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WHS AP Psychology Unit 10: Personality Essential Task 10-1 :Describe Freud’s Triarchic Theory of personality (id, ego and superego) with specific attention to the role of the unconscious, wish-fulfillment, ego ideal, and defense mechanisms and identify how personality develops through the psychosexual stages (oral, anal, phallic, latency

WHS AP Psychology Unit 10: Personality Essential Task 10-1: Describe Freud’s Triarchic Theory of personality (id, ego and superego) with specific attention

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Page 1: WHS AP Psychology Unit 10: Personality Essential Task 10-1: Describe Freud’s Triarchic Theory of personality (id, ego and superego) with specific attention

WHS AP Psychology

Unit 10: Personality

Essential Task 10-1:Describe Freud’s Triarchic Theory of personality (id, ego and superego) with specific attention to the role of the unconscious, wish-fulfillment, ego ideal, and defense mechanisms and identify how personality develops through the psychosexual stages (oral, anal, phallic, latency and genital).

Page 2: WHS AP Psychology Unit 10: Personality Essential Task 10-1: Describe Freud’s Triarchic Theory of personality (id, ego and superego) with specific attention

We are here

Unit 10

Personality

Freud’sTheory

Freud’sTheory

TriarchicTheory

Neo-Freudians

Neo-Freudians

Jung

Psycho-sexualStages

Adler

Horney

MaslowRogersBandura

Objective

Projective

HumanisticTheories

HumanisticTheories

Social Cognitive

Theory

Social Cognitive

Theory

Trait Theory(Big 5)

Trait Theory(Big 5)

Personality Tests

Personality Tests

Psychodynamic

Page 3: WHS AP Psychology Unit 10: Personality Essential Task 10-1: Describe Freud’s Triarchic Theory of personality (id, ego and superego) with specific attention

Issues in Personality

1. Free will or determinism? 2. Nature or nurture? 3. Past, present, or future? 4. Uniqueness or universality? 5. Equilibrium or growth? 6. Optimism or pessimism?

Page 4: WHS AP Psychology Unit 10: Personality Essential Task 10-1: Describe Freud’s Triarchic Theory of personality (id, ego and superego) with specific attention

Psychodynamic Theories

Behavior is the product of psychologicalforces within the individual, often outside of conscious awareness

Central Tenets

1) Much of mental life is unconscious. People may behave in ways they themselves don’t understand.

2) Mental processes act in parallel, leading to conflicting thoughts and feelings.

3) Personality patterns begin in childhood. Childhood experiences strongly affect personality development.

4) Mental representations of self, others, and relationships guide interactions with others.

5) The development of personality involves learning to regulate aggressive and sexual feelings as well as becoming socially independent rather than dependent.

Sigmund FreudNeo-Freudians

Page 5: WHS AP Psychology Unit 10: Personality Essential Task 10-1: Describe Freud’s Triarchic Theory of personality (id, ego and superego) with specific attention

Sigmund Freud

Page 6: WHS AP Psychology Unit 10: Personality Essential Task 10-1: Describe Freud’s Triarchic Theory of personality (id, ego and superego) with specific attention

• Darwin – Man is not special and can be studied like any other part of the natural order

• Helmholtz – Law of the Conservation of Energy

• Brucke – all living organisms are ‘energy systems’

Backdrop of Freud’s Intellectual World

Page 7: WHS AP Psychology Unit 10: Personality Essential Task 10-1: Describe Freud’s Triarchic Theory of personality (id, ego and superego) with specific attention

Freud combines all of this:

• The human PERSONALITY is an energy system

• It is the job of psychology to investigate the change, transmission and conversion of this ‘psychic energy’ within the personality which shape and determine it.

Page 8: WHS AP Psychology Unit 10: Personality Essential Task 10-1: Describe Freud’s Triarchic Theory of personality (id, ego and superego) with specific attention

These Drives are the ‘Energy’• Eros (Life Instinct)

– Covers all the self-preserving and erotic instincts

– LibidoLibido is the most important of all – seen as sexual energy

• Thanatos (Death Instinct)– Covers all the instincts toward

aggression, self-destruction, and cruelty

Page 9: WHS AP Psychology Unit 10: Personality Essential Task 10-1: Describe Freud’s Triarchic Theory of personality (id, ego and superego) with specific attention

Structure of the Mind

• Tripartite Theoretical Model– Id– Super-ego– Ego

Page 10: WHS AP Psychology Unit 10: Personality Essential Task 10-1: Describe Freud’s Triarchic Theory of personality (id, ego and superego) with specific attention

