Freud also notes that the Egyptian hieroglyph for the mother is the vulture, and that they worshipped a motherly deity whose head was vulture-like.
2.
The famous cartoon of Thurber, showing the husband returning to his home, the rear of which consists of his wife with open arms, is completely analogous to this conception and forms an equivalent representation.
3.
Lasswell describes the political man in terms of an equation in which private motives are displaced onto a public object and rationalized in terms of public interest.
4.
Cirlot, J.E.: A Dictionary of Symbols. Transl. J. Sage. New York: Philosophical Library, 1962.
5.
Freud. S.: Leonardo da Vinci (1910). Trans. by A .A. Brill. New York : Random House. 1947.
6.
Lasswell, H.D.: Psychopathology and Politics. University of Chicago Press , 1930. Reprinted by Viking Press, 1960.
7.
Hall. C.S.: "A cognitive theory of dream symbols", in J.Gen.Psych. , 48, pp. 169-186 (1953); " A cognitive theory of dreams", ibid, 49, pp. 273-282 (1953).