Freudian Revolution
Sigmund Freud
Three Conflicting Elements
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ID
The fundamental element
of personality because
it is the source of
all psychic energy.
Instinctive and primitive
Entirely unconscious
Pleasure principle
Demands immediate
satisfaction
Located in subconscious
Pleasure Principle
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Ego
Derives from the id and makes sure that the impulses d's can be conveyed in a way that is appropriate for the outside world.
Mostly located in the
conscious part
Moderator between ID
and SuperEGO
Rationality
Logical aspect of
personality
Reality Principle
SuperEgo
Internalizes the values and moral principles that we learn from our parents and society (our sense of right and wrong). starts to emerge at the age of five.derives from the id and makes sure that the iimpulses d's can be conveyed in a way that is appropriate for the outside world.
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Sense of right and wrong
Both in conscious and
unconscious
Learned rights and
wrongs that control you
Moral aspects of
personality
What we should do
Right and wrong
Internalizes the values and moral principles that we learn from our parents and society (our sense of right and wrong). starts to emerge at the age of five.
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Infantile sexuality
Believes that it inexorably stems from infantile sexuality, which is defined as the sexual development that occurs in the first few years of an infant's existence.
Psychoanalysis
A form of care based on the idea that our past influences our present. Unacknowledged personal meaning can affect how we feel and act, as well as contributing to issues at work, in relationships, and with our self-worth.
Interpretation of dreams and Beyond
He first built his early psychoanalytic theories about mind functioning from an analysis of dream activities.
The Unconscious:
Refers to your unconscious mental processes. used the word "repression" to define the act of stifling undesirable memories and thoughts from conscious consciousness.
Personality