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Theories of Personality: Sigmund Freud

Biography

  • Lived 1856 - 1939

  • Used to be a physician

  • THEORY: based on clinical population

  • THEORY: influenced by “Victorian times”

  • Died in UK – oral cancer – suicide (heavy smoker)

  • Most of his patients were women (OBJECTS)

  • Suicide (overdose morphine) age 83

The Psychoanalytic Perspective

  • Freud’s theory proposed that childhood sexuality and unconscious motivations influence personality

  • Free Association

    • Reaction against hypnosis

    • Ex. The patient is asked to relax and say whatever comes to mind, no matter how embarrassing/trivial – seeking to expose and interpret unconscious tensions

  • First came up use of hypnosis – influenced by the work of Dr. Mesmer

  • Hypnosis

    • Altered state of consciousness

    • Case of Anna O.

      • With colleague and mentor J. Breur (hypnosis)

      • Unexplainable symptoms (paralyzed but no cause)

      • Root issues: father’s illness, dog’s bite

      • As Anna started talking, symptoms lessened

      • Free Association => chimney sweeping

        • Started talking about her father

  • Unconscious

    • According to Freud, a reservoir of mostly unacceptable thoughts, wishes, feelings, and memories

    • Contemporary viewpoint – information processing of which we are unaware

Personality Structure

  • Freud’s idea of the mind’s structure

    • Iceberg metaphor

  • Id

    • Contains a reservoir of unconscious psychic energy

    • Strives to satisfy basic sexual and aggressive drives

    • Operates on the pleasure principle, demanding immediate gratification

  • Superego

    • The part of personality that presents internalized ideas

    • Represents “rules” of society

    • Operates on the morality principle, provides standards for judgment (the conscience) and for future aspirations

  • Id and Superego

    • In constant conflict

    • Causes guilt and anxiety

    • People need to learn how to cope with this conflict

      • Some do it successfully and others don’t

    • Conflicts must be resolved by ego

  • Ego

    • The largely conscious, “executive part” of the personality

    • Mediates among the demands of the id, superego, and reality

    • Operates on the reality principle, satisfying the id’s desire in ways that will realistically bring pleasure rather than pain

*Eros takes precedence over Thanatos

Defense Mechanisms

  • The ego’s protective methods of reducing anxiety by unconsciously distorting reality (can be a normal process, but can also lead to disordered behavior)

  • Motivators are unconscious

  • Tactics that reduce/redirect anxiety in various ways, but always by distorting reality

  1. Repression

    • A defense mechanism that pushes threatening thoughts into the unconscious

    • Forgetting

    • Often connected with trauma (abuse, PTSD, MPD)

  2. Denial

    • A defense mechanism in which one refuses to acknowledge anxiety provoking stimuli

    • When you deny something exists

    • Rejecting it exists

  3. Projection

    • A defense mechanism in which anxiety arousing impulse are externalized by placing onto others

    • Putting own anxiety to others

  4. Displacement

    • A defense mechanism in which the target of one’s unconscious fear/desire is shifted away from the true cause

  5. Sublimation

    • A defense mechanism where dangerous urges are transformed into positive, socially acceptable forms

    • Dangerous urges -> positive forms

    • Ex. Surgeon who becomes excited at the sight of blood

  6. Regression

    • A defense mechanism where one returns to an earlier, safer stage of one’s life to escape present threats

    • Emotionally unstable -> fetal position

  7. Rationalization

    • A defense mechanism where after the fact (post hoc) logical explanations for behaviors that were actually driven by internal unconscious motives

    • Forced self-justification

    • Ex. “I did it because of you.”

  8. Reaction Formation

    • A defense mechanism that pushes away threatening impulses by overemphasizing the opposite of their anxiety-arousing unconscious feelings

    • Opposite of what you really mean

    • Engaging in the opposite feelings

    • Ex. express a disdain for pornography but really enjoy it

Personality Development

  • Psychosexual Stages

    • The childhood stages of development during which the id’s pleasure-seeking energies focus on distinct erogenous zones

    • Majority of personality is formed before age 6

Stages of Psychosexual Development

  1. Oral Stage: Birth to 2 years

    • Need for oral stimulation

    • Achieved through sucking and later chewing

    • If the oral stimulation was inadequate the individual would continue to seek it throughout life

    • Oral Dependent Personality: gullible, passive, and need lots of attention

    • Oral Aggressive Personality: like to argue and exploit others

    • Oral activity and means of aggression

  2. Anal Stage: 2-3 years

    • Gratification now comes from emptying the bowel

    • Attention turns to the process of elimination. Child can gain approval/express aggression by letting go/holding on

    • Anal Retentive: stubborn, stingy, orderly, and compulsively clean (hold on)

    • Anal Expulsive*:* disorderly, messy, destructive, or cruel (letting go)

  3. Phallic Stage: 3-6 years

    • Interest in genitals develop

    • Child now notices and is physically attracted to opposite sex parent

    • Child derives pleasure from playing with genitals

  4. Latency Stage: 6 years to Puberty

    • Less interest in own and others’ bodies

    • Little cross sex interaction

    • Freud thought sexual energies were submerged/repressed during this stage

  5. Genital Stage: Puberty to Adulthood

    • Sexual nature now develops fully with adult needs and desires

    • Recurrence of masturbation and interest in sexual matters

    • Freud thought there was a progression to interest in the opposite sex if latency stage was fully resolved. If not, result was homosexuality.

