library was open to the general public. Between 1827 and 1829, it acquired the classicist extension (Postgasse 9) to the Academic College, in which it was to be accommodated until 1884. In this year, the main library, with some 300,000 books, moved to Heinrich von Ferstel's new Main Building on the Ring, where stacks for some 500,000 volumes had already been prepared. With an annual growth of up to 30,000 volumes, the surplus space was soon filled. Book storage space had to be extended continuously. One hundred years later, the complete library, including departmental and subject libraries, comprised more than 4.3 million volumes. Today, Vienna's University Library is the largest collection of books in Austria, with the greatest problems of space. In addition to the Main Library, which alone has to cope with an annual growth of 40,000 volumes, it includes today, three Faculty Libraries, 32 Subject Libraries and 26 Departmental Libraries.[4]
In 2011 QS World University Rankings[5] ranked the University of Vienna 155th overall in the world. In the 2009 THE–QS World University Rankings list (in 2010 Times Higher Education World University Rankings and QS World University Rankings parted ways to produce separate rankings), the university was ranked inside the top 200 for the sixth year running. During last decade University of Vienna has been losing its position in international rankings:
| Year | Rank (Change) |
|---|---|
| 2004 | 94 |
| 2005 | 65 |
| 2006 | 87 ( |
| 2007 | 85 ( |
| 2008 | 115 ( |
| 2009 | 132 ( |
| 2010 | 143 ( |
| 2011 | 155 ( |
| Year | Position | |
|---|---|---|
| QS World University Rankings[6] | 2011 | 155 |
| Times Higher Education World University Rankings[7] | 2010 | 195 |
| Academic Ranking of World Universities[8] | 2010 | 151–200 |
Bust of Heinrich Ferstel, the constructor of the main building
Bust of Erwin Schrödinger in the courtyard arcade
Bust of Ludwig Boltzmann in the courtyard arcade
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