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Secret Committee : ウィキペディア英語版 | Inner circle (psychoanalysis) Freud's inner circle or Secret Committee consisted of Sigmund Freud's most trusted psychoanalysts. It was set up in 1912–13 to ensure the future of psychoanalysis, in response to several analysts breaking with his theories including Alfred Adler in 1911 and Wilhelm Stekel in 1912, and the threatened departure of Carl Jung.〔Ernest Jones, ''The Life and Work of Sigmund Freud'' (1964) p. 415-6〕 == Ernest Jones ==
Ernest Jones recommended to Freud that he should create a group of loyal psychoanalysts, who would privately discuss any question of departure from "any of the fundamental tenets of psychoanalytical theory" before acting at all.〔Jones, quoted in Peter Gay, ''Freud'' (1989) p. 229-30〕 The group initially consisted of five members, Jones, Sándor Ferenczi, Otto Rank, Hanns Sachs, and Karl Abraham, all of whom were given a golden ring: Max Eitingon was added to the Committee in 1919.〔Jones, p. 416〕 Freud and Jones had recognised "a boyish perhaps a romantic element too in this conception".〔Gay, p. 230〕 later historians have suggested that it was equally a shrewd, partisan move on Jones's part,〔Marco Conci, ''Sullivan Revisited'' (2011) p. 80-1〕 helping to further isolate Jung, and thus to ensure his own position as the only Gentile in Freud's inner circle.〔Brenda Madox, ''Freud's Wizard'' (2007)〕
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