Fritz Riemann (psychologist)

Fritz Riemann (September 15, 1902, Chemnitz, Germany August 24, 1979, Munich, West Germany) was a German psychologist, psychoanalyst, astrologer, and author.

Personal life

Fritz Riemann undertook three courses of analysis. His first teaching analyst was Therese Benedek, who had to resign as a Jew from the German Psychoanalytic Society in 1935 and emigrated to the United States in 1936. Riemann's second training analysis was with Felix Boehm and his third with Harald Schultz-Hencke.

In 1946 Fritz Riemann co-founded the Institute for psychological research and psychotherapy in Munich, renamed Academy of Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy in 1974. At first he was the only training analyst at the Institute and for many years the only Freudian.[1] From 1956 to 1967, he was training director.

Riemann is an honorary member of the Academy of Psychoanalysis New York.

Professional life

Anxiety

In 1961 Riemann published a book called Grundformen der Angst [Basic Forms of Anxiety] in which he developed a typology of personality. He postulated that every person had two pairs of conflicting needs, each coming with their own form of fear or anxiety.

The first pair was the need to be an individual vs the need to be part of a group. The corresponding fears were fear of love and commitment and fear of loneliness and self-actualisation. The second pair was the need for constancy vs the need for change. The corresponding fears were fear of insecurity and change and fear of confinement and constancy.

Riemann stressed that everybody experienced all of these fears, to varying extents. However, if one of the fears became so dominant within a person that it eclipsed the other fears, the person was mentally unhealthy. Each fear thereby came with its own type of disorder: when the fear of love was dominant, Riemann spoke of schizoid people; when it was the fear of loneliness, he spoke of depressed persons; fear of change corresponded with obsessive characteristics; and fear of constancy brought out "hysterical" personalities.

Astrology

Fritz Riemann turned to astrology in the 1930s while training to become a psychoanalyst, and published the book Lebenshilfe Astrologie. Gedanken und Erfahrungen [Life through astrology: Thoughts and experiences] in 1976, which he viewed as a contribution to the prejudice-free "rehabilitation" of the thought and symbolic language of astrology. He saw individual birth charts as fruitful for all human relationships, emphasizing personal responsibility for emotional development. Astrology, according to his statements, had an impact on his psychotherapeutic work.

Publications

Psychology

Astrology

References

  1. John Grunert: The History of Psychoanalysis in Munich. In:Mental Health, 38, 1984.

External links

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