
A MONOLOGUE ON SHAME - Michigan State University
... destructive effects of shame. I will amalgamate prior literary inquiries and theoretical frameworks to gain new perspective on the analysis Fräulein Else. This paper will confront the symptoms and responses of Else‘s inner conflict to determine causality, which can only be accomplished by pursuing t ...
... destructive effects of shame. I will amalgamate prior literary inquiries and theoretical frameworks to gain new perspective on the analysis Fräulein Else. This paper will confront the symptoms and responses of Else‘s inner conflict to determine causality, which can only be accomplished by pursuing t ...
Identification Within: Kenneth Burke`s View of the Unconscious
... inducing coopérationin beings that by nature respond to symbols,9 man thereforeultimatelydevelops his personality,créâtes a self ...
... inducing coopérationin beings that by nature respond to symbols,9 man thereforeultimatelydevelops his personality,créâtes a self ...
Understanding Albert Camus` Absurd as Ambivalence, and its
... reactions to it. Freud understood neuroses as attempts to cope with ambivalence “while effectively preserving it and restraining behaviour” (Lorenz-Meyer 2001, 4), and in The Dynamics of Transference (1912) and The Unconscious (1915b), depicted the unconscious as a ‘reservoir’, a ‘seething cauldron’ ...
... reactions to it. Freud understood neuroses as attempts to cope with ambivalence “while effectively preserving it and restraining behaviour” (Lorenz-Meyer 2001, 4), and in The Dynamics of Transference (1912) and The Unconscious (1915b), depicted the unconscious as a ‘reservoir’, a ‘seething cauldron’ ...
9. Erikson`s Psychosocial Developmental Stages
... Erikson’s Psychosocial Emphasis Erikson extended Freud’s work by describing stages of development to include all of the human lifespan, from infancy through old age. Freud had little to say about stages beyond his genital stage (adolescence), although Erikson quotes him as stating that the important ...
... Erikson’s Psychosocial Emphasis Erikson extended Freud’s work by describing stages of development to include all of the human lifespan, from infancy through old age. Freud had little to say about stages beyond his genital stage (adolescence), although Erikson quotes him as stating that the important ...
Nachträglichkeit: A Freudian perspective on delayed traumatic
... remarked that it is rare to find a psychiatric diagnosis that anyone would like to have, but that PTSD is one of them (Andreasen, 1995). For many people, the diagnosis of PTSD serves as an important tool for acknowledging their distress and determining liability, and the construct has had a dramatic ...
... remarked that it is rare to find a psychiatric diagnosis that anyone would like to have, but that PTSD is one of them (Andreasen, 1995). For many people, the diagnosis of PTSD serves as an important tool for acknowledging their distress and determining liability, and the construct has had a dramatic ...
File
... illustrates a formative stage in each individual's psychosexual development, when the young child transfers his love object from the breast (the oral phase) to the mother. At this time, the child desires the mother and resents (even secretly desires the murder) of the father. (The Oedipus complex is ...
... illustrates a formative stage in each individual's psychosexual development, when the young child transfers his love object from the breast (the oral phase) to the mother. At this time, the child desires the mother and resents (even secretly desires the murder) of the father. (The Oedipus complex is ...
Poulos Paper - Transforming Violence
... King Hamlet’s bed to that of Claudius, the brother who killed him. Hamlet rejects this: “Seems, madam? Nay, it is; I know not ‘seems’.”11 Yet Hamlet himself thinks himself a nothing, and this nothingness that he feels and sees and thinks is the world of faithlessness which he shares with his mother. ...
... King Hamlet’s bed to that of Claudius, the brother who killed him. Hamlet rejects this: “Seems, madam? Nay, it is; I know not ‘seems’.”11 Yet Hamlet himself thinks himself a nothing, and this nothingness that he feels and sees and thinks is the world of faithlessness which he shares with his mother. ...
Seeing, Thinking, Acting Different
... he was engaged into was not a scientific one? “Psychology is often called the science of mental phenomena … this is a bit suspect as if we said: it stands to physics as the science of physical phenomena … By the science of mental phenomena we mean … the science which deals with thinking, judging, wi ...
... he was engaged into was not a scientific one? “Psychology is often called the science of mental phenomena … this is a bit suspect as if we said: it stands to physics as the science of physical phenomena … By the science of mental phenomena we mean … the science which deals with thinking, judging, wi ...
paper a "D" - CLAS Users
... What Causes Feelings of the Uncanny? Sigmund Freuds the uncanny is defined as the “unknown”, but there are various meanings and feelings that are associated to the unknown. The formal definition of the uncanny is strnage and mysterious especially in an unsetting way and can be associated with words ...
... What Causes Feelings of the Uncanny? Sigmund Freuds the uncanny is defined as the “unknown”, but there are various meanings and feelings that are associated to the unknown. The formal definition of the uncanny is strnage and mysterious especially in an unsetting way and can be associated with words ...
