Freud's Project for a psychology (1895) presents a wide reflection on the concept of consciousness, which, in spite of certains difficulties, casts some light on how Freud then conceived the relations between consciousness, representation and language. The aim of this paper is to circumscribe the meaning of the concept of consciousness found in the Project for a psychology and to discuss some of its consequences for the way consciousness is approached later in Freudian metapsychology.
Freud; metapsychology; representation; consciousness; language