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SIGMUND FREUD 3.

Superego – Moral Principles

Biography Anxiety

 May 6, 1856 – born in Freiberg Town, - It arises out of a conflict among the
Moravia (now Czech Republic) id, the ego and the superego.
 Eldest of eight children
Reality Anxiety – fear of danger from the
 Married, with 3 girls and 3 boys
external world, real, objective sources of
 1881 – He graduated from Medical
danger in the environment –
Faculty, University of Vienna
 1896 – SIGMUND FREUD WAS Neurotic Anxiety – fear that the Id impulses
OFFICIALLY RECOGNIZED will overwhelm the ego and cause the person
 1900 – HE RELEASED to do something that will be punished.
‘INTERPRETATION OF DREAMS’
Moral Anxiety – Fear of one’s own
 SEPTEMBER 23, 1939 –FREUD
conscience, Fear the that person will do
PASSED AWAY IN HAMPSTEAD
something contrary to the desires of the
HOUSE
Superego.
 Died of cancer of jaw & mouth lifelong
cigar chain-smoker Defense Mechanism

LEVEL OF MENTAL LIFE invented by the Ego in an attempt to resolve


the conflict between Id and Superego – so that
1. UNCONSCIOUS
personality can operate in a healthy manner
• Contains all the feeling, urges or instinct that
a. Repression — pushes threatening
are beyond our awareness but it affect our
thoughts back into the unconscious.
expression, feeling, action (E.g. Slip of tongue,
b. Denial – denying the existence of some
dreams, wishes)
external threat or traumatic event that
2. PRECONSCIOUS has occurred.
c. Reaction Formation – It is the
• Facts stored in a part of the brain, which are replacement in consciousness of an
not conscious but are available for possible anxiety producing impulse or feeling by
use in the future (e.g. A person will never think its opposite.
of her home address at that moment but when d. Projection —an individual puts the
her friend asks for it, she can easily recall it) blame of his own failure upon others
and some unfavorable factors of his
3. CONSCIOUS
environment.
• Only level of mental life that are directly e. Regression —involves retreating to an
available to us earlier, less frustrating period of life and
displaying the childish and dependent
• The awareness of our own mental process behaviors characteristic of that more
(Thoughts/feeling) secure time
STRUCTURE OF PERSONALITY f. Rationalization —tries to justify his
failure by giving some excuses.
Consist of three parts: g. Displacement — An individual does
something as a substitute for something
1. Id – Pleasure principle
else.
2. Ego – Reality Principles
h. Sublimation —unacceptable desires
are redirected into socially accepted Childhood experiences of being bullied and
channels. fainting spells.

PSYCHOSEXUAL STAGES In 1900, graduated in the University of


1. Oral Stage (Birth to 18 months) Basel and obtained M.D. then two years
later from the University of Zurich.
Pleasure centers on the mouth
Worked as staff at Burgholzli Asylum under
Oral incorporative behavior (taking in)
the guidance of Eugene Bleuler, a
Oral aggressive or oral sadistic behavior pioneering psychologist.
(biting or spitting out)
Observations led the way to develop the
2. Anal Stage (18 months until 3 years) term "complex" to describe the conditions.
Pleasure focuses on bowel movement
Married Emma Rauschenbach in 1903. Had
(withholding/eliminating feces)
five children and remained together until
3. Phallic Stage (3 years to 6 years) Emma's death in 1955.

Pleasure zone is the sex organ/genitals Died on June 6, 1961 in Zurich.


4. Latency Stage (6 years to 11 years, until
puberty) Psyche - fuels the work of the personality

Nothing occurred since the child is focused on PSYCHIC ENERGIES:


peer activities and personal mastery of learning
and physical skills Principle of Opposites - every wish or feeling
has its opposite. This opposition or antithesis—
5. Genital Stage (12 years onwards)
this conflict between polarities—is the primary
Sexual interest in opposite sex increase motivator of behavior and generator of energy.

CARL GUSTAV JUNG Principle of Equivalence - energy expended


in bringing about some condition is not lost but
Biography
rather is shifted to another part of the
Born in July 26, 1875 in Switzerland, to a personality. Thus, if the psychic value in a
pastor and a daughter of a theologian. particular area weakens or disappears, that
energy is transferred elsewhere in the psyche.
Eldest sibling only lived for three days while
the youngest child, a girl, was born 9 years equivalence implies that the new area to
after. which energy has shifted must have an equal
psychic value; that is, it should be equally
Mother Emilie was institutionalized due to a desirable, compelling, or fascinating
mental illness.
Principle of Entropy - psychic energy and
Family was influenced by both spirituality proposed that there is a tendency toward a
and mystic beliefs. balance or equilibrium in the personality. If two
desires or beliefs differ greatly in intensity or
psychic value, energy will flow from the more Introverted feeling: Reserved,
strongly held to the weaker. undemonstrative, yet capable of deep emotion
Introverted sensing: Outwardly detached,
SYSTEMS OF PERSONALITY (LEVELS OF expressing themselves in aesthetic pursuits
PSYCHE) Introverted intuiting: Concerned with the
unconscious more than everyday reality
‘Libido’ is a general psychic energy which may
flow in channels serving a range of instincts.
Personal Unconscious
Ego - the center of consciousness, the part of - It is a reservoir of material that was once
the psyche concerned with perceiving, thinking, conscious but has been forgotten or
feeling, and remembering. It is our awareness suppressed because it was trivial or
of ourselves and is responsible for carrying out disturbing.
the normal activities of waking life
Complex - is a core or pattern of emotions,
Conscious memories, perceptions, and wishes organized
Conscious images are those sensed by the around a common theme.
ego. It is the perception of and reaction to our
environment is determined by the opposing
mental attitudes of extraversion and
introversion.
Collective Unconscious
Psychological Functions

These functions refer to different and opposing


ways of perceiving or apprehending both the
external real world and our subjective inner
world.
Four functions of the psyche:
- sensing,
- intuiting,
- thinking, and
- feeling

Psychological types - based on the


interactions of the two attitudes and four
functions.

Extraverted thinking: Logical, objective,


dogmatic
Extraverted feeling: Emotional, sensitive,
sociable; more typical of women than men
Extraverted sensing: Outgoing, pleasure-
seeking, adaptable
Extraverted intuiting: Creative, able to
motivate others and to seize opportunities
Introverted thinking: More interested in ideas
than in people

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