Unconscious

Page 11: WHS AP Psychology Unit 10: Personality Essential Task 10-1: Describe Freud’s Triarchic Theory of personality (id, ego and superego) with specific attention

Id

• Our baby-like self “pleasure principle” - Oriented toward

immediate unconditional gratification of desires and avoidance of pain

Libido Irrational

Page 12: WHS AP Psychology Unit 10: Personality Essential Task 10-1: Describe Freud’s Triarchic Theory of personality (id, ego and superego) with specific attention

Id has no contact with outside world

Pleasure through

•Reflex action

•Wish fulfillment - (fantasy) a mental image that satisfies the instinct

Page 13: WHS AP Psychology Unit 10: Personality Essential Task 10-1: Describe Freud’s Triarchic Theory of personality (id, ego and superego) with specific attention

Wish fulfillment

Page 14: WHS AP Psychology Unit 10: Personality Essential Task 10-1: Describe Freud’s Triarchic Theory of personality (id, ego and superego) with specific attention

Wishfulfillment

Page 15: WHS AP Psychology Unit 10: Personality Essential Task 10-1: Describe Freud’s Triarchic Theory of personality (id, ego and superego) with specific attention

Superego

• Moral center - “should”, “should not” We internalize the moral code of our society Guilt Irrational striving for moral perfection Ego Ideal – perfect standards of what one would like

to be

Page 16: WHS AP Psychology Unit 10: Personality Essential Task 10-1: Describe Freud’s Triarchic Theory of personality (id, ego and superego) with specific attention

Learned, not present at birth

Page 17: WHS AP Psychology Unit 10: Personality Essential Task 10-1: Describe Freud’s Triarchic Theory of personality (id, ego and superego) with specific attention

Ego

Deals with reality - “reality principle” Has to negotiate demands of the id with

the reality of living in society and with the demands of the super ego.

rational

Page 18: WHS AP Psychology Unit 10: Personality Essential Task 10-1: Describe Freud’s Triarchic Theory of personality (id, ego and superego) with specific attention

Id has no contact with outside world

Page 19: WHS AP Psychology Unit 10: Personality Essential Task 10-1: Describe Freud’s Triarchic Theory of personality (id, ego and superego) with specific attention

Our demo yesterday

List 1• tree• paper• fish• chair• ocean• apple• house• green• shirt• rain• dog

List 2•jail•kiss•fine (please use inflection to denote attractiveness)•miniskirt•angry•_____________ (Say their name)•sex•topless dancer•mother/father•boy(girl)friend•fight

Page 20: WHS AP Psychology Unit 10: Personality Essential Task 10-1: Describe Freud’s Triarchic Theory of personality (id, ego and superego) with specific attention

What happens when the Id and Super-ego can’t reconcile

• The psychic energy has to go somewhere!

• Id won’t let it go• Super-ego won’t let it happen• To protect itself the organism employs

defense mechanisms.

Page 21: WHS AP Psychology Unit 10: Personality Essential Task 10-1: Describe Freud’s Triarchic Theory of personality (id, ego and superego) with specific attention

Psychoanalytic PerspectiveDefense mechanisms

• Denial: refusal to acknowledge a painful or threatening reality.

• Repression: exclude painful thoughts or feelings w/o realizing• Projection: attributing own feelings on others.• Identification: taking on someone else’s characteristics• Regression: revert to childlike behavior• Intellectualization: detaching from feelings by thinking about

them intellectually.• Reaction Formation: exaggeratedly opposite ideas and

emotions.• Displacement: redirection of repressed motives or feelings

onto substitute objects.• Sublimation: transforming repressed motives or feelings into

more socially accepted forms.

Page 22: WHS AP Psychology Unit 10: Personality Essential Task 10-1: Describe Freud’s Triarchic Theory of personality (id, ego and superego) with specific attention

Thin line Between the conscious and unconscious

• Sometimes our unconscious thoughts, etc slip into the conscious.

• How?– “Freudian slips”– Dreams– Humor

Page 23: WHS AP Psychology Unit 10: Personality Essential Task 10-1: Describe Freud’s Triarchic Theory of personality (id, ego and superego) with specific attention

So how does this play out• Humans are driven by the desire for

bodily sexual pleasure (libido)– it gets released from different centers at different times.

• But the parents act as the social coercion to balance these desires. – ‘Super-ego givers’

• Development is the resolution of a series of conflicts

Page 24: WHS AP Psychology Unit 10: Personality Essential Task 10-1: Describe Freud’s Triarchic Theory of personality (id, ego and superego) with specific attention

So how does this play out• “Psychosexual” Stages of

development– Oral: 0–18months

• Sucking (Weaning)• Fixation – Gullible or Cynical

– Anal: 18months–3• Defecation (Potty training)• Fixation – Self Destructive vs.