Opening the Purple Wardrobe: A Psychoanalytic Approach to
... organizations of pregenital sexual life, the first of which is oral, where "sexual activity has not yet been separated from the ingestión of food" {On Sexuality, 116-7). The oral stage is associated with the ingestión of milk, with drinking, and with liquids in general, and as Freud comments, when t ...
... organizations of pregenital sexual life, the first of which is oral, where "sexual activity has not yet been separated from the ingestión of food" {On Sexuality, 116-7). The oral stage is associated with the ingestión of milk, with drinking, and with liquids in general, and as Freud comments, when t ...
Personality
... by distorting thoughts or perceptions of reality through processes Freud called ego defense mechanisms By resorting to these largely unconscious self-deceptions, the ego can maintain an integrated sense of self While searching for a more acceptable and realistic solution to a conflict between the id ...
... by distorting thoughts or perceptions of reality through processes Freud called ego defense mechanisms By resorting to these largely unconscious self-deceptions, the ego can maintain an integrated sense of self While searching for a more acceptable and realistic solution to a conflict between the id ...
Oedipus - manasquanschools
... Today, download and read “The Real Oedipal Complex” by Jeffrey Rubin Ph.D. This weekend, craft an essay (four paragraphs) that advances Rubin’s claim that “Freud misread Oedipus Rex—which does not illustrate the Oedipus complex— and distorted its meaning to suit his theoretical ...
... Today, download and read “The Real Oedipal Complex” by Jeffrey Rubin Ph.D. This weekend, craft an essay (four paragraphs) that advances Rubin’s claim that “Freud misread Oedipus Rex—which does not illustrate the Oedipus complex— and distorted its meaning to suit his theoretical ...
Assessing Your Personality, continued
... unconscious, it has often been compared to the portion of an iceberg that lies beneath the water’s surface. Freud also divided personality structure into three components—id, ego, and superego—that operate according to different principles and exhibit different modes of thinking. In Freud’s model, t ...
... unconscious, it has often been compared to the portion of an iceberg that lies beneath the water’s surface. Freud also divided personality structure into three components—id, ego, and superego—that operate according to different principles and exhibit different modes of thinking. In Freud’s model, t ...
Chapter 2 Theories of Personality The Nature of Personality
... awareness: the conscious, the preconscious, and the unconscious. To dramatize the size of the unconscious, it has often been compared to the portion of an iceberg that lies beneath the water’s surface. Freud also divided personality structure into three components—id, ego, and superego—that operate ...
... awareness: the conscious, the preconscious, and the unconscious. To dramatize the size of the unconscious, it has often been compared to the portion of an iceberg that lies beneath the water’s surface. Freud also divided personality structure into three components—id, ego, and superego—that operate ...
Personality disorders and genesis of trauma
... presence was considered impossible. A PTSD would therefore have a thematic core: the confrontation with the content of the terror, and particularly with the incomprehension in which we are plunged against all expectations of the reality facing us. It is as if reality has betrayed the person – but t ...
... presence was considered impossible. A PTSD would therefore have a thematic core: the confrontation with the content of the terror, and particularly with the incomprehension in which we are plunged against all expectations of the reality facing us. It is as if reality has betrayed the person – but t ...
conscience - Mr. Bull - A-Level and GCSE Religious Studies
... this is the reason for the social creation of the conscience. He argued that in order for the psyche to be healthy there must be a balance between with the ego and the super-ego. He said that religious belief was an “adolescent stage in the development of the human race from which humanity should fr ...
... this is the reason for the social creation of the conscience. He argued that in order for the psyche to be healthy there must be a balance between with the ego and the super-ego. He said that religious belief was an “adolescent stage in the development of the human race from which humanity should fr ...
Module - 6
... control many aspects of our behavior, especially those acts which we would prefer to avoid. According to Freud, much of human behavior is driven directly from the subconscious mind; and so it is important that the unconscious material needs to be brought into the conscious state so that it can be ex ...
... control many aspects of our behavior, especially those acts which we would prefer to avoid. According to Freud, much of human behavior is driven directly from the subconscious mind; and so it is important that the unconscious material needs to be brought into the conscious state so that it can be ex ...
here are "the syndrome of decay" (i.e,
... The volume is interesting because of it* judicious use of case history material*, though it is not overloaded with them. The patients indeed helped him to formu ...
... The volume is interesting because of it* judicious use of case history material*, though it is not overloaded with them. The patients indeed helped him to formu ...
HAROLD BLOOM The Internalization of Quest
... period proper, during which the half-dozen major English poets did their work, from the generations that have come after them, but the distinction is difficult to justify critically. Freud’s embryonic theory of romance contains within it the po tential for an adequate account of Romanticism, particu ...
