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Personality
Psychology PSY 405
VU
Lesson
6
PSYCHOANALYTIC
THEORY OF SIGMUND
FREUD
A
gigantic intellectual, a controversial
figure, a person criticized more
then any person in field
in
psychology.
1.
Theory of personality
2.
Method of treatment- Psychoanalysis
3.
Set of clinical observations (e.g.,
defenses)
4.
Methods of investigation (free
association, dream analysis)
Basic
Concepts
1.
Psychic determinism--all our
behavior has a
purpose/goal.
Example:
Eat to get energy, help others to get
appreciation
2.
Freud emphasized the predominance
of
unconscious motives and
processes
3.
Recent translation into
cognitive psychology
The
core elements of his
approach include.
1.
Levels of consciousness or theory of
consciousness
2.
Analysis of mental
structures
3.
Psychosexual stages of
development.
4.
Defense mechanisms
5.
Means of tapping the
unconscious
Levels
of Consciousness
How
personality is organized?
According
to this model, psychic life
can be represented by three levels of
consciousness-the conscious,
the
preconscious,
and the unconscious. Freud used
this mental "map" of the
mind to describe the degree
to
which
mental events such as
thoughts and fantasies vary in
accessibility to awareness.
The
conscious
level
includes
all the sensations and
experiences of which we are
aware at any given
moment.
Freud insisted that only a
small part of mental life
(thoughts, perceptions, feelings, memories)
is
contained
in the realm of consciousness.
The
preconscious
domain,
sometimes called "available
memory," it contains all experiences
that are not
conscious
at the moment but which can
readily be summoned into
awareness either spontaneously or with
a
minimum
of effort. This might
include memories of everything
you did last week, your
Social Security
number,
all the towns you ever lived
in, your favorite foods, and
a host of other past
experiences.
The
deepest and major stratum of the human
mind is the unconscious. Freud
was not the first to
focus
attention
on the importance of unconscious
processes in understanding human actions; several
eighteenth-
and
nineteenth-century philosophers had
suggested the influence of unconscious
experience on behavior.
Example:
All
your nightmares, phobias, fears which
influence you but why
you have them is because of the
unconscious,
you don't have an answer. Freud
suggested ways / techniques of reaching the
unconscious.
They
include Free Association,
dream analysis and hypnosis.
Example:
You
stand near a river, the top
water is the conscious part,
fill out some muddy
water in container, it is the
sub-conscious
and when you dug the river
bed and find something buried in it well
that is the
unconscious
part.
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Personality
Psychology PSY 405
VU
Freud
recognized the existence of two basic groups of
them-life
and
death
instincts.
The former group
includes
all the forces which
serve to maintain. Vital
life processes and assures
propagation of the species.
Because
of the significance attributed to them in the psychic
organization of individuals, the
sex
instincts
were
singled out by Freud as the
most salient of the life
instincts for the development of
personality. The
energy
force underlying the sexual instincts is
called libido
(from
the Latin word
for
"wish" or "desire") or
libidinal
energy.
Instinct
is an inherited condition that
gives our behavior
direction.
Two
kinds of instincts:
1.
Life instinct or Eros: bodily
needs, survival, pleasure
(libido)
2.
Death instinct or Thanatos: aggression,
self-destructiveness
The
Id is like a child when it
wants something it wants it there and
then without regard for
consequences,
so
Id operates on pleasure
principle.
This
refers to Greek concept of hedonism
meaning pleasure. The energy
within the Id is labeled as
the
libido.
The
Ego
The
ego is that portion of the psychic
apparatus that seeks to
express and gratify the
desires of the id in
accordance
with the restrictions of both
outer reality and the superego.
The ego acquires its
structure
and
functions from the id,
having evolved from id,
and proceeds to borrow some
of the id's energy for
its
own use in response to the
demands of the environment.
Ego
thus assures the safety and
self- preservation of the organism. In
its battle for survival
against both
the
external world and the instinctual
demands of the id, ego must
continuously differentiate between
things
in the mind and things in the outer
world of reality.
Super
ego is the moral arm of the
personality.
The
ego has the role to mediate
conflict between the Id and super ego
according to realities of
the
world.
If it mediates successfully, we see an
intelligent, creative individual
who is well adjusted
while
if
ego is unsuccessful either Id or super
ego will be strong.
Id
present at birth
Completely
unconscious
Primary
process thinking
(dreams); understand via analysis
Pleasure
principle--the
Id wants it and the Id wants it
now!!
Ego
Constrained
by real world
Standards
of Superego
Uses
secondary
process thinking
to follow reality
principle
Human
Development Viewed
Psychosexually
The
psychoanalytic theory of development is
based on two premises. The
first, the genetic
approach,
emphasizes
that adult personality is
shaped by various types of early
childhood experiences. The
second
is that a certain amount of sexual energy
(libido) is present at birth and
thereafter progresses
through
a series of psychosexual
stages
that are rooted in the
instinctual processes of the
organism.
Psychosexual
stages
include
oral, anal, phallic, latency
and genital.
·
Each
stage has typical
problem
·
At
each stage, the "right
amount" of libidinal satisfaction
must occur
·
Danger
of fixation or regression
26
Personality
Psychology PSY 405
VU
·
Basis
of character types
·
Major
event = Oedipal
complex
The
formation of personality-oral,
anal,
phallic,
and
genital.
A
period of latency,
normally
occurring
between
the ages of 6 or 7 and the onset of
puberty, was included by
Freud in the overall scheme
of
development,
but, technically speaking, it is not a
stage. The first three
stages of development
extend
from
birth to 5 years of age are
called pregenital
stage.