Anal Retentive– Phallic: 3-5/6

• Genitals (Oedipus Complex / Castration Anxiety)

• Fixation Egotism (playa or ho) or low self-esteem The Official Portrait of the Danish

Royal Family by Newcastle painter James Brennan.

Photo: Glen Mccurtayne

Page 25: WHS AP Psychology Unit 10: Personality Essential Task 10-1: Describe Freud’s Triarchic Theory of personality (id, ego and superego) with specific attention

So how does this play out– Latency 5/6 –

12/13• all libidinal activity is

suppressed.

– Genital Stage – To puberty and beyond!

• genitals and orgasm. • Focused on

reproduction

Page 26: WHS AP Psychology Unit 10: Personality Essential Task 10-1: Describe Freud’s Triarchic Theory of personality (id, ego and superego) with specific attention

Oedipus Complex

• Phase One– Boy has a libidinal bond with the mother

(breast feeding and mother as primary caregiver)

– Parallel to this, the boy begins to identify with his father, the figure parallel to him in terms of biological sex. (Identification with the father's role as "lover" of mother.)

– In this phase, these 2 relationship exist side-by-side and in relative harmony.

Page 27: WHS AP Psychology Unit 10: Personality Essential Task 10-1: Describe Freud’s Triarchic Theory of personality (id, ego and superego) with specific attention

Oedipus Complex

• Boy’s feelings Intensify• Sees the father as an obstacle and a rival

who he desires to get rid of or to kill.• Worries the father will castrate him.• Boy is never 100% hostile. He keeps the

identification so he is torn – ambivalence

• Boy hopefully turns his psychic energy into full-on identification with the father. “Can’t beat’em, join’em.”

• Boy is masculinized, eventually seeks his own sexual partner

Page 28: WHS AP Psychology Unit 10: Personality Essential Task 10-1: Describe Freud’s Triarchic Theory of personality (id, ego and superego) with specific attention

Castration Anxiety

• This fear or threat becomes real upon the observation of the female genitalia, which appear to be "castrated”

• Sources of the castration complex:• Punishment for affectionate feelings for Mother• Punishment for masturbation• Punishment for bed-wetting

Page 29: WHS AP Psychology Unit 10: Personality Essential Task 10-1: Describe Freud’s Triarchic Theory of personality (id, ego and superego) with specific attention

The "negative" outcome

• He identifies with the Mother so much that the father becomes the focus of his libidinal interests

• The boy exhibits "girl-like" behavior• He assumes an affectionate, feminine attitude

toward the father (instead of feeling ambivalence)

• Develops jealousy or even hostility toward the mother.

• According to Freud, this can lead to . . . .

Page 30: WHS AP Psychology Unit 10: Personality Essential Task 10-1: Describe Freud’s Triarchic Theory of personality (id, ego and superego) with specific attention

Feud’s Case Study: Little Hans

• Would not go outside for fear of being bitten by a horse

• Hans has said he wanted to sleep with his mother, “coax with” or caress her, be married to her, and have children “just like daddy.”

• His parents warned that if he continued to play with his “widdler” (penis), it would be cut off. He noticed that his sister had no “widdler.”

• Hans wanted his mother all to himself, was jealous of his father, and feared his mother would prefer his father’s bigger widdler.

• Hans was most afraid of horses with black muzzles,

• The Phobia started after Hans had “accidentally” knocked a statue of a horse from its stand.

Page 31: WHS AP Psychology Unit 10: Personality Essential Task 10-1: Describe Freud’s Triarchic Theory of personality (id, ego and superego) with specific attention

The Electra Complex

• But what about girls?• During the phallic stage the daughter

becomes attached to her father and more hostile towards her mother.

• Believes that mom is responsible for her not having a penis.

• This is due mostly to the idea that the girl is "envious" of her father's penis thus the term "penis-envy".

• This leads to resentment towards her mother, who the girl believes caused her castration.

Page 32: WHS AP Psychology Unit 10: Personality Essential Task 10-1: Describe Freud’s Triarchic Theory of personality (id, ego and superego) with specific attention

Implications

• Girls seek compensation for the "lost" penis;

• They find this in the baby upon whom they can heap affection.

• The sense of "motherhood" results from the castration complex, the sense of "loss" or "inadequacy" based on an "inferior" physical endowment in the genital region.