... period proper, during which the half-dozen major English poets did their work, from the generations that have come after them, but the distinction is difficult to justify critically. Freud’s embryonic theory of romance contains within it the po tential for an adequate account of Romanticism, particu ...
The Evolution of Psychodynamic Mechanisms
... of the first to systematically explore and describe it (Ellenberger, 1970). Similar con fusion results because "repression" describes two things: (a) the general capacity for keeping things unconscious (the meaning we will use), and (b) the more specific defense mechanism of simply "forgetting" thi ...
... of the first to systematically explore and describe it (Ellenberger, 1970). Similar con fusion results because "repression" describes two things: (a) the general capacity for keeping things unconscious (the meaning we will use), and (b) the more specific defense mechanism of simply "forgetting" thi ...
CHAPTER 7 Desexualising the Freudian Child in a Culture of
... biological. Masculine subjects were allowed to pursue sexuality, whereas cultural dictates demanded passivity in the feminine (an equation Freud felt was unequal and pathological) (Freud 1908). Nevertheless, what is important to keep in mind is that, for Freud, the child experiences its sexuality lo ...
... biological. Masculine subjects were allowed to pursue sexuality, whereas cultural dictates demanded passivity in the feminine (an equation Freud felt was unequal and pathological) (Freud 1908). Nevertheless, what is important to keep in mind is that, for Freud, the child experiences its sexuality lo ...
Personality - Ms. G`s Classroom
... Id: Contains a reservoir of unconscious psychic energy that strives to satisfy basic sexual and aggressive drives. Operates on the pleasure principle, demanding immediate gratification (reduces tension) Ego: partly conscious and unconscious, mediates among the id, superego and reality. Contains ...
... Id: Contains a reservoir of unconscious psychic energy that strives to satisfy basic sexual and aggressive drives. Operates on the pleasure principle, demanding immediate gratification (reduces tension) Ego: partly conscious and unconscious, mediates among the id, superego and reality. Contains ...
Why so many `Borderlines`? - The London Society of the New
... borderline to be a pseudo-neurotic form of schizophrenia, others opt for a form of neurosis with psychotic mechanisms; not to resolve the issue, one could go with Kohut on the pivotal point of narcissistic transference. Or again we could prefer the position of those who challenge all notions of stru ...
... borderline to be a pseudo-neurotic form of schizophrenia, others opt for a form of neurosis with psychotic mechanisms; not to resolve the issue, one could go with Kohut on the pivotal point of narcissistic transference. Or again we could prefer the position of those who challenge all notions of stru ...
WHY SO MANY `BORDERLINES`? - The London Society of the New
... borderline to be a pseudo-neurotic form of schizophrenia, others opt for a form of neurosis with psychotic mechanisms; not to resolve the issue, one could go with Kohut on the pivotal point of narcissistic transference. Or again we could prefer the position of those who challenge all notions of stru ...
... borderline to be a pseudo-neurotic form of schizophrenia, others opt for a form of neurosis with psychotic mechanisms; not to resolve the issue, one could go with Kohut on the pivotal point of narcissistic transference. Or again we could prefer the position of those who challenge all notions of stru ...
Chapter 13: Personality
... Eysenck, ending with the five-factor model (pp. 460-461). 19. Discuss the research findings regarding the five-factor model of personality and the three major criticisms regarding trait theories, in general (pp. 461-463). 20. Describe research findings regarding animal personality (pp. 463-464). Tex ...
... Eysenck, ending with the five-factor model (pp. 460-461). 19. Discuss the research findings regarding the five-factor model of personality and the three major criticisms regarding trait theories, in general (pp. 461-463). 20. Describe research findings regarding animal personality (pp. 463-464). Tex ...
Id, ego and super-ego

Id, ego, and super-ego are the three parts of the psychic apparatus defined in Sigmund Freud's structural model of the psyche; they are the three theoretical constructs in terms of whose activity and interaction our mental life is described. According to this model of the psyche, the id is the set of uncoordinated instinctual trends; the super-ego plays the critical and moralizing role; and the ego is the organized, realistic part that mediates between the desires of the id and the super-ego.The super-ego can stop one from doing certain things that one's id may want to do.Although the model is structural and makes reference to an apparatus, the id, ego and super-ego are purely symbolic concepts about the mind and do not correspond to actual (somatic) structures of the brain such as the kind dealt with by neuroscience.The concepts themselves arose at a late stage in the development of Freud's thought as the ""structural model"" (which succeeded his ""economic model"" and ""topographical model"") and was first discussed in his 1920 essay Beyond the Pleasure Principle and was formalized and elaborated upon three years later in his The Ego and the Id. Freud's proposal was influenced by the ambiguity of the term ""unconscious"" and its many conflicting uses.