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Personality

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Car. Hair. The Libido ... On that deals with the real world and keeps the other two in balance. Id, Superego, and Ego ... The first 3 stages deal with major conflicts ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Personality


1
Personality
  • Where Does Personality Come From?

2
Theories of Personality
  • What is personality?
  • Personality Broad and long-lasting patterns of
    behavior.
  • Mood a conscious yet temporary state of mind
    or emotion

3
Psychoanalytic Theory of Personality
  • The psychoanalytic theory was popularized by
    Sigmund Freud (1856-1939).
  • Psychoanalytic Theory of Personality How we
    develop and behave results from impulses or needs
    that are unknown to us (hidden forces).
  • A trained professional can see the origin of a
    persons psychological problems by analyzing
    their thoughts, feelings, and history to reveal
    what is going on beneath the surface.

4
Psychoanalysts
5
Psychoanalytic Theory of Personality (Freud)
  • Freud The core of ones personality appears
    within the first 5-6 years of life and is more or
    less fixed. For the most part, this core come
    from ones family.
  • Our feelings about ourselves come from
    jealousies, anxieties, and guilt regarding other
    family members.

6
The Unconscious
  • The Unconscious Part of the mind removed from
    conscious memory but still with us.
  • Although we are unaware, the unconscious still
    affects behavior.
  • Freud believed our true feelings appear in dreams
    and mistakes when we are speaking (Freudian
    slips).

7
Freudian Slip???
  • For seven and a half years Ive worked alongside
    President Reagan. Weve had triumphs. Made some
    mistakes. Weve had some sex . . . uh . . .
    setbacks.
  • George H. W. Bush, 1998

8
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9
The Unconscious
  • Freud believed everyone has desires they want to
    hide, so we make them disappear (repression).
    According to Freud, needs and desires are
    forbidden cause guilt, so they are repressed into
    the unconscious.
  • Freud reached the unconscious through free
    association, where a person says everything on
    their mind, even if it seems unconnected.

10
Free Association
  • Mother
  • Pet
  • Lunch
  • School
  • Work
  • Sister
  • Car
  • Hair

11
The Libido
  • Freuds theory emphasizes an interaction between
    conscious and unconscious forces.
  • Freud believed humans had real (biological, not
    symbolic) energy inside them that controlled
    behavior. This energy he called libido.
  • The libido constantly seeks discharge, and this
    creates tension. If the tension isnt released
    in real life, the desires appear as dreams or
    fantasies.

12
Freuds Map of the Mind
  • Freud divided the inner world of the mind into 3
    parts
  • One responsible for needs
  • One responsible for societys rules for behavior
  • On that deals with the real world and keeps the
    other two in balance

13
Id, Superego, and Ego
  • Id All of our basic needs and drives make up
    the id
  • Contains the libido
  • Doesnt directly know what is going on because it
    is unconscious
  • Causes psychological problems, but without the
    id, we wouldnt survive
  • Superego Conscience holds the id in check
  • Causes us to feel guilt and pride
  • If allowed to go unchecked, would block our
    drives and instincts
  • Ego The self allows the id to express
    itself in some safety
  • Balances our desires with demands of reality
    (The Controller)

14
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17
Id, Superego, and Ego
  • If the id has too much control, our
    personalities, will be more demanding of
    animalistic needs
  • Whiny
  • Pouty
  • Never satisfied
  • If the superego has too much control, our
    personalities will be guilt-ridden
  • Shy
  • Fearful
  • Withdrawn

18
Freuds Stages of Development
  • Freuds theory says personality develops in 5
    stages, birth through adolescence
  • The first 3 stages deal with major conflicts
  • According to Freud, adult psychological problems
    have roots in early childhood and can be traced
    to unresolved conflicts that originated during
    this time
  • When one of these conflicts is unresolved, libido
    energy gets stuck (fixated) at that stage, which
    creates psychological problems (alcoholism,
    eating disorders, depression, etc.)

19
Freuds Stages of Development
  • 1. Oral Stage Birth to 1 ½ years
  • Feeding is the main source of infants pleasure,
    and weaning is the task to be dealt with
    (conflict)
  • When a child is weaned too early or too late,
    personality problems develop
  • i.e. - overdependence on others, rejecting
    others, being overly sarcastic, overeating,
    self-starvation

20
Oral Stage
21
Freuds Stages of Development
  • 2. Anal Stage 1 ½ years to 2 ½ years
  • The task (conflict) in the anal stage is toilet
    training
  • Early in the anal stage, the child gets pleasure
    from delivering feces. Late in the stage (after
    toilet training begins), the child gets pleasure
    from withholding feces
  • If the trainer (parents, usually) is too
    lenient or too harsh, psychological problems will
    develop
  • i.e. overly stingy or generous, sticking
    rigidly to rules and regulations,
    irresponsibility, and rebelliousness

22
Ahhh, the anal stage.
23
Freuds Stages of Development
  • 3. Phallic Stage 2 ½ years to 5-6 years
  • Oedipus Complex Desire to marry the
    opposite-sex parent, along with jealous and
    hostile feelings toward the same-sex parent
  • Because parents are bigger, a fear of punishment
    develops. The possibility of being punished
    causes guilt because, in the childs mind, one is
    only punished for being bad
  • The only way to cope with all these romantic,
    jealous, aggressive, anxious, and guilty feelings
    is to identify with the same-sex parent
  • Failure to resolve this identification conflict
    can result in psychological problems
  • i.e. unreasonable anxiety, extreme guilt,
    phobias, and depression

24
What if these were your parents?
25
Review of Freuds Oral, Anal, and Phallic Stages
  • Review of Freud's Oral, Anal, and Phallic Stages

26
Freuds Stages of Development
  • 4. Latency Stage 6 years to preadolescence
  • Latent (def) Beneath the surface, hidden
  • Conflicts and problems from earlier stages remain
    subdued, or latent
  • There are no new conflicts at this stage

27
Freuds Stages of Development
  • 5. Genital Stage Adolescence onward
  • As people seek appropriate marriage partners and
    prepare for adult life, the conflicts of early
    childhood reappear (no new conflicts)
  • Although the way in which they are expressed may
    have changed, their content is left over from the
    first 5 years of life

28
Freuds Stages of Development
  • Can you think of any examples of how Freud might
    say these earlier conflicts from the oral, anal,
    and phallic stage may resurface in adulthood?
  • Examples
  • Oral Fixation stuck in the oral stage (weaned
    too late)
  • Neat Freak obsessed with neatness stuck in
    the anal stage (punished too harsh when toilet
    trained)
  • Fear of Authority fixated at phallic stage
    (never identified with same-sex parent)

29
Fraud . . . I mean Freud.
  • What about Freuds theory do you agree with?
  • What do you disagree with?
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