Personality: Chapter 11, PSY 121 DTCC
Personality: Chapter 11, PSY 121 DTCC
Personality: Chapter 11, PSY 121 DTCC
Conscious
– all things
we are
aware of
at any
given
moment
Psychoanalytic Approach
Preconscious –
everything that
can, with a little
effort, be
brought into
consciousness
Psychoanalytic Approach
Unconscious –
inaccessible
warehouse of
anxiety-
producing
thoughts and
drives
Psychoanalytic
Divisions of the Mind
Id—instinctual drives present at birth
does not distinguish between reality and fantasy
operates according to the pleasure principle
Ego—develops out of the id in infancy
understands reality and logic
mediator between id and superego
Superego
internalization of society’s moral standards
responsible for guilt
Id: The Pleasure Principle
Pleasure principle—drive toward
immediate gratification, most
fundamental human motive
Sources of energy
Eros—life instinct, perpetuates life
Thanatos—death instinct, aggression, self-
destructive actions
Libido—sexual energy or motivation
Ego: The Reality Principle
Reality principle—ability to postpone
gratification in accordance with demands
of reality
Ego—rational, organized, logical, mediator
to demands of reality
Can repress desires that cannot be met in
an acceptable manner
Superego: Conscience
Internalization of societal and parental
values
Partially unconscious
Can be harshly punitive using feelings of
guilt
Defense Mechanisms
Repression—keeping anxiety-
producing thoughts out of the
conscious mind
Reaction formation—replacing an
unacceptable wish with its
opposite
Defense Mechanisms
Displacement—when a drive
directed to one activity by the id is
redirected to a more acceptable
activity by the ego
Sublimation—displacement to
activities that are valued by society
Defense Mechanisms
Projection—reducing anxiety by
attributing unacceptable impulses to
someone else
Rationalization—reasoning away
anxiety-producing thoughts
Regression—retreating to a mode of
behavior characteristic of an earlier
stage of development
Psychosexual Stages
Sexuality is repressed
Children participate in hobbies,
school, and same-sex friendships
Genital Stage (puberty on)
Esteem Needs
Self-Actualization Needs
Achievement motivation—behavior
aimed at excelling, succeeding, or
outperforming others at some activity
Evaluating Humanism
Neuroticism-stability
Psychoticism
Neuroticism
Openness to Experience
Agreeableness
Conscientiousness
Behavioral Genetics
Interdisciplinary field that studies the
effects of genes and heredity on behavior
Heredity seems to play a role in four of the
“big five” personality traits—extraversion,
neuroticism, openness to experience, and
conscientiousness
Evaluation of Trait Perspective
Don’t really explain personality, simply
describe the behaviors
Doesn’t describe the development of the
behaviors
Trait approaches generally fail to address
how issues such as motives, unconscious,
or beliefs about self affect personality
development
Personality Assessment
Projective Techniques