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RECAP What is the id? What is the ego? What is the superego? How do these three work together?

What is the id? What is the ego? What is the superego? How do these three work together?

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Page 1: What is the id?  What is the ego?  What is the superego?  How do these three work together?

RECAP What is the id?

What is the ego?

What is the superego?

How do these three work together?

Page 2: What is the id?  What is the ego?  What is the superego?  How do these three work together?

ID, EGO & SUPEREGO Watch the following video clip on the Id,

Ego and Superego to see a representation of Freud’s psyche

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y_KztSDMNus&feature=related

Page 3: What is the id?  What is the ego?  What is the superego?  How do these three work together?

THE OEDIPUS COMPLEX Freud’s Oedipus Complex is very

important to his psychological view of religion

The Oedipus Complex is an analogy based on the Greek tragic play “Oedipus and the King”

Page 4: What is the id?  What is the ego?  What is the superego?  How do these three work together?

OEDIPUS AND THE KING Oedipus and the King is a Greek

tragedy. The basic story is as follows:Oedipus is abandoned at birth due to a

prophecy told that he will kill his father and have children with his mother

As an adult, Oedipus returns unknowingly to his own country

He kills the king in battle and takes his wife as his own

He then discovers that he has killed his own father and married his mother

In his despair he cuts out his own eyes

Page 5: What is the id?  What is the ego?  What is the superego?  How do these three work together?

LEGO OEDIPUS Watch the Lego portrayal of Oedipus

and the King

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XtboBsgzMcA

Page 6: What is the id?  What is the ego?  What is the superego?  How do these three work together?

FREUD’S OEDIPUS COMPLEX Freud believed that each small boy

wants his mother for himself and so wants rid of his father

However the boy fears his father as he is bigger and stronger and so he can’t beat him

We feel we need the protection of our father

And so the boy joins him by identifying with him, introjecting his qualities of strength, wisdom etc.

Page 7: What is the id?  What is the ego?  What is the superego?  How do these three work together?

HOW FREUD RELATES THIS TO RELIGION Despite having taken in the father’s

qualities of strength and wisdom etc we still run into difficulties and frustrations in the world and want someone stronger and wiser to protect and reward us

We project those same qualities taken from the father and create God “after our own image and likeness we now have the ultimate father-figure

Page 8: What is the id?  What is the ego?  What is the superego?  How do these three work together?

So basically Freud is saying that God is a projected father-figure, based on early experiences of the real, and who like him is needed as a source of protection, but who is also the source of fear and guilt (we feel guilty because we want the mother to ourselves and want rid of the father)

According to the Oedipus Complex, everyone has to deal with the problems caused by the fact that we have complex childhood relationships with our parents. Religion is a way of working through these problems in a socially acceptable manner

Page 9: What is the id?  What is the ego?  What is the superego?  How do these three work together?

FREUD, SEX AND THE OEDIPUS COMPLEX Freud also relates the Oedipus Complex

to sex, as is so common with Freud

According to Freud the sexual drive, or libido, is the body’s most basic urge and therefore is the one most capable of causing psychological problems within the development of the individual

The trauma behind neurotic behaviour results from problems in the sexual development of the child

Page 10: What is the id?  What is the ego?  What is the superego?  How do these three work together?

In terms of the Oedipus Complex the sexual development of the child results in trauma because the suckling child was used to having the mother’s sole attention, when the libido is transferred to the sexual organ there’s an already present rival in the form of the father

The feelings of jealousy and hatred combine with the respect and fear previously felt for the father. So the result is that the father is viewed with ambivalence

The desire to possess the mother and the ambivalence towards the father is the Oedipus Complex

Page 11: What is the id?  What is the ego?  What is the superego?  How do these three work together?

HOW THIS LINKS TO RELIGION The child represses the conflict deep into

the unconscious mind The mechanism of repression is only

partially effective While the repressed event or desire may

appear to be long forgotten, the mind continues to struggle to prevent it from re-emerging into the conscious

As a result of the conflict the event is channelled out in form of neurotic symptoms. One of these symptoms is religion which is why Freud called religion the ‘universal obsessional neurosis of mankind

Page 12: What is the id?  What is the ego?  What is the superego?  How do these three work together?

EVALUATION Do you think this is a good explanation

for religious belief? Why/why not?

What are the strengths of this theory?

What are the weaknesses?

Page 13: What is the id?  What is the ego?  What is the superego?  How do these three work together?

STRENGTHSWe do describe God as a ‘father figure’We believe we are made in his image - this could just as easily be the other way round – formed by us projecting the qualities of the father onto a GodFreud carried out case studies to inform his theory

Page 14: What is the id?  What is the ego?  What is the superego?  How do these three work together?

WEAKNESSESFreud only studied a small sample of people in his research, usually women from sexually repressed societies

The Oedipus Complex does not explain women’s religion. Freud’s works are male orientated and often excluded women. If he is using this analogy to explain religious belief it is not clear why women as well as

men are religious

It is too far-fetched and

inaccurate when applied to

all of society

What about religious

believers who do not grow

up with a father figure?