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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 February 2010
In Marshall Edelson's commentary on Adolph Grünbaum in BBS 9(2) 1986, the last sentence of paragraph two on p. 233 should have read:
Why, here, in particular, does Grünbaum ignore Freud's many explicit statements that on grounds of discretion he was giving a much edited approximation to the products of free association, an imperfect illustration of what a patient's free associations might sound like—wouldn't Freud have been the first to acknowledge that this “patient” (Freud) was having a good deal of difficulty suspending judgment and conscious control over the direction of his thinking and was very reluctant to utter aloud what he was in fact consciously thinking?