Identification

  • The process by which children incorporate the parents’ values into the developing superegos

  • The reason our culture placed so much emphasis on traditional families

Fixation

  • A lingering focus on pleasure-seeking energies at an earlier psychosexual stage, where conflicts were unresolved

S

Theories of Personality: Sigmund Freud

Biography

  • Lived 1856 - 1939

  • Used to be a physician

  • THEORY: based on clinical population

  • THEORY: influenced by “Victorian times”

  • Died in UK – oral cancer – suicide (heavy smoker)

  • Most of his patients were women (OBJECTS)

  • Suicide (overdose morphine) age 83

The Psychoanalytic Perspective

  • Freud’s theory proposed that childhood sexuality and unconscious motivations influence personality

  • Free Association

    • Reaction against hypnosis

    • Ex. The patient is asked to relax and say whatever comes to mind, no matter how embarrassing/trivial – seeking to expose and interpret unconscious tensions

  • First came up use of hypnosis – influenced by the work of Dr. Mesmer

  • Hypnosis

    • Altered state of consciousness

    • Case of Anna O.

      • With colleague and mentor J. Breur (hypnosis)

      • Unexplainable symptoms (paralyzed but no cause)

      • Root issues: father’s illness, dog’s bite

      • As Anna started talking, symptoms lessened

      • Free Association => chimney sweeping

        • Started talking about her father

  • Unconscious

    • According to Freud, a reservoir of mostly unacceptable thoughts, wishes, feelings, and memories

    • Contemporary viewpoint – information processing of which we are unaware

Personality Structure

  • Freud’s idea of the mind’s structure

    • Iceberg metaphor

  • Id

    • Contains a reservoir of unconscious psychic energy

    • Strives to satisfy basic sexual and aggressive drives

    • Operates on the pleasure principle, demanding immediate gratification

  • Superego

    • The part of personality that presents internalized ideas

    • Represents “rules” of society

    • Operates on the morality principle, provides standards for judgment (the conscience) and for future aspirations

  • Id and Superego

    • In constant conflict

    • Causes guilt and anxiety

    • People need to learn how to cope with this conflict

      • Some do it successfully and others don’t

    • Conflicts must be resolved by ego

  • Ego

    • The largely conscious, “executive part” of the personality

    • Mediates among the demands of the id, superego, and reality

    • Operates on the reality principle, satisfying the id’s desire in ways that will realistically bring pleasure rather than pain

*Eros takes precedence over Thanatos

Defense Mechanisms

  • The ego’s protective methods of reducing anxiety by unconsciously distorting reality (can be a normal process, but can also lead to disordered behavior)

  • Motivators are unconscious

  • Tactics that reduce/redirect anxiety in various ways, but always by distorting reality

  1. Repression

    • A defense mechanism that pushes threatening thoughts into the unconscious

    • Forgetting

    • Often connected with trauma (abuse, PTSD, MPD)

  2. Denial

    • A defense mechanism in which one refuses to acknowledge anxiety provoking stimuli

    • When you deny something exists

    • Rejecting it exists

  3. Projection

    • A defense mechanism in which anxiety arousing impulse are externalized by placing onto others

    • Putting own anxiety to others

  4. Displacement

    • A defense mechanism in which the target of one’s unconscious fear/desire is shifted away from the true cause

  5. Sublimation

    • A defense mechanism where dangerous urges are transformed into positive, socially acceptable forms

    • Dangerous urges -> positive forms

    • Ex. Surgeon who becomes excited at the sight of blood

  6. Regression

    • A defense mechanism where one returns to an earlier, safer stage of one’s life to escape present threats

    • Emotionally unstable -> fetal position

  7. Rationalization

    • A defense mechanism where after the fact (post hoc) logical explanations for behaviors that were actually driven by internal unconscious motives

    • Forced self-justification

    • Ex. “I did it because of you.”

  8. Reaction Formation

    • A defense mechanism that pushes away threatening impulses by overemphasizing the opposite of their anxiety-arousing unconscious feelings

    • Opposite of what you really mean

    • Engaging in the opposite feelings

    • Ex. express a disdain for pornography but really enjoy it

Personality Development

  • Psychosexual Stages

    • The childhood stages of development during which the id’s pleasure-seeking energies focus on distinct erogenous zones

    • Majority of personality is formed before age 6

Stages of Psychosexual Development

  1. Oral Stage: Birth to 2 years

    • Need for oral stimulation

    • Achieved through sucking and later chewing

    • If the oral stimulation was inadequate the individual would continue to seek it throughout life

    • Oral Dependent Personality: gullible, passive, and need lots of attention

    • Oral Aggressive Personality: like to argue and exploit others

    • Oral activity and means of aggression

  2. Anal Stage: 2-3 years

    • Gratification now comes from emptying the bowel

    • Attention turns to the process of elimination. Child can gain approval/express aggression by letting go/holding on

    • Anal Retentive: stubborn, stingy, orderly, and compulsively clean (hold on)

    • Anal Expulsive*:* disorderly, messy, destructive, or cruel (letting go)

  3. Phallic Stage: 3-6 years

    • Interest in genitals develop

    • Child now notices and is physically attracted to opposite sex parent

    • Child derives pleasure from playing with genitals

  4. Latency Stage: 6 years to Puberty

    • Less interest in own and others’ bodies

    • Little cross sex interaction

    • Freud thought sexual energies were submerged/repressed during this stage

  5. Genital Stage: Puberty to Adulthood

    • Sexual nature now develops fully with adult needs and desires

    • Recurrence of masturbation and interest in sexual matters

    • Freud thought there was a progression to interest in the opposite sex if latency stage was fully resolved. If not, result was homosexuality.

Identification

  • The process by which children incorporate the parents’ values into the developing superegos

  • The reason our culture placed so much emphasis on traditional families

Fixation

  • A lingering focus on pleasure-seeking energies at an earlier psychosexual stage, where conflicts were unresolved