The
Oral Stage (birth-to
-18 months):
The
oral
stage
of psychosexual development extends throughout the
first year of life. Infants
are totally
reliant
upon others for survival;
dependence is their only way
of obtaining instinctual gratification.
The
mouth
is obviously the body structure most
frequently associated at this
time with both reduction
of
biological
drives and pleasurable sensations.
The
Anal Stage (18 months to 3 years)
:
During
the second and third years of
life, the focus of libidinal energy
shifts from mouth to the
anal
region.
Young children derive considerable
pleasure from both the
retention and expulsion of
feces.
The
Phallic Stage (3 years to 5
years):
During
the fourth and fifth years, the
child's libidinal interest one again
shift to a new erogenous
zone
of
the body, the genitals. During
this stage development of
oedipal complex and Electra
complex takes
place.
The
Latency Period (5 years to 12
years):
Between
the ages of 5 or 7 and the onset of
adolescence, the child passes
through the latency
period;
the
libido is sublimated i.e. channeled
into nonsexual activities
such as intellectual interests,
athletics,
and
peer relationships.
The
Genital Stage (12 years
-puberty):
With
the advent of puberty comes a
resurgence of sexual and aggressive impulses
coupled with an
increased
awareness of and interest in the opposite
sex. The initial phase
of
the genital
stage
(a period
extending
from adolescence until death) is
brought about by biochemical and
physiological changes in the
organism.
The reproductive organs mature, and the
endocrine system secretes
hormones that result
in
secondary
sex characteristics (e.g., beards in
males, breast development in
females).
The
Nature of Anxiety
Freud's
initial interest in the phenomenon of anxiety
was motivated by his interest in
explaining neurotic
symptoms
and treating people suffering
from them.
Types
of Anxiety
(1)
Realistic Anxiety
(2)
Neurotic Anxiety
(3)
Moral Anxiety
Anxiety
= threat
Reality: danger in
external world
Neurotic:
fear of id out of
control
Moral:
fear of conscience
Ego
defends against anxiety--often
unconscious, more and less
mature/primitive
Realistic
Anxiety:
The
emotional response to threat
and/ or perception of real
dangers in the external
environment
(e.g., poisonous snakes, wild animals, earthquakes,
final examinations) is called
realistic,
or
objective,
anxiety.
It is essentially synonymous with fear
and may have a negative
effect on the individual's
ability
to cope effectively with the
source of danger.
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Personality
Psychology PSY 405
VU
Neurotic
Anxiety:
It
is caused by the fear that the
ego will be unable to
control the id instincts
particularly
those of a sexual or aggressive nature.
The small child quickly
learns that active discharge
of
his
or her libidinal or destructive urges
will be met by threats of
retaliation from parents or
other social
agents
Moral
Anxiety:When
the ego is threatened by punishment from the
superego, the ensuing emotional
response
is called moral
anxiety.
It occurs whenever the id strives toward
active expression of immoral
thoughts
or acts and the superego responds
with feeling of shame,
guilt, and self-condemnation.
The
ego fights a battle to stay
at the top of id and super ego. The
conflicts between id and super ego
produce
anxiety that is a threat to ego.
The threat or anxiety experienced by
ego is a signal that alerts
the
ego
to use unconscious protective
processes that keep primitive emotions
associated with conflicts
in
check.
These protective processes
are defense mechanisms or
coping styles.
Id
↓
Coping
Styles
Ego
↑
Super
ego
They
operate an on unconscious level and are
therefore self-deceptive and
they distort one's
perception of
reality,
so as to make anxiety less
threatening to the individual and
they protect the ego.
Kinds
of Ego Defense Mechanisms
(1)
Repression
(2)
Regression
(3)
Reaction formation
(4)
Displacement
(5)
Projection
Techniques
of Psychoanalysis
Psychoanalysis
is a therapeutic process which reveals
unconscious mental process and
conflicts through
catharsis
and insight.
1.
Free association: The
patient is asked to lie on a
couch and the therapist sits
behind the client, then
the
patient
is asked to give a running
account of his thought
pattern uninterrupted without
social censoring it.
This
technique brings to the conscious
level emotionally loaded
material that at times can be
painful,
threatening
to be discussed at conscious
level.
2.
Dream analysis: It refers to the
process in which the contents of the
dream usually the id impulses
(wishes)
related to the unconscious conflicts.
The therapist interprets the
contents of dreams and
relates
them
to various unconscious
wishes.
Example:
Suppose
you go to the bazaar and you
want to buy a very expensive
pair of shoes, costing a
fortune. Your
mother
refuses to buy and says that
you are out of your
mind. So at night, you dream
that you are
owner
of that shoe shop so your id
desire has been fulfilled in
a dream. The relationship between the
patient
with
the therapist / clinician / psychoanalyst / counselor
is very important.
3.
The
patient may relate with
therapist positively as with an important
person in his life like
parents,
teachers,
and friends. We label it as
positive
transference phenomenon.
The
patient may relate
negatively with the therapist with anger
resentment or dislike. We say
negative
transference
has occurred. The patient
may at times like the therapist while at
times resent him so
an
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Personality
Psychology PSY 405
VU
ambivalent
transference takes place. The therapist
(is human) he also at times projects his
feelings, emotion
usually
positive ones towards the patient
this is counter transference. This should
not happen.
4.
Freudian slips means
you wanted to say something
but you said something wrong
or embarrassing say
Freud
went to USA to deliver lectures on
psychoanalysis and a professor introduced him as
Dr. Fraud,
though
he apologized but that is a
Freudian slip.
5.
Humor is an
essential part of
psyche.
What
sort of humor do you read and
enjoy? For Freud humor is
mostly related to death and sex
two
unknown
areas of your life about
which you are not
sure
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